Seventh Heaven (1993 film)
Seventh Heaven | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Jean-Paul Lilienfeld |
Written by | Jean Paul Lilienfeld |
Produced by | Paul Voorthuysen Erwin Provoost Cyril de Rouvre |
Starring | Urbanus Renée Soutendijk |
Cinematography | Willy Stassen |
Edited by | Philippe Ravoet |
Music by | Jacques Davidovici |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | United International Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 94 minutes |
Countries | Belgium Netherlands |
Language | Dutch |
De Zevende Hemel (English: Seventh Heaven) is a 1993 Belgian-Dutch romantic comedy film directed by Jean-Paul Lilienfeld, based on a script by Jean-Paul Lilienfeld translated by Urbanus.[1][2]
Cast
- Urbanus as Samuel
- Renée Soutendijk as Charlyne
- Hilde Van Mieghem as Micheline
- Peter Van den Begin as Claude
- Ludo Busschots as Handelsreiziger
- Annick Christiaens as Girl with dog
- Chris Corens as Kruidenier
- Kitty Courbois as Hotelhoudster
- Jean-Paul Lilienfeld as Colombani
- Philippe Merchiers as Pinocchio
- Ann Petersen as Conciërge
- Marijke Pinoy as Receptioniste
- Ann Pira as Girl in bed
- Senne Rouffaer as Troyon
- Liesa Servranckx as Baby 1
- Jan Steen as Werkman
- Tom Van Bauwel
- Lucas van den Eijnde
- Loes van den Heuvel as Prostitute
- Koen Van Overschelde as Young Samuel
Production
The film was written and directed by French director Jean-Paul Lilienfeld with Urbanus and Renée Soutendijk in the lead roles. Filming took place in Texel and Brussel. Unlike Hector and Koko Flanel, Seventh Heaven was not specifically written with Urbanus in mind.[3]
References
- ^ "De Zevende Hemel (1993)". moviemeter.nl (in Dutch). 31 January 2023.
- ^ "De Zevende Hemel". urbanus.be (in Dutch). 30 November 2023.
- ^ "Renée met Urbanus in de zevende hemel". De Telegraaf. September 24, 1992. p. 19. Retrieved June 27, 2025 – via Delpher.