Now that “Game of Thrones” has finally reached its conclusion, releasing its gifted international ensemble into the casting wilds, will Hollywood remember just what it has in Carice van Houten? It’s not that the statuesque Dutch thesp hasn’t been consistently employed since her startling 2006 breakout in Paul Verhoeven’s “Black Book,” or even that she’s been underappreciated. But few filmmakers have tested her emotional breadth and technical control the way Verhoeven did — and for anyone who’s forgotten the extent of van Houten’s skill set, actress-turned-filmmaker Halina Reijn’s impressive, icily disciplined debut feature “Instinct” provides a fearsome reminder.
Perhaps van Houten just responds best to the care of a confident provocateur. It’s apt that her strongest big-screen showcase since “Black Book” is the kind of hot, confrontational psychodrama you can imagine Verhoeven himself dreaming up, albeit with a frank view of gendered desire and...
Perhaps van Houten just responds best to the care of a confident provocateur. It’s apt that her strongest big-screen showcase since “Black Book” is the kind of hot, confrontational psychodrama you can imagine Verhoeven himself dreaming up, albeit with a frank view of gendered desire and...
- 8/17/2019
- by Guy Lodge
- Variety Film + TV
Zus and Zo
opens Friday, Feb. 7
NEW YORK -- This eccentric Dutch comedy, Holland's official entry for the Academy Awards, concerns the conflicts that arise between three sisters and their heretofore gay brother Nino, who suddenly announces that he is engaged to marry the beautiful, and quite female, Bo.
Normally, this would not be much of a problem, except that the marriage conveniently fulfills a clause in their parents' will which stipulates that if Nino marries he stands to inherit the family's beautiful beachside resort in Portugal. Needless to say, Nino's sisters set out to derail the suspicious union.
As you might expect from this plot description, the remake rights for "Zus & Zo" have already been purchased. However, the plot details and characterizations might have to be somewhat sanitized for American consumption, as this rather wicked comedy delivers an extremely casual treatment of such topics as adultery. Not to mention the subplot in which one of the husbands must endure a series of particularly painful urological tests. The film opens today at New York's Quad Cinema.
Nino's sisters all have ample reason to want to escape to sunny Portugal. Wanda, a struggling artist, would like to open a gallery. Sonja, a writer, wants to put a crimp on her husband's adulterous activities. And Michelle, who runs a home for young war refugees, would like to abandon her philanthropic life in favor of something a little more selfish. Their schemes to wreck Nino's marriage generally revolve around getting him back together with the handsome television chef he's in love with, but they are unwittingly hindered by his oblivious fiancee.
Director-screenwriter Paula van der Oest infuses the proceedings with too much forced wackiness and overly contrived and complicated situations, but she certainly earns points for originality. Fortunately, the performers, particularly Jacob Derwig as the hapless Nino, Pieter Embrechts as the object of his affections (deliciously named Felix Delicious) and Theu Boermans as the husband coping with a variety of medical invasions of his genitalia, fully embrace the ludicrous aspects of their roles, with frequently hilarious results.
ZUS AND ZO
Lifesize Entertainment
Credits:
Director-screenwriter: Paula van der Oest
Producer: Jacqueline de Goeij
Director of photography: Bert Pot
Production designer: Harry Ammerlaan: Editor: Sander Vos
Music: Fons Merkies
Cast:
Sonja: Monic Hendrickx
Wanda: Anneke Blok
Michelle: Sylvia Poorta
Nino: Jacob Derwig
Bo: Halina Reijn
Jan: Jaap Spijkers
Hugo: Theu Boermans
Mother: Annet Nieuwehhuijzen
Felix: Pieter Embrechts
Running time -- 100 minutes
No MPAA rating...
NEW YORK -- This eccentric Dutch comedy, Holland's official entry for the Academy Awards, concerns the conflicts that arise between three sisters and their heretofore gay brother Nino, who suddenly announces that he is engaged to marry the beautiful, and quite female, Bo.
Normally, this would not be much of a problem, except that the marriage conveniently fulfills a clause in their parents' will which stipulates that if Nino marries he stands to inherit the family's beautiful beachside resort in Portugal. Needless to say, Nino's sisters set out to derail the suspicious union.
As you might expect from this plot description, the remake rights for "Zus & Zo" have already been purchased. However, the plot details and characterizations might have to be somewhat sanitized for American consumption, as this rather wicked comedy delivers an extremely casual treatment of such topics as adultery. Not to mention the subplot in which one of the husbands must endure a series of particularly painful urological tests. The film opens today at New York's Quad Cinema.
Nino's sisters all have ample reason to want to escape to sunny Portugal. Wanda, a struggling artist, would like to open a gallery. Sonja, a writer, wants to put a crimp on her husband's adulterous activities. And Michelle, who runs a home for young war refugees, would like to abandon her philanthropic life in favor of something a little more selfish. Their schemes to wreck Nino's marriage generally revolve around getting him back together with the handsome television chef he's in love with, but they are unwittingly hindered by his oblivious fiancee.
Director-screenwriter Paula van der Oest infuses the proceedings with too much forced wackiness and overly contrived and complicated situations, but she certainly earns points for originality. Fortunately, the performers, particularly Jacob Derwig as the hapless Nino, Pieter Embrechts as the object of his affections (deliciously named Felix Delicious) and Theu Boermans as the husband coping with a variety of medical invasions of his genitalia, fully embrace the ludicrous aspects of their roles, with frequently hilarious results.
ZUS AND ZO
Lifesize Entertainment
Credits:
Director-screenwriter: Paula van der Oest
Producer: Jacqueline de Goeij
Director of photography: Bert Pot
Production designer: Harry Ammerlaan: Editor: Sander Vos
Music: Fons Merkies
Cast:
Sonja: Monic Hendrickx
Wanda: Anneke Blok
Michelle: Sylvia Poorta
Nino: Jacob Derwig
Bo: Halina Reijn
Jan: Jaap Spijkers
Hugo: Theu Boermans
Mother: Annet Nieuwehhuijzen
Felix: Pieter Embrechts
Running time -- 100 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 2/7/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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