Soldier of Orange - posters, covers, wallpapers

Lots of posters, covers and wallpapers for the movie "Soldier of Orange"
Soldaat van Oranje (1977)
Timing: 2:28 (148 min)
Soldier of Orange - TMDB rating
7.081/10
178
Soldier of Orange - Kinopoisk rating
7.225/10
2134
Soldier of Orange - IMDB rating
7.6/10
15000

Posters, covers

Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945223K 2000p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945234K UHD 2250p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #1094524HD Ready 1050p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945255K UHD 2925p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945262K 1440p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945274K UHD 2438p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945284K UHD 2438p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #1094529HD Ready 900p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #1094530HD Ready 900p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945315K UHD 2925p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945322K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #1094533Full HD 1080p
Poster to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #1094534Full HD 1288p

Backdrops, wallpaper

Backdrop to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #452358HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #452359HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #452360HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #10945194K UHD 2160p
Backdrop to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #1094520HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Soldier of Orange" #1094521Full HD 1080p

What's left behind the scenes

  • The television version has a runtime of 215 minutes.
  • A more accurate translation of the title is "The Queen's Soldier".
  • The explosions in the film were not handled by civilian specialists, but by soldiers of the Dutch army. According to director and screenwriter Paul Verhoeven, one of the explosions nearly killed Rutger Hauer, who played the lead role.
  • Reik de Gooyer, who played Brightner, was in the Resistance during World War II and therefore felt a certain animosity towards Reinhardt Kollhoff (who played the Wehrmacht general). This animosity went so far that, before filming a joint scene, Reik de Gooyer fired a gas pistol right next to Kollhoff.
  • Producer Rob Houwer re-edited the film for foreign markets, doing so without the knowledge of director Paul Verhoeven. According to Verhoeven, this re-edited version with a different title ("Survival Run") was almost an hour shorter. It contained only action scenes without explanations or historical context, and was dubbed by British actors. Houwer even claimed he preferred his version to the original director's cut. If his version had gained distribution, Verhoeven’s hopes for international recognition would likely have ended, but producer, director, actor and screenwriter Dan Ireland intervened. He had already seen the original version and was so impressed that he showed it to Steven Spielberg. This is why American distributors demanded the original version of the film, not Houwer's re-edit, and soon nominated it for a Golden Globe Award (presented by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association). Verhoeven remains grateful to Ireland to this day, rightly believing that he owes his success in the US to him.
  • At the beginning of the film, Queen Wilhelmina (played by Andrea Domburg) arrives in the Netherlands with adjutant Erik Lanshof (Rutger Hauer) after liberation at the end of World War II. In this episode, specially filmed footage is combined with authentic newsreel footage shot by American and Dutch cameramen. The footage shows Wilhelmina with an adjutant named Erik Hazelhoff Roelfzema (the author of the 1971 novel that served as the literary source for the screenplay). To add authenticity to the modern footage supplementing the newsreel, the filmmakers enlisted the services of a man who voiced Danish newsreels in the post-war period, so his voice is heard on screen in the film.
  • The entire film was shot on location, with the exception of a short scene in a Royal Air Force bomber.
  • While playing Wilhelmina, Andrea Domburg held cotton balls in her cheeks, just as Marlon Brando did in the role of Vito Corleone in Francis Ford Coppola's crime drama 'The Godfather' (1972).
  • At the time, it was the most expensive Dutch film to be made. Considering the scale of the project and the limited budget, the time directly allocated to filming was limited. Often, a shooting day lasted 18 hours. It is claimed that some scenes were shot for 36 hours straight.
  • A more accurate translation of the title is "The Queen's Soldier".

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