DCSIMG
 
 

Victor Löw Movies

2008  
 
Add Reykjavik-Rotterdam to Queue Add Reykjavik-Rotterdam to top of Queue  
An Icelandic crime thriller with the gloss stripped away, director Oskar Jonasson's Reykjavik-Rotterdam hones in on a down-and-outer at the very end of his rope. For Kristofer (Baltasar Kormakur) life has been little more than a never ending series of failures and disappointments. Among other things, he made the colossal mistake of smuggling alcohol during his tenure as a shipworker - a little stunt that promptly landed him behind bars. Now, following release, he struggles to pull his life together while working as a security guard and continually attempts to support his family. Then the opportunity arises for Kristofer to do one final tour on a freighter running from Reykjavik, Iceland, to Rotterdam, Holland. Kristofer initially embraces the opportunity to work with his old friends once again - little foreseeing the malestorm of crime into which this move will plunge him. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Baltasar KormákurVictor Löw, (more)
 
2006  
 
Four ten year-old friends are forced to think out of the box in order to win back access to their favorite playground in this short film from director Jelmar Hufen. Two aggressive drunks have taken over the local playground, and when it becomes clear that the parents aren't going to help the kids enlist the aid of the neighborhood tough in hopes of driving out the alcoholic bullies. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Ruben van den BesselaarTom Schild, (more)
 
2001  
 
A cop convinces a friend on the wrong side of the law to trust him, only to see their lives endangered when someone else betrays that trust in this Dutch crime thriller. Eddy (Cas Jansen) is a police detective whose career seems stuck in neutral. Hoping for a promotion, he warily agrees to approach his old friend Jackie (Victor Low), a small-time hash dealer, and persuade him to act as an informant as the police try to put Haveman (Ton Kas), one of the nation's biggest dope wholesalers, behind bars. Jackie and his wife have just become parents, and Jackie thinks becoming a police informant might prevent him from doing serious time if he's ever busted, so he agrees to cooperate with Eddy under the condition that his status as an informer be kept a strict secret. But Eddy soon discovers that someone in the department has been leaking information about Jackie's secret testimony, which puts both Jackie and Eddy's lives in great danger. Lek was directed by Jean van de Velde, who enjoyed a pair of major box-office successes in the Netherlands with All Stars and De Kleine Blonde Dood. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Cas JansenRicky Koole, (more)
 
2000  
 
Eddy Terstall directs this wacky, lighthearted Dutch comedy. Tired of his successful screenwriter girlfriend Monique's (Rifka Lodeizen) constant kvetching about his lack of motivation, failed artist Alfred (Marc van Uchelen) moves out on her in order to start a business. His scheme is to hire out friends for every occasion and much to everyone's surprise, it proves to be a monstrous success. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Marc van UchelenRifka Lodeizen, (more)
 
2000  
R  
Add Everybody's Famous! to Queue Add Everybody's Famous! to top of Queue  
Just how far should a father go to help his daughter gain fame and fortune? Jean (Josse De Pauw) lives in a working-class Belgian community, where he holds down a job at a bottle factory with his friend Willy (Werner De Smedt). Jean and his wife Chantal (Gert Portael) have a teenage daughter, Marva (Eva van der Gucht), who like her father, is interested in music; Jean likes to write songs in his spare time, while Marva dreams of becoming a singer. But Jean's songs don't seem to impress anyone but Willy, and while Marva has a good voice, she's overweight, has little charisma, and seems a poor prospect for success in show business. When the bottle factory is shut down, both Jean and Willy are thrown into dire circumstances, and Jean is trying to figure out how to support his family when his car breaks down in the middle of nowhere. He is offered a ride by a friendly stranger, whom Jean soon recognizes as Debbie (Thekla Reuten), a well-known pop singer. In a flash of ill-advised inspiration, Jean gives Debbie a heavily drugged beverage, and after she passes out, he spirits her away to a cottage in the woods. He then contacts Debbie's manager (Victor Low), informing him that he has the star hidden away -- and if he ever wants to see her again, Marva has to be given a chance to sing on national television. Iedereen Beroemd! was shown in competition at the 2000 Venice Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Josse de PauwWerner De Smedt, (more)
 
1999  
 
A suicidal man spends his last day on earth saying goodbye to his friends in this poignant Dutch comic-drama. Telling his friends he's leaving on an extended bicycle trip, Dirk Van Dijck spends the day catching up with his friends at a café, giving them his regards and posessions to hold onto. What they don't know is that the man, terribly depressed, intends to kill himself. No Trains, No Planes was chosen as the closing night feature at the 1999 Rotterdam Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Dirk van DijckEllen Ten Damme, (more)
 
