The 4th Man (1983) Poster

(1983)

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8/10
You don't want to watch, but you can't turn away!
jonathandoe_se7en20 September 2001
Paul Verhoeven's De Vierde Man (The Fourth Man) is one of the most compelling thrillers I have ever seen. It really was a pleasant surprise. The story concerns bi-sexual writer Gerard (Jeroen Krabbe), as he is lured into a relationship with beautiful hairdresser Christine (Renée Soutendijk), but in the twisted mind of Gerard there could be more to the story. Verhoeven and cinematographer Jan De Bont create a beautiful and thick atmosphere full of surreal and sickening sexual imagery, this really pulls you into the story, you don't want to watch, but you can't turn yourself away. This is by far Verhoeven's best film (maybe second only to Robocop). True The Fourth Man isn't for everyone, some of the sex scenes are quite gratuitous (just ignore them, but trust me, if you watch for at least ten minutes you'll be hooked. This is one of those films that you need to know how it ends, a true whodunit it in the Hitchcock tradition, compelling, controversial and thrilling. I even like the spider metaphor.

8/10
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8/10
Lie the Truth
claudio_carvalho1 January 2010
The morbid Catholic writer Gerard Reve (Jeroen Krabbé) that is homosexual, alcoholic and has frequent visions of death is invited to give a lecture in the literature club of Vlissingen. While in the railway station in Amsterdam, he feels a non-corresponded attraction to a handsome man that embarks in another train. Gerard is introduced to the treasurer of the club and beautician Christine Halsslag (Renée Soutendijk), who is a wealthy widow that owns the beauty shop Sphinx, and they have one night stand. On the next morning, Gerard sees the picture of Christine's boyfriend Herman (Thom Hoffman) and he recognizes him as the man he saw in the train station. He suggests her to bring Herman to her house to spend a couple of days together, but with the secret intention of seducing the man. Christine travels to Köln to bring her boyfriend and Gerard stays alone in her house. He drinks whiskey and snoops her safe, finding three film reels with names of men; he decides to watch the footages and discover that Christine had married the three guys and all of them died in tragic accidents. Later Gerard believes Christine is a witch and question whether Herman or him will be her doomed fourth husband.

The ambiguous "The Vierde Man" is another magnificent feature of Paul Verhoeven in his Dutch phase. The story is supported by an excellent screenplay that uses Catholic symbols to build the tension associated to smart dialogs; magnificent performance of Jeroen Krabbé in the role of a disturbed alcoholic writer; and stunning cinematography. The inconclusive resolution is open to interpretation like in many European movies that explore the common sense and intelligence of the viewers. There are mediocre directors that use front nudity of men to promote their films; however, Paul Verhoeven uses the nudity of Gerard Reve as part of the plot and never aggressive or seeking out sensationalism. Last but not the least; the androgynous beauty of the sexy Renée Soutendijk perfectly fits to her role of a woman that attracts a gay writer. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "O 4o Homem" ("The 4th Man")
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8/10
Psychological Suspense with Shades of Lolita...
Xstal13 June 2020
... but without the age thing and with a man instead of a girl. Not many things from the 80s age this well. Visions of impending doom and a boyish blonde drive an author with a swollen liver to the brink of insanity and an ever growing belief in a holy saviour.
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Surreal, atmospheric, coolly erotic thriller with shades of hidden depth
ThreeSadTigers18 March 2008
Well known for being something of a run-through for the infamous Basic Instinct (1992), The Fourth Man (1983) remains one of maverick director Paul Verhoeven's greatest works. Like Basic Instinct, The Fourth Man blends sex and death in a delicious cocktail of mystery, suspense and exaggerated imagery; telling a story of seduction and paranoia through the eyes and mind of an unreliable narrator. In this instance, Gerard Reve; an alcoholic writer of lurid pulp fiction, who in the film's subtle and darkly sardonic opening sequence, staggers out of bed, naked and hung-over, and - in a scene of quiet confusion and matter of fact precision - garrottes his homosexual lover to the point of asphyxiation. Right from the start, Verhoeven is skilfully introducing those aforementioned themes of sex and death, as well as establishing the air of incredibly dark humour, symbolism and that sense of blurring the lines between fact and fiction to near incomprehensible levels of uncertainty, all of which will permeate the film's very core.

