The Return (2006 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
The Return
Directed by Asif Kapadia
Written by Adam Sussman
Starring Sarah Michelle Gellar
Peter O'Brien
Adam Scott
Kate Beahan
and Sam Shepard
Music by Dario Marianelli
Cinematography Roman Osin
Editing by Claire Simpson
Release date(s) November 10, 2006 (United States)
Running time 86 Minutes
Language English
Budget $15 Million
Box office $11,992,014

The Return is a 2006 psychological thriller directed by Asif Kapadia. The film stars Sarah Michelle Gellar, Kate Beahan, Peter O'Brien, and Sam Shepard. It was released theatrically on November 10, 2006, and on DVD on February 27, 2007.The Blu-ray Disc was released on October 6, 2009.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The Return is focused on a 25-year-old woman named Joanna Mills (Sarah Michelle Gellar), a travelling rep for a trucking company, dedicated to her successful career but something of a loner. Since the age of 11 she has been a troubled person, with episodes of self-mutilation and menacing visions. Normally she avoids returning to her native Texas, but agrees to a trip there to secure an important client. During the trip her visions, which take the form of memories of events not from her life, increase in intensity. She sees a strange face staring back at her in the mirror. Her truck radio plays Patsy Cline's "Sweet Dreams" no matter what station she selects. She stops at the scene of an accident that, on the following day, seems not to have happened. Joanna cuts herself in a bar restroom and is narrowly rescued by a friend. She visits her father, who observes that from age 11 she was "a different girl". The visions continue, becoming both more specific and more threatening, centering upon a menacing man she does not recognize and a bar she has never seen, but a picture of which is in one of her catalogs.

Drawn by the image to the Texas town where the bar is located, a place she has not been since childhood, Joanna meets a man named Terry Stahl, whose wife, Annie, was stalked, brutally assaulted, and left to die fifteen years before, a crime of which Terry was suspected but not convicted. Joanna continues to have visions of this crime and the events that led up to it, and to discover other links between Annie's life and hers. She meets the real killer and is led by what she has seen in her visions to recover the knife he used from its hiding place. She is then herself stalked. Inevitably, she finds herself drawn into a repetition of the crime, but this time she stabs her assailant with the recovered knife, using the original weapon to avenge the original crime.

The story ends with the revelation that Annie, clinging to life as Terry drove her to the hospital after the original assault, died when his car crashed into one driven by Joanna's father, in which the eleven-year-old Joanna was a passenger. After momentary unconsciousness, the young Joanna seems to have survived the crash. But is she still Joanna, or has her soul been replaced by that of the dying Annie? In the final scene, a silent Joanna is seen reflecting on who she is, and what has happened to her. She seems to reach an inner resolution of these questions, but what that is we are not told.

An alternative ending included on the DVD release more straightforwardly supports the interpretation that Annie's soul has been placed in Joanna's body.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Reception

Reviews of the film were mostly negative with 15% positive on Rotten Tomatoes.[1] However, the reviews were not incredibly negative, and ranged from mostly mixed with some more on the negative side and some more positive. The biggest criticism was the very slow pace. The artistic tone and cinematography of the film were heavily praised, as was the film as a whole by some. The Return opened with what distributor Rogue Pictures called a "very disappointing" $4,800,000 weekend gross.

Except for TV trailer spots, there was no publicity nor a premiere for the film, as Sarah Michelle Gellar was busy shooting the movie Possession in Vancouver, British Columbia. The movie only earned a disappointing $7.7 million dollars. Worldwide, the movie made $14,949,851.[2]

[edit] Trivia

  • An excerpt from the song "Sweet Dreams (Of You)" by Patsy Cline, which seems to have a will of its own, appears as the "warning" before many supernatural occurrences.
  • The R1 DVD was released on February 27, 2007 with a "Creation of a Nightmare: The Making of The Return" featurette, deleted scenes, and the "too shocking for the big screen" alternate ending.
  • The R2 release was of the movie only.
  • In Australia, The Return was a straight to DVD feature, released June 5, 2007.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages