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The 4th Man

Original title: De vierde man
  • 1983
  • Unrated
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
9.1K
YOUR RATING
Thom Hoffman, Jeroen Krabbé, and Renée Soutendijk in The 4th Man (1983)
Erotic ThrillerDramaMysteryThriller

A man who has been having visions of an impending danger begins an affair with a woman who may lead him to his doom.A man who has been having visions of an impending danger begins an affair with a woman who may lead him to his doom.A man who has been having visions of an impending danger begins an affair with a woman who may lead him to his doom.

  • Director
    • Paul Verhoeven
  • Writers
    • Gerard Reve
    • Gerard Soeteman
  • Stars
    • Jeroen Krabbé
    • Renée Soutendijk
    • Thom Hoffman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    9.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paul Verhoeven
    • Writers
      • Gerard Reve
      • Gerard Soeteman
    • Stars
      • Jeroen Krabbé
      • Renée Soutendijk
      • Thom Hoffman
    • 58User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 4:09
    Trailer

    Photos82

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    Top cast18

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    Jeroen Krabbé
    Jeroen Krabbé
    • Gerard Reve
    Renée Soutendijk
    Renée Soutendijk
    • Christine Halsslag
    Thom Hoffman
    Thom Hoffman
    • Herman
    Dolf de Vries
    • Dr. de Vries
    Geert de Jong
    • Ria
    Hans Veerman
    Hans Veerman
    • Begrafenisondernemer
    Hero Muller
    Hero Muller
    • Josefs
    Caroline de Beus
    • Adrienne
    Reinout Bussemaker
    • Eerste echtgenoot
    Erik J. Meijer
    • Tweede echtgenoot
    Ursul de Geer
    • Derde echtgenoot
    Filip Bolluyt
    • Surfer
    Hedda Lornie
    • Verkoopster boekhandel
    Paul Nygaard
    • Violist
    Guus van der Made
    • Treinkelner
    Pamela Teves
    • Verpleegster
    Hella Faassen
    Hella Faassen
    • Vrouw bij lezing
    Helen Hedy
    • Verkoopster AKO
    • Director
      • Paul Verhoeven
    • Writers
      • Gerard Reve
      • Gerard Soeteman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews58

    7.19K
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    Featured reviews

    tmensamaster-2

    Astonishingly directed by Paul Verhoeven

    Paul Verhoeven is known in Hollywood as a maker of ultra-violent, ultra-sleazy films. 'Showgirls' bears the brunt of many bad movie jokes and 'Total Recall' and 'Robocop' are known to be very entertaining but stupid. Depending on who you talk to, 'Basic Instinct' is either sleazy trash or an erotic masterpiece. These films definitely do not belong to the art category: They are Hollywood entertainment. Most people think that is all Verhoeven can do. They will be surprised, as I was, that his Dutch films are suitably different. They are art-house material and several times have been nominated by several critic's associations as Best Foreign Picture. De Vierde Man [The Fourth Man] is his most notable accomplishment It is truly astonishing: It is eerie, gory, sexy and chilling with an amusing and involving performance by Jeroen Krabbe as a bisexual writer who bites off more than he can chew in a sexy hairdresser in the form of blonde Soutendijk.

    Krabbe plays real-life writer Gerard Reve whose books are very well-known in the world of literature. He is asked to speak at a function attended by several prominent literary fans. Strange clues are revealed in his journey. He has a hallucination on the commuter train of an eye squishing and oozing through a hotel room door and of his name on a coffin. Later, at the function, a strange woman follows him with a camera, videotaping his every move. She is Christine Halsslag, a hairdresser who is incidently the groups treasurer and says she is videotaping him as '' a memory of his visit''. Though Reve is annoyed by her pestering camera, they seem to hit it off. She shows him the hotel where the group has paid for his room in case he is too tired to go home on the train. His eyes widen, it is the same hotel where the eye oozed through the door. Seeing he is unnerved, Christine asks him if he wants to stay with her. He accepts her offer and.....Things really begin to hit it off......

    Soon, some strange things are revealed. It seems that Chrissy's been married three times and her three husbands have died rather bizarre deaths. After seeing a picture of Christine's sometime boyfriend. Herrman, Reve becomes determined to sleep with him and tries to manipulate Christine to invite Herrman back. But, who is doing the real manipulating?