Verhoeven has often claimed that the somewhat skewed, surreal and heavily atmospheric look and feel of the film was purposely stylised to an almost obvious degree in order to placate the high-brow Dutch film critics who had, at that particular time in his career, dismissed previous films such as Keetje Tippel (1975) and Spetters (1980) as lurid sensationalism. Whether or not this is the case is open to debate, but what most impresses here is Verhoeven's energy and skill in presenting such a taut and labyrinthine thriller that seems to draw as much on the surreal and coolly evocative psychodrama of a filmmaker like Ingmar Bergman as it does on the twisted world of Alfred Hitchcock. From beginning to end, The Fourth Man offers old fashioned suspense and bold strokes of drama, all contrasted and juxtaposed against the director's moody, European style and liberal bursts of violence and eroticism. The design of the film - rich with over-saturated light and colour, shades of autumn and lingering camera movements - suggest a world hinged somewhere between the noir-like stylisation of Bernardo Bertolucci's The Conformist (1970) and the vibrant, lurid surrealism of Dario Argento's Suspiria (1977), to add further depths to the already densely layered mystery, and to create a world that seems real, but at the same time, entirely dreamlike.

The film works on a number of levels; on the one-hand, as a piece of pure entertainment, with Verhoeven's always memorable use of imagery - both grotesque and beautiful - and his scenes of upfront and often confrontational violence and sexuality. The film is as much about sexuality and desire as it is about sex; with Gerard introduced initially as gay, though he later has an affair with the central femme-fatale, but only after he has flattened her small breasts with his hands and confessed that she "looks like a boy". Later in the film he will seduce the fiancé of this character and again raise questions pertaining to the film's central enigma. In the most telling scene, Gerard attends a Q&A session for his new book. When someone in the audience asks him about his secret for writing, Gerard replies "I lie the truth". Perhaps a poor subtitle translation, but the implication that Gerard sees the world through a somewhat false perspective is certainly there; with the further elements of alcoholism, sexual confusion, lust and paranoia creating a fascinating central character, quite possibly creating the story in his mind as it moves along.

There are Hitchcockian allusions as noted, with the cold, blonde femme-fatale person represented by Christine, who has an air of subtle menace and great sexuality. Is Gerard seducing her or is she seducing Gerard, and just why have three of her past husbands turned up dead in recent years? Is Gerard imagining all of this? Is he genuinely interested in Christine, or is he more interested in getting closer to the man in her life? Are his reasons purely sexual or are they a further fuelled by his lurid obsessions with death? Questions like this crop up constantly with The Fourth Man, with Verhoeven denying the audience easy answers and instead plunging headlong into surreal visions of rotting eyeballs, strung-up meat carcasses, puddles of blood and the juxtaposition of homoerotic yearning with Christ-like metaphors. There's also a continual use of black-widow symbolism apparent right from the start, as well as all the elements coming together at the end in a sort of tragic foreshadowing of events. Even then, do we believe Gerard and his wild accusations, or is this just another example of the alcoholic, over-sexed writer "lying the truth" for the purposes of fiction.

The Fourth Man is a film that I haven't seen in a long time, but its images and story have always stayed with me. On my initial viewing in 2001, my familiarity with Verhoeven was based purely on his satirical Hollywood pictures, principally Robocop (1986), Total Recall (1991) and Starship Troopers (1997). I was also fairly unfamiliar with European cinema in general, meaning that the film's bold scenes of both straight and gay sex, nudity and imagined (or are they?) scenes of surreal, sexualised violence were a real revelation. A few years later I returned to the film and found it just as fascinating; with the labyrinthine plot, moody visuals, bold performances and totally entrancing story and character drawing me in; offering a great central mystery that is visually captivating and rife with a myriad of potential interpretations. It's easy to say that The Fourth Man is one of my favourite films; filled with cool irony, controversial images and ideas, and a completely fascinating, dreamlike evocation of the story at hand.
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6/10
An unapologetic Catholic fairy tale put into the dress of a thriller
Not even a year ago I probably would have said that 'The Fourth Man' insults my intelligence as a viewer for lacking a good sense of realism among other things, but it really is an unapologetic Catholic fairy tale put into the dress of a thriller. There isn't much about this plot that is realistic, some of it even was played deliberately campy, it seems, I'm especially thinking of the flashbacks that show the deaths of certain characters, if you have seen the film you will know which scene I'm thinking of, it's like out of a Hammer film production. If we wouldn't know better from Paul Verhoeven's body of work we would assume that the film was made by a religious fanatic who really believes in occultism, prevision, the literal truth of the bible and other mythical matters and wants the audience to believe all of them too. 'De vierde man' - if it wants to be cherished - certainly requires its audience to just roll with it and accept those things as a given for the sake of the film.

