Spetters

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Spetters

International DVD cover of Spetters
Directed by Paul Verhoeven
Produced by Joop van den Ende
Written by Gerard Soeteman
Jan Wolkers (uncredited)
Starring Hans van Tongeren
Renée Soutendijk
Toon Agterberg
Maarten Spanjer
Marianne Boyer
Jeroen Krabbé
Rutger Hauer
Music by Ton Scherpenzeel
Kayak
Cinematography Jost Vacano
Editing by Ine Schenkkan
Distributed by The Samuel Goldwyn Company
Release date(s) February 25, 1980 [1]
Running time 120 min.
Country Netherlands
Language Dutch
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Spetters, a Dutch film released in 1980 directed by Paul Verhoeven.

Spetters led to many protests across the board about the caricatural manner in which Verhoeven portrayed gays, Christians, the police, the press and more. Although Verhoeven made one more film in the Netherlands, it was the response to Spetters that led to his leaving the Netherlands for the more liberal film culture of the Hollywood of that day.

Maarten Spanjer's career was launched by this film, but the film did not do much for the other young lead actors, and Hans van Tongeren finally committed suicide in 1982.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The film, which is violent and sexually explicit, is a high-speed coming of age movie which centers on three young men who are dreaming of an escape from their provincial surroundings by means of a motorcross career: young motocross racing champion Rien (Hans van Tongeren), another racer who thinks he has the goods, but does not, Hans (Maarten Spanjer (nl)), and mechanic and Bible thumping Calvinist Eef (Toon Agterberg).

When they run into a young seductress (Renee Soutendijk) and her homosexual brother, and into national motorcross champion Witkamp (Rutger Hauer) and the national press that follows in his wake, their ability to change their lives into top gear determines their future.

The film has been compared to Saturday Night Fever, because that movie also has young protagonists trying to overcome the grind of day-to-day life, and preceded Spetters by three years.

The original, uncensored version has an extended, very graphic, homosexual gang-rape scene, intended as punishment for a hustler who makes an illicit living by blackmailing homosexuals he spies on during their encounters in a local park.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Trivia

The words "spetters" is a (now outdated) word with the same meaning as the English word hunk.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Spetters, de wording van een cynisch sprookje, September 24, 2002; accessed on October 5, 2006


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