“The Vanishing” (1988) directed by George Sluizer, starring Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu, Gene Bervoets and Johanna ter Steege / Z-View

The Vanishing (1988)
Director: George Sluizer
Screenplay: George Sluizer, Tim Krabbé, based on The Golden Egg by Tim Krabbé
Stars: Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu, Gene Bervoets and Johanna ter Steege.
Tagline: None.
The Plot…
Rex and Saskia are young and in love. While on vacation in France, they stop at a busy gas station. They stretch their legs and take a break in a nearby grassy area. As Rex waits at the car, Saskia heads in to get drinks for the road.
She never returns.
When Rex realizes Saskia should have been back, he searches the gas station and surrounding area. Nobody saw anything. Rex goes to the police. Searches and appeals to the public turn up no clues.
Rex is obsessed with finding Saskia. He makes sure posters with Saiska’s picture and information about her disappearance are always up. He follows up on even the smallest possibility. Rex realizes Saskia is probably not alive. Still, it torments Rex to not know what happened to her.
Three years after her disappearance, Rex is contacted by Saiska’s kidnapper. He wants to meet.
Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…
Stanley Kubrick reportedly considered The Vanishing the most terrifying film he’d ever seen. Entertainment Weekly listed The Vanishing as one of the all-time scariest films ever made. The Vanishing is a movie that doesn’t have jump scares. There is no unstoppable killer or traditional monsters. And that makes it even more frightening.
The Vanishing will stay with you. You’ll think about the movie long after you finish watching it. THAT ending. The killer alone practicing his moves. The fact that Rex gets his wish.
The success of The Vanishing, the Dutch film was optioned to be remade in the United States. George Sluizer, who co-wrote and directed the original, was brought on to direct the American remake. Jeff Bridges, Kiefer Sutherland, Nancy Travis and Sandra Bullock were brought on to star. The budget was set at $20 million dollars (over ten times the budget of the original). The ending was changed because “American audiences don’t like sad endings.” Change the ending and you’re making a totally different film. Why bother? Audiences and critics overwhelmingly prefer the original.
The Vanishing (1988) rates 4 of 5 stars














































