Movie · 2006 · Drama, Thriller, War · 2h 25m · R · NL
Curator score: 6.9/10 (114.9K ratings)
To fight the enemy, she must become one of them.
Overview
Israel, 1956: Jewish teacher Rachel Stein rather unexpectedly meets an old friend at the kibbutz. It brings back memories of her experiences in the Netherlands during the war, memories of betrayal. In September 1944, Rachel's hiding place is bombed by Allied troops; she makes contact with a resistance member and joins a group of Jews to be smuggled across the Biesbosch to the freed South Netherlands. Only Rachel escapes a massacre by patrol Germans, and is rescued by a resistance group under the leadership of Gerben Kuipers, whose son is captured trying to smuggle weapons. Kuipers asks Rachel to seduce SS-hauptsturmführer Ludwig Müntze, a mission that she will soon learn that the boat attack wasn't a coincidence.
Ratings
Curator score: 6.9/10
IMDb: 7.7/10
Letterboxd: 3.82/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 77%
Metacritic: 71
TMDB: 7.5/10
Director
Paul Verhoeven
Production
Fu Works, AVRO, VIP Medienfonds 4, Clockwork Pictures, Studio Babelsberg, Motion Investment Group
Cast
Carice van Houten, Sebastian Koch, Thom Hoffman, Halina Reijn, Waldemar Kobus, Matthias Schoenaerts, Theo Maassen, Derek de Lint, Christian Berkel, Dolf de Vries, Peter Blok, Michiel Huisman, Ronald Armbrust, Frank Lammers, Johnny de Mol, Xander Straat, Diana Dobbelman, Timothy Deenihan, Nolan Hemmings, Skip Goeree
Curator Review
Verdict
A sharp, lurid WWII resistance thriller that blends espionage, betrayal, and survival with Verhoeven’s taste for provocation. It’s both pulpy and serious, with a strong central performance and enough twists to keep the tension high.
Best for
Viewers who like wartime thrillers with espionage and double-crosses
Fans of morally messy anti-heroes and survival stories
People open to graphic violence and sexual frankness in historical drama
Audiences who enjoy genre filmmaking that feels knowingly unruly
Skip if
You want a sober, restrained Holocaust or resistance drama
You dislike explicit sex, gore, or cynical humor
You prefer historically reverent films over pulpy, transgressive ones
You want a simple good-versus-evil narrative
Overview
Black Book is a wartime thriller that refuses to behave like a prestige war film. It moves with the momentum of a spy picture, but it keeps undercutting clean heroics with betrayal, opportunism, and the ugly bargains people make to survive. The result is tense, propulsive, and often nasty in the best Verhoeven sense.
Worth noting
What makes it stand out is the way it treats its heroine as both victim and strategist, never reducing her to a symbol. The film is full of reversals, and it keeps asking how much dignity can survive inside occupation, resistance, and revenge. That gives the melodrama real bite.
Bottom line
It’s not subtle, and it’s not meant to be. The violence is blunt, the sexuality is provocative, and the tone can swing from suspense to black comedy in a heartbeat. But if you want a WWII film that feels alive, reckless, and morally complicated, this is one of the more memorable ones.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Josh Lewis (4★) · 509 likes
On its surface a very classically made wartime epic/thriller with exciting espionage twists and action setpieces but of course taken to all the thorny and filthy and perverse extremes you'd expect from Verhoeven; complete with sex, shit and brain matter. Totally lost it when Carice Van Houten asks her Nazi lover whether he thinks her titties are Jewish, and later when she strips for him and he appears on-screen to be growing a boner beneath the sheets only for it to be revealed to be a gun. Only Paul would make time for moments like these in an otherwise fairly Hollywood piece of resistance pulp.
Blain LaMotta (5★) · 287 likes
I almost forgot how fucking good this was. Almost. BLACK BOOK is a rowdy genre picture about the most grim of subject matters: WWII. Director Paul Verhoeven is a madman, embracing everything about movie movies, all the while skewering them within an inch of their life. He is both deadly serious and an absolute prankster. It's all here: candid sexuality, graphic violence, revenge, and betrayal. Who's good? Who's bad? If only it were that easy to figure out. The savagery of humankind is unbound by time and space. A war that can never be won.
Adam Nayman (5★) · 247 likes
Smashing, sophisticated, and shameless entertainment that brings together the Holland and Hollywood chapters of Verhoeven's career. Never a dull moment.
Nakul (4★) · 196 likes
Black Book is an unabashedly pulpy and entertaining espionage thriller about the Dutch resistance during WWII with a mix of genre play and tropes resurrected with fresh takes & twists without losing sight of the larger message. At times the plot seems outrageous and far-fetched, but it is based on true events. It's also a very erotic & perverse flick (it's what you expect from Paul Verhoeven), even considering the subject matter, which really helps you understand the main character and Carice van Houten is great in it.
Krommedijk (4★) · 193 likes
Paul Verhoeven grew up during the Second World War in The Hague, which was bombed by mistake by Allied forces on 3 March 1945. "I will not be able to release myself from the war," Verhoeven said in 2008 to Elsevier Magazine about the influence of the war on his later life and films, in which violence regularly predominates. "As a child I saw the bombing, dead people lying on the street. These are penetrating memories. That determines your world… more Paul Verhoeven grew up during the Second World War in The Hague, which was bombed by mistake by Allied forces on 3 March 1945. "I will not be able to release myself from the war," Verhoeven said in 2008 to Elsevier Magazine about the influence of the war on his later life and films, in which violence regularly predominates. "As a child I saw the bombing, dead people lying on the street. These are penetrating memories. That determines your world… more
1949 · Thriller, Mystery · 1h 45m · NR · Curator 9.6/10 (377K ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, IndieFlix, Cineverse, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
A classic of shadowy intrigue, postwar corruption, and shifting loyalties, with the same pleasure in suspense and moral rot.