What really is the intended appeal for the audience is questionable overall since we know from start on that the blonde (Christine) has nothing good in mind for Gerard (while for long passages it plays it relatively straight as a romance where the viewer is supposed to care for both characters) and that it involves fantastic elements, although to which extend those things are true and prevalent we find out during the course of the movie, and I have to say that it goes all the way in both affairs. How it uses homosexuality as a plot device...I don't want to say it trivializes the topic, but it really is used without much psychological depth, it doesn't make Gerard a much more complex character, instead it feels like it's just used to drive along the plot and as such it feels tacked on. But it's funny how this creates a plot situation that is reminiscent of 'Lolita'. Gerard agrees to stay with the blonde just to get to her boyfriend who he is in love with, so Gerard plays the lover in order to reach real love, and again it is sort of a taboo love, certainly not as taboo as the love of Humbert Humbert to the 12-year-old Dolores, but still.

No doubt 'De vierde man' should have an appeal to fans of surrealist cinema with its blunt symbolism and the protagonist's fears turned into physical reality, without the filmmakers giving a priority to plausibility or even coherence, not even coherence of characters. Christine not only is the personified evil who in retrospect can't convince as a being with a soul, but her ability to foresee so precisely how Gerard would act upon her vicious setups can't make her human, and that's where we come full circle, because it is an unapologetic fairy tale and as such it's not necessary for its characters to be convincing human beings, it's enough for them to be human-like. For films though I can not so easily accept this concept and it's a reason why eventually I wasn't all too satisfied with the film. But I have become more open to films that lack plausibility if there is a reason for it. In this case there is a reason but I'm not convinced of the preciousness of it. It made for an entertaining thriller that shows some inventiveness and trippy pictures but that I think substantially is eventually not more than a rather shallow Catholic fantasy.
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10/10
One of Verhoeven's best
preppy-324 August 2003
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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7/10
There would have been no Basic Instinct without The Fourth Man.
axlrhodes11 July 2012
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.
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8/10
Stylish, challenging and intriguing
The_Void21 December 2004
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.
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7/10
Catholic Guilt
billcr123 June 2021
A bisexual writer with a drinking problem meets a mysterious woman and she invites him home for some fun. He has dreams of doom and visits a Catholic church where he experiences a strange vision while looking a Jesus on a crucifix. I am sure that the Vatican would not approve of the scene with its homosexual overtones. He discovers that the woman has three dead husbands, all of whom died in unusual accidents. The style is Hitchcock with both male and female nudity. Alfred was much more subtle. The leads are good and the story fine. I was entertained by The Fourth Man.
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10/10
Brilliant Dutch psycho thriller
Mikew300129 October 2002
"De vierde man" (The Fourth Man, 1984) is considered one of the best European pycho thrillers of the eighties. This last work of Dutch director Paul Verhoeven in his home country before he moved to Hollywood to become a big star with movies like "Total Recall", "Basic Instinct" and "Starship Troopers" is about a psychopathic and disillusioned author (Jeroen Krabbe) going to the seaside for recovering. There he meets a mysterious femme fatale (Renee Soultendieck) and starts a fatal love affair with her. He becomes addicted to her with heart and soul and finds out that her three previous husbands all died with mysterious circumstances...

"De vierde man" is much influenced by the old Hollywood film noire and the psycho thrillers of Alfred Hitchcock and Orson Wells. It takes much time to create a dark and gripping atmosphere, and a few moments of extreme graphic violence have the right impact to push the story straight forward. The suspense is sometimes nearly unbearable and sometimes reminds of the works of Italian cult director Dario Argento.

The cast is also outstanding, especially Krabbe's performance as mentally disturbed writer that opened the doors for his international film career ("The Living Daylights", "The Fugitive"). If you get the occasion to watch this brilliant psycho thriller on TV, video or DVD, don't miss it!
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7/10
A politically incorrect psychological thriller
kenneth2378 March 2002
An occasionally surrealistic thriller that will push most people's buttons., the 4th Man is sure to offend anyone with a taste for the politically correct. The story's protagonist is a bisexual alcoholic Catholic writer, Gerard (Krabbe), with a seriously twisted sense of imagination. Verhoeven offers up

Gerard has an example of everything wrong with the modern man. He's shiftless, delusional, unable to control his urges, afraid to commit to

meaningful relationships, and utterly apathetic about life in general. As the character himself states at one point, he is a professional liar, unable to recall the truth.

