Average Rating: 8.1/10
Reviews Counted: 75
Fresh: 71 | Rotten: 4
A suspenseful but perplexing thriller.
Average Rating: 8.4/10
Critic Reviews: 22
Fresh: 21 | Rotten: 1
A suspenseful but perplexing thriller.
liked it
Average Rating: 4.3/5
User Ratings: 8,401
Two teenage Russian boys have their father return home suddenly after being absent for 12 years. The father takes the boys on a holiday to a remote island on a lake in the north of Russia that turns into a test of manhood of almost mythic proportions.
Unrated, 1 hr. 45 min.
Jun 25, 2003 Wide
Oct 19, 2004
Kino International
All Critics (83) | Top Critics (26) | Fresh (71) | Rotten (4) | DVD (4)
What begins as a simple road trip becomes a spiritual journey, the classic passage from boy to man.
To any masochist who's been pining for all those cliched tropes associated with Russian cinema -- ponderous pacing and arcane symbolism shot through a lens darkly -- this will seem a welcome blast from the past.
A quiet film.
Poetic yet efficient, The Return constructs a powerful mood without indulging in brooding, overlong scenes.
The film has an eerie sense of conviction in its simplicity, and the two primary antagonists -- Dad and Ivan -- are brilliantly acted.
Zvyagintsev's measured pacing adds to the film's mystery. And Mikhail Kritchman's photography delivers visual verse after visual verse.
Like each episode of Kieslowski's Decalogue, The Return is a small but potent story. It leads us to ask: Is it ever enough to just 'trust and obey'?
A harrowing, elusively biblical account… echoes of Abraham and Isaac, the Gospel parables about fathers and pairs of sons, and the Second Coming.
magnificent return of a great cinema tradition to the world stage
Si uno se queda sólo en la primera lectura del drama familiar, la experiencia puede ser bastante desconcertante.
Um estudo de personagens cuja força se torna ainda maior em função das belas performances do trio principal.
The Return feels like an experiment designed to find out how much basic plot information you can withhold from an audience and still have an interesting movie.
... an unsentimental film about how childhood lingers until it abruptly ends.
an absorbing psychological drama and coming-of-age story in the guise of a road movie
The story sidesteps all expectations and does not go where you might expect.
A remarkable achievement.
This solid film tells the story of the brothers Andrey and Ivan. It is not the particular story of these brothers: it is the universal story of kids struggling to grow up.
We're sent out of the theater unsettled and somewhat mystified by what we saw, but exhilarated to have been in the presence of a truly impressive filmmaking debut.
The Return begins on an ominous note and stays there for 105 absorbing, frustrating minutes.
This family trip moving in a thrilling manner is quiet captivating for what it is, but then somehow I'd got the notion that the genius was going to end it leaving behind pieces for us to put together..... and that didn't suit my taste. Disappointing for what it gives away, but entertaining for what it maintains: the
January 7, 2012Super Reviewer
Sometimes some seemingly ordinary situations in the lives of common people can serve as premises of highly extraordinary films such as Andrei Zvyagintsev's 2003 film, "The Return (Vozvrashcheniye)". Somewhere in a remote part of Russia, two boys, Andrei (Vladimir Garin) and his younger brother Ivan (Ivan Dobronravov)
August 24, 2011Super Reviewer
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Journey 2 Not Worth the Trip
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