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The Return (2003)

The Return cover art
Average rating: (74%)
1112211920311
3.5
 
Starring: Vladimir Garin | Ivan Dobronravov | Natalya Vdovina | Konstantin Lavronenko
Director: Andrey Zvyagintsev
Studio: UGC FILMS
Run time: 110 mins
Certificate: 12
User collections: If Foreign's Your Thing... | The best 21st century foreign films nobody's seen because they're all too busy watching Amelie and City of God | Films that stole my heart and polished my soul
Genres: Drama
Languages: Russian
Subtitles: English
Released: unknown

Brief synopsis of The Return

Director Andrei Zvyagintsev makes a phenomenally assured directorial debut with THE RETURN. The spare tale focuses on two young brothers, Andrey (Vladimir Garin) and Vanya (Ivan Dobronravov), whose lives are thrown into a tailspin when their father (Konstantin Lavroneko) returns after a 12-year absence. Bullish and intense, the patriarch takes the boys on a mysterious journey through a bleak yet beautiful Russian landscape. While Andrey looks up to his father, Vanya has trouble forgiving him for disappearing so many years ago. This strain adds even more drama to the already tense atmosphere, culminating in a shocking event that will change their lives forever.
Winner of the Golden Lion at the 2003 Venice Film Festival, THE RETURN is a masterful drama that works on an allegorical, as well as literal, level. Zvyaginstev's imagery is at once painterly, abstract, and realistic. Newcomers Garin and Dobronravov deliver performances that are deeply affecting. In a cruel twist of irony, actor Garin drowned just after shooting in the same water where the opening scene took place, which adds another level of bleakness to the film's somber tone. THE RETURN is a truly haunting work of art.

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Rated - 5 starsThe Return keeps coming back

Luno1 from Lancashire , 31/12/2004

This is one film you will not forget easily. A moving, complex story about a father who returns home out of the blue after 12 years away. No one knows where he has been or why he has come back.

His eldest son Andrei is secretly delighted to see him, but the younger child Ivan is suspicious. Their mother suggests a bonding trip and the three set off on the road; the father to complete "business" which is never fully explained; the boys to go fishing. But the father fails to slot back into his son's lives easily. He displays an undercurrent of violence, which when mixed with Ivan's open contempt for him, creates a tension and a dread which lasts until the last frame.

The film is made all the more poignant by the fact that one of the child actors (Andrei) drowned after making the film. It's beautifully shot and the dialogue is spare. The DVD extras are a little pedestrian, but still worth a look.

  15 out of 15 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsInvolving and intriguing

W from Liverpool , 21/01/2005

This interesting film is not the 'thriller' that it is marketed out to be, but rather an engaging and enagmatic dark drama about fatherhood as viewed through the eyes of a child. The film opens with two brothers (Andrey & Ivan) who are suddenly and (in some cases violently) 'introduced' to their missing father (who remains nameless throghout the film)on a weekend fishing trip. Along the way there are questions which remain unanswered, and the slow pacing of the movie would not be everyone's cup of tea, however the stark and stunning cinematography, assured performances from all the actors and intriguing premise makes this a worthwhile journey to take. Recommended

  14 out of 16 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsArt and suspense

Basque from Hitchin , 26/02/2005

This film won this years bbc4 world cinema awards. The competition was strong, with films such as Zatoichi, Uzak and Motorcycle Diaries. However, I think the prize was deserved. The story about the unexpected and unexplained return of a father, after many years absence, is thrilling, moving, real and beautifully shot and narrated.

The father takes his sons on a fishing trip. Why, where, for how long is never explained. Both kids interract with their father in different ways: one accepts him, the other rebels. It is a coming of age film, as the trip will have unexpected consequences. The locations looks stunning (rivers, lakes, islands, forrests), there are lots of symbolic/mythical references and the acting, by all three main characters is excellent.

  13 out of 13 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starsBeautiful but leaden

Rupert Cousens from Oxford, UK , 28/04/2005

I wish critics would judge foreign-language films by the same criteria they apply to those in English. If this was an American independent, or a low-budget British film, it would be dismissed as the ponderous trudge that it is. The film is beautiful to look at, no question, and the lead actors are fine, but it's all in vain; I don't need action sequences to sustain my interest, but I do need interesting dialogue and some kind of dramatic propulsion. *The Return* has neither.

  9 out of 12 people found this review helpful
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