    The film is set up similar to a Kubrick film in that everything is told in riddles and visuals that tell the story in a way that resembles some kind of fable of good and evil. The film has much religious symbolism: the opening shot is of a spider crawling over the figure of Christ on the cross and Reve himself seems to have religious visions of what may be the Virgin Mary. Christine herself begins to act strangely: she drives a bit too recklessly for him. The film is very similar to Verhoeven's 'Basic Instinct' in that we have a main character who may be fatally attracted to a killer and the potential murderess has a cold, kinky style that is too strong to resist. Soutendijk even has a resemblance to Sharon Stone: the blonde hair, the sexy yet evil smile, she's like a dramatic version of Elizabeth Hurley's devil in 'Bedazzled'. She so obviously but so easily poisoning him with her sexiness, she is like a devil, tempting the hero with endless pleasure for a high price. If the Virgin Mary finds it so important to protect Reve, isn't it conceivable that Christine is a manifestation of the devil. A behavior near the end seems to suggest this, she is done with Reve and needs to move on to a new soul

    Believe it or not, I haven't given away anything. The film twists in so many directions that some things may or may not have ever happened. The film is astonishingly and intelligently directed by Verhoeven and after seeing this, you will be tempted to see his other Dutch films before he was Hollywoodized. Afterwards, I found myself wishing that Verhoeven would do another one of these, a sexy, smart and stunning film.
    7axlrhodes

    There would have been no Basic Instinct without The Fourth Man.

    As a huge fan of Paul Verhoeven's contribution to Hollywood in the late 80's and early 90's i found myself compelled to dig deeper to investigate some of his Dutch language offerings. I started with this, The Fourth Man. One of my favourite films of the early 90's was Basic Instinct. That film had a larger than life appeal and the two actors, Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone fizzed together on screen. Watching The Fourth Man was like meeting Basic Instinct's older, slightly more weathered sister. The film doesn't have the gloss of Basic Instinct, but i still found it to be a useful and interesting experience. The similarities with it's more celebrated and younger counterpart are all there to be seen. The writer, the bisexual element, the blonde femme fatale who enjoys taking risks involving driving too fast, the blood, the sex, i think you get the picture. The Fourth Man isn't without it's own surprises though. Some of the symbolism is truly shocking and provocative. One particular scene in a Catholic church will really push buttons, but i guess that's Verhoeven and that's why i love his work. For me, The Fourth Man would never go down as a true classic. Sure it has some stand out moments and some very good ideas, but the execution wasn't there for me. That said, without it we may never have had Basic Instinct so for that, i am thankful.
    FilmFlaneur

    Verhoeven's Answer to the Critics

    Verhoeven's Fourth Man was apparently his answer to those carping Dutch critics who had been so offended by the casual working class realism and frankness he familiarised in Turkish Delight, Business is Business & etc. Gone is the simple story line, the concern with contemporary issues, 'offensive' humour and the prominence of working girls as characters. Instead Verhoeven and his scriptwriter have substituted a hot house of religious imagery, 'literary' associations, obscure motivations and a deliberately overwrought atmosphere, guaranteed to please those who value an 'art house' ideal over the rougher product the director had been making. Perhaps surprisingly, it is a largely successful concoction, and pleased both audiences and the critics. The joke is still a joke, but it is all so well done, and carried off with such dark glee and verve, that Verhoeven's private fun in his task becomes public.

    Having dished out his private joke to the conservative arbiters of Dutch film taste, it wasn't long before the frustrated director was lured off to Hollywood. Here he achieved a more perfect - and sincere - synthesis of vision, style, and message in the more familiar films that have confirmed his reputation.
    8The_Void

    Stylish, challenging and intriguing

    Paul Verhoeven's predecessor to his breakout hit 'Basic Instinct' is a stylish and shocking neo-noir thriller. Verhoeven has become known for making somewhat sleazy trash films, both in his native Holland and in America and this film is one of the reasons why. The Fourth Man follows the strange story of Gerard Reve (played by Jeroen Krabbé); a gay, alcoholic and slightly mad writer who goes to Vlissingen to give a talk on the stories he writes. While there, he meets the seductive Christine Halsslag (Renée Soutendijk) who takes him back to her house where he discovers a handsome picture of one of her lovers and proclaims that he will meet him, even if it kills him.

    Paul Verhoeven twists the truth many times in this film, and that ensures that you never quite know where you are with it. Many of the occurrences in The Fourth Man could be what they appear to be, but they could easily be interpreted as something else entirely and this keeps the audience on the edge of their seats for the duration, and also makes the film work as this narrative is what it thrives on. Paul Verhoeven is not a filmmaker that feels he has to restrain himself, and that is one of things I like best about him. This film features a very shocking scene that made me feel ill for hours afterwards (and that doesn't happen very often!). I wont spoil it because it needs the surprise element to work...but you'll see what I mean when you see the film (make sure you get the uncut version!). There is also a number of other macabre scenes that are less shocking than the one I've mentioned, but are lovely nonetheless; a man gets eaten by lions, another one has a pipe sent through his skull, a boat is smashed in half...lovely.