1997  
R  
Add Character to Queue Add Character to top of Queue  
This dark drama from the Netherlands won the 1998 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Dreverhaven (Jan Decleir), the most ruthless and intimidating bailiff in Rotterdam, is brutally murdered, and a young attorney, Katadreuffe (Fedja Van Huet), is arrested in connection with the crime. Under questioning, the angry young lawyer reveals a hidden motive for the killing -- he is Dreverhaven's illegitimate son. Katadreuffe's mother, Joba (Betty Schuurman) had an affair with Dreverhaven but refused to marry him, preferring to raise her son on her own, despite her difficult economic circumstances. Eventually, Joba takes in a boarder, Jan Maan (Hans Kesting), and Jan becomes something of a father figure to the boy, urging him to improve himself and pursue new opportunities in business. As a young man, Katadreuffe takes Jan's advice to heart and obtains a bank loan to open a cigar shop. The shop soon fails, and Katadreuffe must negotiate terms with the bank to pay off his debt. The young man discovers that the bank is managed by Dreverhaven and learns that his father has no desire to help him. While obtaining legal advice on his problems with the bank, Katadreuffe becomes interested in the study of law, and after a great deal of struggle, he makes his way through law school and obtains a low-level position with a prominent legal firm. However, his father often appears along the way, berating Katadreuffe and convincing him that he's doomed for failure, until the young man becomes convinced that Dreverhaven controls his entire life and wants nothing more than to destroy him. Karakter was based on a novel by Ferdinand Bordewijk that was a major bestseller in the Netherlands. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Fedja van HuêtJan Decleir, (more)
 
1995  
R  
Add Antonia's Line to Queue Add Antonia's Line to top of Queue  
A strong-willed Dutch woman recalls her life in this uplifting picture that won the 1996 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Antonia (Willeke van Ammelrooy) is an elderly woman who wakes up one morning and realizes that this is the last day of her life. She begins to tell her story in flashback, beginning with her arrival home to the family farm after World War II with her daughter, Danielle (Els Dottermans). For the next fifty years, a variety of colorful characters come and go on the farm. Danielle becomes a painter, and decides she wants a child but no husband, so Antonia arranges the proper donation. Danielle giving birth to Therese (Veerle van Overloop), who laters has her own child, Sarah (Thyrza Ravesteijn), also without virtue of a husband. Antonia and her descendants come to symbolize the freedom of independent females, with little need for men in their lives. ~ Don Kaye, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Willeke van AmmelrooyJan Decleir, (more)
 
1994  
 
A professional woman falls in love with a potentially murderous neighbor in her apartment building in this gripping Dutch thriller. Roos, a divorcee doctor with a young son, has just moved into her ultra-modern apartment beside the sea. One of her first visitors is Eric, an attractive copywriter who shares his suspicions that fellow tenant and housekeeper for Roos may be in danger. Sure enough, the housekeeper is found murdered in her apartment. Meanwhile, Roos is being harassed by an obscene caller. Unbeknownst to her, she is also being spied upon by a binocular toting peeper. Eric becomes buddies with her son Davy. Soon he tries to buddy up to her, and despite the warnings of other tenants, finds herself equally attracted to him. Eric is arrested as a suspect for the housekeeper's murder and also on the suspicion that he killed his wife and Roos begins to feel paranoid. Her fear increases when another woman in the building is found strangled. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Renée SoutendijkVictor Löw, (more)
 
1993  
 
Whether it is the duck in the box she is carrying, or something else that's in there with it, Sacha (Loes Wouterson) is being followed by some very unsavory characters. She agreed to hold it as a favor to a stranger, and since then, she has been mugged, and has had to seek refuge with two pretty scary men (Victor Löw and Jack Wouterse) who keep casting greedy glances not at the box, but at her violin. She is a violinist, and was on her way to Amsterdam to tell her boyfriend that she is pregnant. Instead, as she hides from her pursuers with these two bums, she strikes up an unexpected romance. Along the way, her rescuers share with her what they think The Three Best Things in Life are. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Loes WoutersonVictor Löw, (more)
 
1992  
 
Alex van Warmerdam's award-winning second feature is set in a remote small Dutch village in the early 1960s. The village is actually just one street of a new town that was never completed, and the behavior of its inhabitants is invariably determined by their unsolved sexual problems, leading to a number of comic situations depicted in a tradition of absurdist black humor. The director himself plays a curious postman who can't live without opening other people's letters. ~ Yuri German, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Jack WouterseRudolf Lucieer, (more)
 

Shopping Cart

Your cart is empty.
Any items you add will
appear here until checkout.