The movie opens with Gerard dreaming of spiders consuming Christ, and then waking to begin the long march to his own destruction. He chases off

one man (a boyfriend presumably), then chases another at a train station. Later, at a lecture, he meets a woman who seems to want to help him, or

perhaps she has more nefarious plans.. She quickly captures Gerard in her web, enticing him with sex and money, having plenty of both. She's also got

secrets, like three dead husbands. Is she lonely, and genuinely looking for someone to nurture - or is she a deadly black widow, luring Gerard to his

death? Will Garard be the 4th man she kills? The woman is Christine (Soutendijk), and Verhoeven does his best to keep you guessing what she's up to.

This is an interesting movie, with a lot of sex and intrigue. It's similar to Verhoeven's<em>Basic instinct</em>, but has a lot more depth, and is certainly more shocking. There's a lot of very strong gay content, which may make some viewers squirm. Highly recommended for fans of intelligent

psychological thrillers, or anyone looking for something entirely new.
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9/10
Psychology + ART + Horror = the 4th Man
jtaveras6425 December 2015
This film functions like an intricate puzzle. its visuals and class give away to an incredibly well written plot ..don't want to give much away, but this is the definition of ART HOUSE horror! Suspenseful and Cerebral, you'll love pacing together the hints.

The horror scenes are no joke and they remind me of 2 other great horror films, SUSPIRIA and DON'T LOOK NOW. Maybe its because they were shot in Europe, maybe its because they're all artistic and visually stunning, maybe because there's a lot that stays in the mind even after the film ends, or maybe because they don't quite give away the story and instead let the viewer figure it out, or maybe its because its just a a great movie just like those 2, either or its an EXCELLENT Film.

Final Grade, A-
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7/10
It's that Sensitive Artist theme. Explains everything...not.
DARCY-1228 September 1999
The first time I saw this film in the theatre at a foreign film festival, I thought it intriguing, fascinating, the sensitive bi-sexual artist. So very European, so very Dutch! I recently rented it for a second viewing and could hardly keep from laughing at that overworked theme of the mad writer with a religious-sexual orientation persecution complex. Get a grip! This guy is a freeloader, living off of society. I suspect that the real reason he is having these fantasy-nightmares about the "spiderwoman" is that his guilt complex is kicking in after year's of ignoring mother's advice about getting into cars (and bed) with strangers! Not only is he making outrageous sums of (probably taxfree) loot for making up stories (lying guilt trip) but he is too cheap to pay for a hair cut, hence he hustles the beauty salon owner. Then he has the nerve to complain about the bill! But I also suspect the world has changed alot since this film was made. On a serious note it was entertaining to see some of Jan de Bont's camera work and one of Paul Verhoeven's earlier films. Hmmm, maybe the world hasn't changed so very much after all?
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4/10
All Style, No Substance
kenjha3 July 2006
Within the first few minutes of this Dutch thriller, we learn that Krabbe is a gay alcoholic writer who sleeps sans underwear, fantasizes about murdering his roommate, tries to steal a magazine from a news stand, and lusts after a studly young man he meets at the train station. And he's the hero of this nonsensical movie that is all dressed up (except for Krabbe in at least one scene too many) but has nowhere to go. The basic plot is very simple but is dragged out to nearly two hours before reaching a pointless conclusion. Verhoeven has a nice visual flair but resorts to scenes of wild hallucinations, overt symbolism, and gratuitous gore when he runs out of ideas.
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Verhoeven's Answer to the Critics
FilmFlaneur2 October 2000
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.
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7/10
A Solid, Though Unoriginal Offering From Verhoeven
kidwltm13 July 2003
Most people know Paul Verhoeven as the director of many good (and bad) sci-fi movies in Hollywood. But long before that he was churning out generic thrillers in his native land. The story is a basic femme fatale premise, nothing new or enthralling. Verhoeven thinks he can make it better by adding in a series of dream sequences, which instead of defining our main character and his situation, are just used as a way to drive forward the predictable plot. The screenplay was solid, the dialogue helping to pad the effects of the bland story. What really made the movie at at least good was some terrific acting. Jereone Krabbe was amazing as the "tortured artist", and the supporters were very good as well. Also, Jan De Bont's cinematography adds at least some life to the film, helping to make Verhoeven look at least capable as a director.

