The Girl with the Red Hair (1981) Poster

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7/10
It's a washed out world
Chip_douglas30 December 2005
Renée Soutendijk plays her first leading role as a young law student who joins the Dutch resistance in WWII and trains to be a liquidator. Having already garnered attention the year before in Paul Verhoeven's controversial "Spetters", Soutendijk decided to leave the sitcom Zeg 'ns Aaa (wich had not yet found a big audience) to concentrate on a career in film rather than television. The movie was shot to resemble black and white pictures from the period and looks suitably bleak and gray, making the lead characters's red hair stand out even more. Eventually circumstances force her to dye it (it made her the most recognizable resistance fighter) and at that point both the story and the film seem to lose all color. Not that there was anything to laugh about in the first place.

Debutant director and co-writer Ben Verbong decided to omit any references to Jannetje Johanna Schaft (the girl with the red hair) being a communist, even though that was one of the main reasons for her to join the resistance. There is hardly any dialog anyway, as none of the group members want too much emotional attachments. Even when she get romantically involved with fellow resistance fighter Hugo, they never seem especially passionate. The sparseness of the spoken word makes this picture seem even more like a psychological study of the lengths people will go to in desperate times as we watch the title character struggle with becoming a hit woman on a bicycle.

Although the film is certainly well made and Soutendijk proves to be a capable lead, there is absolutely nothing uplifting in the entire picture. The combination of long silent scenes and colorless photography makes for quite a depressive sitting. The period is recreated in great detail, with only Loes Luca's different hairstyles seeming to be a little out of place at times. Verbong and Soutendijk teamed up again in 1994 for the "Sliver" like thriller 'De Flat'. This marked Renée's return to Dutch films after a stint in Hollywood and Verbong's goodbye from his homeland, as he decided to move to Germany after wards.

7 out of 10
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10/10
One of the better and more authentic Dutch ww2 movies
jufjo31 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This movie is very well made, very authentic and accurate. The feeling and atmosphere grips you right away. It does leave out the Communism part of the story but it wasn't as important as the other writer suggests. Hannie became a communist after she joined the group, it wasn't her motive for joining. She joined the communist group because they were the one of the few groups that took up arms and allowed women to fight as well. But yes, it is a shame that this didn't make the story. I also would have liked to see more about the Versteeg-sisters, their story is as interesting, perhaps even more then Hannies story. What upsets me is that Hannies last words were not in the movie. According to those who were there at the time Hannie was shot once but not killed right away. She then remarked; "I shoot better then you", before being killed with a machine gun.

Still, a great movie, cheaper and older then Black Book (Zwartboek) by Paul Verhoeven, but a LOT better and MUCH more authentic.
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9/10
very interesting
spookie289012 March 2005
Warning: Spoilers
i watched this movie in my nederlands class at school and i was very interested by it. its quite suspenseful at times. at one point i even tried to yell "Kijk uit!" (look out) when something was about to happen. That's me and movies. I yell at the characters. Anyway, it is a true historical story of a dark time during war in the 1940s. The ending is quite sad, though as the girl gets murdered two weeks before the end of the war, even after trying all these ways to stay out of the hands of the police for murdering traitors. i highly suggest this movie. don't worry its not just another war movie. it has an interesting plot and its not too hard to understand.
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1/10
Chauvinistic and Unhistorical
fedwords19 September 2018
Feminism must not have been very strong in 1981 in the Netherlands if this film gained any popular acclaim there. I say this because "the girl with the red hair," Hannie Schaft, an actual member of the Dutch Resistance to German occupation in World War II, isn't favorably depicted. She is shown as constantly conflicted about and uncomfortable with her resistance work, doesn't do any of it well, and repeatedly fails. Thus she is just what we would expect from a "fragile female" trying to perform "men's work"--the exact stereotype that the real Hannie Schaft struggled so much against. Therefore, if this film ever played well with Dutch audiences, it could only have been because the filmmakers managed to elicit sympathy for the protagonist by making her every bit as weak and uncertain as they imagined the women in the audience to be. But in reality, people who take on dangerous espionage, sabotage, and assassination work (or join the military)--and who stay with it any length of time--aren't like the rest of us. They gain a toughness and skill which allows them to succeed, as the real Hannie Schaft did--enough to make the German occupiers want her dead, even as the war was ending. Moreover, this film is historically superficial in its treatment of Schaft, failing completely to cover or even mention her sabotage work or include her famous partnership with the Oversteegen sisters (the very resistance fighters who helped immortalize her after the war).
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