Return, The
Universal Studios (11/10/2006)
Drama, Thriller
In Collection
#10802
0*
Seen ItYes
025192867620
IMDB   4.8
1 hr 25 mins USA / English
DVD  Region 1   PG-13
Sarah Michelle Gellar Joanna Mills
Sam Shepard Ed Mills
J.C. Mackenzie Griff & Young Griff
Adam Scott Kurt Setzer
Kate Beahan Michelle
Frank Ertl Ambrose Miller
Darrian McClanahan Young Joanna Mills
Peter O'Brien (II)
Wally Welch
Brad Leland Mr. Marlin
Peter O'Brien Terry Stahl
Director
Asif Kapadia
Producer Marc D. Evans
Steve Gaub
Jeffrey Silver
Aaron Ryder
Writer Jeffrey Silver
Aaron Ryder
Adam Sussman
Cinematography Roman Osin
Musician Dario Marianelli


The Return is a drowsy, mildly creepy and unexpectedly well-crafted supernatural thriller that lays off the cheap thrill and gore factor in favor of the slow build up to fright and a twist ending that, while effective, may hit viewers as mostly out of left field. The Sixth Sense it ain't, but there's enough texture, style and ladled-on art direction to keep the eeriness palpable even through some of the more labored dialogue and plot contrivances. A chocolate-haired Sarah Michelle Gellar (what was wrong with her natural goldilocks?) plays Joanna Mills, some sort of traveling sales rep in a big pickup truck who journeys from her nightmare-disturbed life in St. Louis back to a small town in Texas that she sort-of remembers. Demons from the girlhood she once knew there come fiendishly together in a mishmash of flashbacks and present-day creep-outs involving murder, self-mutilation and spirits that have haunted her more than she knows. Gellar has become a go-to for glossy Hollywood horrorshows like this, thanks to her work in the Grudge franchise and the remnants of our memories from her Buffy glory days. In spite of the handful of slipshod faults in story and directorial force, she holds her own against the vibrantly dilapidated set decorations along with a variety of other equally important characters. There's a creepy ex-boyfriend, a disgusting being stalking a phantom woman she recognizes from her psychosis-induced visions, and a hunky guy who's facing down mysteries from his own past. (Do they all intersect? Hmmm...) She even stands her ground against Sam Shepard, who is all but slumming it in his few scenes as her dad. He talks about an incident that forever changed her when she was 11 years old, but his weird allusions are as enigmatic as the film itself, which desperately wants to be better than it is. But The Return still carries its share of respectable fears that are made scarier by the effectively edited string of spooky noises and images. Together they add up to make a worthy entrant in the genre of understated ghost story. --Ted Fry
Edition Details
Edition Widescreen Edition
Distributor Universal Studios
Release Date 2/27/2007
Packaging Keep Case
Screen Ratio Widescreen 2.35:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles English; French; Spanish
Audio Tracks ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
Layers Single Side, Dual Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 1

Features
The Alternate Ending" Too Shocking for the Big Screen
·This chilling footage reveals the horrifying conclusion not seen in theaters!
The Making of The Return: Creation of a Nightmare
·Your all-access pass to the creation of this supernatural thriller!
Deleted Scenes: The Terror You Never Saw
·Sarah Michelle Gellar's nightmare continues in this never-before-seen footage!