6.5/10

* * 1/2 / * * * *
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10/10
The ultimate erotic thriller
rundbauchdodo1 September 2000
When it comes to Paul Verhoeven and erotic thrillers, most people think of "Basic Instinct" and some maybe of "Showgirls". But Verhoeven has made his best erotic thriller years before these two movies: "De Vierde Man". This film is mesmerizing and mindblowing - and above all the story is absolutely plausible, which makes the whole experience even more intense. The performances by Jeroen Krabbe, Renee Soutendijk and Thom Hoffman are exceptional, and Verhoeven's direction does the rest. "De Vierde Man" makes even "Basic Instinct" look quite tame... It can't get much better than this, a true classic of erotic nightmare cinema. 10 out of 10, at least...
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7/10
Verhoeven's mysterious, above-average Dutch thriller
Leofwine_draca19 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
You may find your patience tried by this initially slow-moving thriller, but my advice is to stick with it until the end as it's one of those films that starts off as just okay and builds into something that's great. This was the film that worked as the ticket for Paul Verhoeven to move to Hollywood, although it ironically took four years for this to actually be released worldwide. Verhoeven then went on to even greater fame and success with his masterpiece ROBOCOP, and the rest, as they say, is history.

Fans of Verhoeven's later successes will no doubt be aware of the rather excessive nature of his films in the depiction of gore, violence, nudity, and sex. This one is no exception, beginning as it does with the lead walking around completely naked. Throughout the film, Verhoeven does his best to try and offend the church, with his repeated religious imagery, some of it blasphemous (in one instance, Gerard visits a church and sees a life size statue of Christ being crucified; he images that it is Herman on the wall, and proceeds to strip him). The straight and homosexual sex scenes are also explicit, so be warned.

Throughout the first hour, not a lot really happens in the way of plot development, although we have an intelligent and literate script to make things easier to watch. I've only previously seen a couple of Dutch thrillers, the likes of THE LIFT and AMSTERDAMNED, and they all seem to have the same kind of grotty yet down-to-earth quality about them; a result of the less-than-hefty budget, no doubt. This film is much the same, and Verhoeven isn't one for fancy camera-work either; he shoots his films matter-of-factly, and scores points by not being afraid to experiment.

At around the hour mark, the plot really begins to kick into gear, when Gerard discovers the films showing Christine's string of marriages. It is here that our first suspicions about her being something other than a nice, young, innocent girl are aroused, and the tension begins to grow. As a way to include the fantastic into an otherwise realistic film, Verhoeven uses the old trick of our lead having hideous nightmares, where we see eyes bulging and dropping out of doorways, images of castration and lots more besides. The finale is excellent, with a truly shocking and gruesome demise for one of the man in a car accident, and then an ambiguous ending.

The acting is pretty much excellent, especially in the case of Jeroen Krabbé, who also found this to be his ticket to Hollywood. Krabbé brings charisma and depth to his role of the tormented crime writer. Soutendijk is suitably mysterious as the lover who may or may not be a killer, while Hoffman is surprisingly effective as the muscular lover who does have a brain in his head after all. Fans of Verhoeven's BASIC INSTINCT would be wise to watch this film, as this is where plenty of ideas seem to have been taken from. THE FOURTH MAN is an above average thriller, and the good story, script and performances make it one to watch.
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9/10
Outstanding; highly recommended
capkronos31 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I don't know if I'd consider it a masterpiece of not, but it's damn near close; it's extremely well made, artistic, suspenseful, intricately plotted, thematically challenging and full of bleak foreshadowing and sexual-religious imagery. There's also some great camera-work from Jan de Bont, an atmospheric score from Loek Dikker and outstanding acting from Jeroen Krabbé and Renée Soutendijk, the latter giving one of the most sneaky, subtle 'femme fatale' performance I've ever seen. Like many other European movies, this movie has an unashamed, non-judgmental attitude toward sex, nudity and the complexities of sexuality and has zero reservations about mixing it all up with religious and/or surrealistic (some would say blasphemous) images. In other words, if you can't bear the thought of seeing a lust-driven homosexual envisioning the object of his carnal desire as Jesus crucified on the cross before the two of them go at it inside a cemetery crypt then this might not be the movie for you. What surprised me more is how this bizarre movie managed to completely dodge being a pretentious mess. It mixes the abstract/surreal/parallel fantasy-reality scenes and somehow makes it all work. Like any good mystery, you can see the pieces slowly falling into place as the movie progresses. There is NOT an out-of-left-field resolution here. The movie has direction, there's no needless filler and once it concludes, you begin to understand the purpose of what may have confused you earlier. If you like the work of Ken Russell and David Lynch, I can almost guarantee you will love this movie. Hell, if you have no idea who they even are, you still might like it.