    The acting in The Fourth Man isn't anything to write home about, but it's solid throughout. Jeroen Krabbé holds the audience's attention and looks the part as the drunken writer. It is Renée Soutendijk that impresses the most, though, as the femme fatale at the centre of the tale. Her performance is what Sharon Stone would imitate nine years later with Basic Instinct, but the original fatale did it best. Paul Verhoeven's direction is solid throughout as he directs our attention through numerous points of view, all of which help to create the mystery of the story. Verhoeven has gone on to make some rubbish, but he obviously has talent and it's a shame that he doesn't put it to better use. Of all the Verhoeven films I've seen, this is the best and although it might be difficult to come across; trust me, it's worth the effort.
    10preppy-3

    One of Verhoeven's best

    In Holland a gay writer Gerard (Jeroen Krabbe) gives a lecture. He stays overnight with a beautiful woman Christine (Renee Soutendijk) and has sex with her (by imagining she's a boy). He plans to leave the next day, but gets a look at a picture of Christine's hunky boyfriend Herman (Thom Hoffman) and decides to stay to have a try at him. Then things get strange.

    A big X-rated art house hit in the US in 1983. Why was it X rated? Let's see...there's strangulation, full frontal male and female nudity, castration, mutilation, simulated sex, a scene in a church with a cross that will shock most people, a gay sex scene in a crypt...and it's all a comedy!!!!! Paul Verhoeven made this after "Spetters". "Spetters" was attacked by the critics for it's extreme sexual sequences and denounced as trash. So, Verhoeven filled this film with very obvious symbolism thinking the critics would think it was art and praise it. He was right! Critics loved the film not realizing that Verhoeven was playing a big joke on them. Still, it's a great film.

    It's beautifully shot by Jan de Bont (now a director himself) and there's so much symbolism and obvious "hidden" layers in the dialogue that you're never bored. All the acting is great--Krabbe plays a thoroughly despicable character but (somehow) has you rooting for him; Soutendijk is just stunning to look at and plays her part to perfection--the little smile she gives when Gerard agrees to stay with her is chilling; Hoffman is extremely handsome with a great body--he deserves credit for doing the church sequence and going at with Krabbe in the crypt.

    This is not for people easily offended or the weak of heart, but if you like extreme movies that playfully challenge you (like me) this is for you! A 10 all the way.

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    Related interests

    Sharon Stone in Basic Instinct (1992)
    Erotic Thriller
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Forty actors were tested for the part of Herman. Thom Hoffman got the part because he was the only actor bold enough to give Jeroen Krabbé a French kiss during his screentest.
    • Goofs
      When Gerard and Herman go back to the convertible after a rainstorm, the car's interior is dry.
    • Quotes

      Gerard Reve, Herman: [are confronted with a sudden shower]

      Herman: Damn weather!

      Gerard Reve: [yelling and pointing to trees] There!

      Gerard Reve, Herman: [ran to the trees]

      Herman: We all get soaked!

      Gerard Reve: That one's open!

      Gerard Reve, Herman: In that tomb?

      Gerard Reve: Dead men don't bite, only live ones do.

      Gerard Reve, Herman: [going inside]

      Herman: [got licked by Gerard and turns towards him] Do you want to get hit?

      Gerard Reve: It wouldn't be the first time. But you won't.

      Herman: Won't I?

      Gerard Reve: No...

      [pulls up Herman's shirt, touches his breast]

      Herman: Do you think I'll like it?

      Gerard Reve: I'm gonna try...

      Herman: Keep going, Gerard.

      Gerard Reve: [kisses Herman] I saw you at the station... and your picture later on... such a beautiful boy.

      Gerard Reve: [after French kissing] I thought I've got to have him, even if it kills me.

      Herman: I like your spiel... nobody's ever told me that before.

      Gerard Reve: Spieling is my profession. I kept lobbying with Christine... and hoping that you would come.

      Herman: I like you going for me, Gerard.

      [going down on him]

      Gerard Reve: I, dirty old man.

    • Alternate versions
      Italian version is largely censored. It runs 98 minutes (more than 5 minutes shorter than the original version).
    • Connections
      Featured in Schau mir in die Augen, Kleiner (2007)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The 4th Man?Powered by Alexa
    • Is the main (male) character bisexual?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 24, 1983 (Netherlands)
    • Country of origin
      • Netherlands
    • Languages
      • Dutch
      • Flemish
      • Eastern Frisian
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Cetvrti covek
    • Filming locations
      • Vlissingen, Zeeland, Netherlands
    • Production companies
      • Rob Houwer Productions
      • Verenigde Nederlandsche Filmcompagnie (VNF)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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