Het Bombardement

Het Bombardement

Dutch film poster
Directed by Ate de Jong
Produced by San Fu Maltha
Written by Ate de Jong
Paul Ruven
Starring Jan Smit
Monic Hendrickx
Roos van Erkel
Gerard Cox
Pieter van der Sman
Music by Fons Merkies
Distributed by Dutch FilmWorks
Release dates
  • 19 December 2012 (2012-12-19)
Running time
104 minutes
Country Netherlands
Language Dutch

Het Bombardement (Dutch for The Bombing) is a 2012 Dutch film directed by Ate de Jong and produced by San Fu Maltha, starring Jan Smit and Roos van Erkel. The film story line begins shortly before the Bombing of Rotterdam and concerns the story of an impossible love between a young boxer (Smit) and an engaged girl (Van Erkel) as the Second World War reaches the Netherlands. The film was critically panned following its release.[1][2][3]

Plot

The film is set in May 1940 in and around the city of Rotterdam, where the young bakers assistant (and aspiring amateur boxer) Vincent de Graaf meets the wealthy Eva von Heerle, the daughter of German refugees who've fled Nazi Germany. Eva is engaged to Dirk Lagerwaard, a wealthy older industrial whom she does not love, whereas Vincent wants to emigrate to the United States to find a cure for his sick brother. The two fall in love. As German troops invade the Netherlands, Vincent offers Dirk to bring Eva and her parents to Rotterdam resulting in a dangerous journey through the frontlines as Dutch and German troops clash in bitter combat. As the two reach Rotterdam, an ultimatum is delivered to the Dutch troops defending the city in which they are summoned to surrender immediately or face destruction, the Dutch soldiers refuse and Rotterdam is bombed, changing the future for everyone involved.[4]

Reception

The film received negative reviews. Several critics attacked the films plot, which was said to be a bad imitation of the story line of Titanic (1997). Both concerned an impossible love between a lower class boy and an upper class girl already engaged to wealthy but unloving older man culminating in a dramatic disaster.[5][6] Others considered many of the characters to be stereotypes and criticized the film for its corny dialogues, bad acting and predictability,[7] the De Telegraaf finding the romance plot to be as predictable as the bombing itself.[8] The film also provoked public outcry from several survivors of the Rotterdam bombing, who were offended that the bombing was used as a mere plot element for a simplistic romance film. The Algemeen Dagblad called the film poorly made and offensive to the victims of the bombing[9] with a Belgian critic going on to say that watching the film was the worst experience in his life.[10]

References

External links

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