I'm not going to spoil the plot by getting too detailed, but the film's opening shot - through a web as a spider catches its prey - sets the stage as Krabbé, as unshaven, smug, bisexual writer Gerard Reve (interestingly, also the name of the writer whose novel this is based on) crosses paths with a wealthy, mysterious, sexy woman named Christine (Soutendijk, melding androgynous stylings with Simone Simon-like innocence/cuteness that's pretty unnerving), who may be a literal 'black widow' responsible for the deaths of her three previous husbands. The two become lovers and move in with one another, but we're led to believe (through Christine's bizarre behavior and the frequent appearances of another woman - played by Geert de Jong - who may or may not actually exist) something terrible is boiling under the surface. When another of Christine's lovers, the young and "beautiful" Herman (Thom Hoffman), shows up at the house, things take an unexpected turn. And that's all you need to know.

THE 4TH MAN was a huge art-house success in much of the world, but didn't make it over to the US until 1984, where it was awarded the Best Foreign Film of the year from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. The most common video is the Media release, which has been horribly dubbed. Try to avoid that one and head straight for the newer subtitled Anchor Bay DVD release. Since coming to America, Verhoeven's career has had its ups and downs. He has made a few decent films (Flesh & Blood, RoboCop) and some lousy ones (Showgirls). In fact, Verhoeven's big hit Basic Instinct is almost like a less interesting, junior league version of The Fourth Man. Soutendjik also tried her hand at acting in America and since GRAVE SECRETS (1989) and EVE OF DESTRUCTION (1991) were the best offers she was getting, she headed right back home to the Netherlands.
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7/10
A very good film, except for the first 15 minutes.
frankde-jong25 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"The 4th man" is a film from director Paul Verhoeven and cinematographer Jan de Bont. Both belong to the small group of Dutch moviemakers who made it in the USA. "The 4th man" (1983) was the last Dutch film of Paul Verhoeven after earlier successes with "Turkish delight" (1973) and "Spetters" (1980). After "The 4th man" Verhoeven went to the USA and made films such as "Robocop" (1987) and "Basic instinct" (1992). After 2000 Verhoeven came back to Europe and made the Dutch production "Blackbook" (2006) and the French/German production "Elle" (2016). Jan de Bont was the cinematographer of Verhoeven both in Holland and in the USA, but he also collaborated with other directors such as John McTiernan ("Die hard" (1988) and "The hunt for the red October" (1990)).

"The 4th man" is based on a book by the Dutch novelist Gerard Reve. Apart from the story of this book also other elements from the oeuvre of Reve (such as homo eroticism and the magic of the Roman Catholic faith) are incorporated in the script.

The story is about a woman who, at a young age, has already lost three husbands. Is this a coincidence or is she a femme fatale? The main character (the writer Reve himself played by Jeroen Krabbé) tries to answer this question. The suspense of the movie is harmed by a relatively weak first quarter of an hour. In this quarter of an hour the alcohol addicted writer has multiple Bunuel like hallucinations. This reduces his credibility in the rest of the movie.

