The New Yorker by Anthony Lane
This is trash pretending to serve the cause of history: a "Dirty Dozen" knockoff with one eye on "Schindler’s List."
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Netherlands, Germany, United Kingdom · 2006
Rated R · 2h 25m
Director Paul Verhoeven
Starring Carice van Houten, Sebastian Koch, Thom Hoffman, Halina Reijn
Genre Drama, Thriller, War
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
In the Nazi-occupied Netherlands during World War II, a young Jewish singer narrowly escapes death. Determined to help the Dutch resistance, she goes undercover to seduce a Gestapo officer, only to find herself falling, too.
The New Yorker by Anthony Lane
This is trash pretending to serve the cause of history: a "Dirty Dozen" knockoff with one eye on "Schindler’s List."
A hard-core war film with raw violence, intense action, graphic sexuality and a twisting plot that offers a series of surprises.
Moves like an express train across almost 2½ hours without any sense of rush and with strong, empathetic characters etched en route.
Black Book is Verhoeven's best film since "RoboCop": audacious, smart, shamelessly entertaining.
Black Book, which takes its title from a secret list of Dutch collaborators, is an impressively old-fashioned yet fashionably embittered movie.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
Black Book possesses a taut, exciting script that throws surprises at the viewer on a regular basis.
Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan
As epic as its two-hours-and-25-minute running time indicates, Black Book is as subversive as it is traditional, both enamored of conventional notions of heroism and frankly contemptuous of them.
TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh
While Rachel's story is fiction, many of its incidents are rooted in historical events carefully researched by Soeteman and the film's briskly staged action and stunning reversals of fortune ensure that its two and a half hours fly by.
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
Just for starters, no movie about the Dutch Resistance during World War II has any right to be this wildly entertaining, not to mention this provocative and potently erotic.
The Hollywood Reporter by Ray Bennett
It succeeds on almost all fronts. The epic film is a high-octane adventure rooted in fact with a raft of arresting characters, big action sequences and twists and turns galore.
A beautiful biopic about South African poet Ingrid Jonker, whose father was a Minister of Censorship during the height of Apartheid.
A man faces a crisis at his 50th birthday party when his mistress shows up pregnant.
A gang of thieves invades the ruins of a remote village, home to a reclusive yet hypersexual artist.