The best part of the movie was for me the second quarter of an hour, in which the writer gives a lecture before the literary society of Vlissingen (a medium sized city in the Netherlands). This part of the movie reflects the contempt of the writer (Reve) for conservative middle class citizens feeling themselves very broad minded because the are visiting a cultural evening once a month. This contempt is the central theme in "The evenings" (1947), one of the most well known novels of Reve.
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9/10
Another Masterpiece from the Dutch Master
cliffo885 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
One of the best filmmakers to come out of Europe in the 1970s, Paul Verhoeven amassed a superb portfolio of work as a director in the Netherlands. De Vierde Man is Verhoeven's sixth film – his last before moving to Hollywood – and continues, in fine form, from his masterful back catalogue. The film is a Hitchockian-like thriller, as a writer becomes involved with rich femme fatale and subsequently discovers that she's already disposed of three husbands and fears he could be the fourth man of the title. Quite a mainstream thriller then. Ha, not with Verhoeven behind the camera; there's plenty of artsy symbolism, outrageous religious imagery (seriously, the Church of Holland must've gone absolutely bonkers over the scene in the cathedral!), a gay romance sub-plot, plus the usual sex and violence to frequent Verhoeven's work – you won't see that in any blockbuster this summer! The acting from Verhoeven regular Jeroen Krabbé and Renée Soutendijk (from Spetters) is also excellent. Incidentally, Verhoeven claims to have added the symbolism to appease the Dutch film critics who mauled his previous masterpiece, Spetters, for being overly sensationalist and devoid of morals.
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7/10
The Fourth Man
jboothmillard13 January 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Before making it big in Hollywood with hit films RoboCop, Total Recall, Basic Instinct and Starship Troopers, and not forgetting critically slated Showgirls, Dutch film director Paul Verhoeven was still making films in his native Netherlands, and this was the last before he left for the States, and one to feature in the book 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die. Basically Catholic alcoholic and bisexual novelist Gerard Reve (The Living Daylights' Jeroen Krabbé) has frequent nightmares and visions of his possible impending or future death, but he tries to carry on as normal, leaving Amsterdam to the Vlissingen Literary Society to deliver a lecture, and on his journey he spots a handsome young man he is very attracted to, but he leaving on a different train. Following the lecture he is the introduced to the treasurer of the literature club and wealthy widow Christine Halsslag (Renée Soutendijk), also a beautician and the owner of the Spider beauty shop, and they have a one night stand, unaware that she already had a boyfriend, and in a photo he finds out it is the young man he saw in the train station. Gerard urges Christine should bring her boyfriend Herman (Thom Hoffman) so he can meet and spend some time with him, of course if he was to come for a few days his secret intention is to seduce the man he longs for. She agrees to this and leaves Köln to go and get Herman, while Gerard stays alone in her house, he just drinks whiskey and looks around her place, including inside a safe containing the film reel footage of her three previous marriages, and he finds out eventually that these three men all died while married to her. When Gerard does meet Herman, he first obviously questions her marriages and tells him that they simply all died in tragic accidents, but at one point while walking through a graveyard with Herman, and briefly seducing him, the two of them discover a secret crypt full of incriminating dark contents. Gerard is at that point sure that Christine is a Black Widow, i.e. a witch, and intends to marry Herman and perform some sort of dark spell so he will die in what looks like an accident as well, he could be "the fourth man", but the boyfriend thinks he is jealous and wants to scare him off and keep her for himself. They get into a bit of a squabble and drive recklessly, and they end up together in severe car accident, Herman is impaled through the eye with a pipe, but Gerard survives and is determined to prove Christine is an evil being and could kill him next, but in the end doctors catch him and believe him to be crazy, and he ends up in comatose and the nasty woman gets away with it. Also starring Dolf De Vries as Dr. De Vries and Geert De Jong as Ria. Krabbé gives a good leading performance as the sexual predator and unknowing victim of a dark series of witch crafted murders made to look like accidents, and Soutendijk is a suitable choice for the Femme Fetale who turns out to be some kind of sorceress with dark intentions, it is a simple enough story about doomed sexual desires and almost like a fatal attraction sort of vibe, but it does have the funny moments as well, it works as a fun black comedy thriller. Very good!
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8/10
A seductive tale of psychological horror
Vomitron_G20 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Viewing DE VIERDE MAN (aka THE FOURTH MAN) is a slightly unsettling and rather fascinating experience. It's a very tight and intense psychological mystery/thriller from Netherlands's Paul Verhoeven. He directed this film just before he got big with his "free-ticket to Hollywood"-movie FLESH + BLOOD. In a lot of user-comments on this site I noticed the mentioning of Alfred Hitchcock. Indeed, this movie might very well be Hitchcockian, but I also noticed touches of early Cronenberg (the visceral), flavors of David Lynch (surreal story-linked visuals) and even Roman Polanski (plot-wise set-up). Funny thing is that the movies by those directors I was thinking of while watching DE VIERDE MAN weren't made until after 1983, the year of release of THE FOURTH MAN. So go figure.

Very much credit indeed must be given to the story of the original novel by Gerard Reve this movie is based on. Gerard Reve is also the fictional name of the main character (a tormented writer, played by Jeroen Krabbé, balancing on the dangerous line of a severe psychosis). Now, has anybody stopped and thought about the fact that the word "rêve" is French for "dream"? And the film does feature a lot of dream-like/nightmarish sequences, often to that extend that you don't always know for sure if Gerard is awake or dreaming himself. Could this be coincidence...? Maybe it's just me, but I don't think so. Renée Soutendijk is pretty amazing as the leading lady (in a rather demanding role). She sometimes seems to be guilty of over-acting (in a subtle way). But that aspect was clearly intentional to portray the character she plays, since as this movie progresses, you become unsure about what to actually think of this lady and her intentions. Proves again what an excellent actress she is. I might add that the movie contains also several scenes portraying full frontal male & female nudity, as well as some rather explicit sex-scenes (and you will even notice that some scenes and aspects clearly were the blueprints of scenes later to be shot for Verhoeven's BASIC INSTINCT).

Another aspect this movie has is a lot of symbolism and biblical references/images, which supposedly made the film thoroughly hated by some conservative/catholic movements at the time of its European release. Either way, it makes the movie worthy of a second viewing. Now, someone recently told me he had grave misgivings about DE VIERDE MAN. One of them being that the film supposedly manoeuvers itself into a position where it needs the divine intervention of the Virgin Mary to resolve itself. I myself have big issues with the way Catholicism has been, and still is sometimes, portrayed in many movies in any genre (so not only when it comes to religiously themed horror movies). But surprisingly, I had no misgivings whatsoever when it comes to THE FOURTH MAN. Although the Virgin Mary-aspect in the plot did make me scratch my head at one point, I also had fun with it, in a way. I think the keyword as to why it didn't bother me at all is 'duality'. Because, this movie works on two levels. Although 'divine intervention' might have resolved the plot-line from the protagonist's point of view... on the other hand: the movie implies that all this might have been the delirious ramblings of a raving madman. And that's the fun part: You never know for sure. And then there's the question: Could it be that Gerard Reve was somehow receiving distorted visions of things to come... like receiving omens? At one point in the movie, Gerard even tries to fool Christine into believing he is clairvoyant. The way he is playing Christine in that particular scene is exquisite to behold.

So with its compelling story, convincing acting performances and adequate direction, DE VIERDE MAN is a very much recommended viewing indeed (especially if you enjoy a solid European psychological horror film). But make sure you see the original Dutch version (not the dubbed one).
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7/10
I finished it which says alot
james1-494-82685724 February 2018
In today's world with so much to watch (including DVR's) my attention span is very short. This is one of those movies where not alot is really going on (i.e Drama) but the acting is so good you hang in their. The main guy can act his balls off. That's it for me everyone (other reviewers) else can give you what you're looking for in depth.
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1/10
worst film ever............
flagrantsake6 June 2003
Warning: Spoilers
Even if this film was allegedly a joke in response to critics it's still an awful film. If one is going to commit to that sort of thing at least make it a good joke.....first off, Jeroen Krabbé is i guess the poor man's Gerard Depardieu.....naturally i hate Gerard Depardieu even though he was very funny in the 'Iron Mask' three musketeer one. Otherwise to me he is box office poison and Jeroen Krabbé is worse than that. The poor man's box office poison....really that is not being fair to the economically disenfranchised. If the '4th Man' is supposed to be some sort of critique of the Bourgeoisie....what am i saying? it isn't. Let's just say hypothetically, if it was supposed to be, it wasn't sharp enough. Satire is a tricky thing....if it isn't sharp enough the viewer becomes the butt of the joke instead......i think that is what happened. The story just ends up as a bunch of miserable disgusting characters doing nothing that anyone would care about and not in an interesting way either.....(for a more interesting and worthwhile application see any Luis Bunuel film....very sharp satire)

[potential spoiler alert]

Really, the blow job in the cemetery that Jeroen Krabbé's character works so so hard to attain.... do you even care? is it funny? since Mr. Voerhoven is supposed to be a good film maker i will give him the benefit of the doubt and assume it was some misanthropic joke that got out of control.....though i'm guessing he didn't cast Jeroen Krabbé because he's the worst actor and every character he's played has been a pretentious bourgeois ass.... except he's incompetent at it. So it becomes like a weird caricature. Do you think Mr. Voerhoven did that on purpose? and Jeroen Krabbé is the butt of the joke as well? I just don't see it...... So you understand the dilemma i'm faced with here right? It is the worst film ever because he's supposed to be a good director. So there is some kind of dupery involved. I knew 'Patch Adams' was horrible without even seeing it. Do not be duped by 'The 4th Man"s deceptively alluring packaging or mr. Voerhoven's reputation as a good director etc. etc.
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