The Return (1/29/19)
We learned in class that this director
took a little influence from Tarkovsky, now while I am not sure if I saw every
nod and reference to him what stood out to me as a sort of tribute to him are
the following. For starters the mother character looks visually like the mother
from Tarkovsky’s Mirror but not only
that she has the same sort of depiction on screen as well. In the scene where
the two boys run home to find their father has returned she is facing away from
the camera with a cigarette in hand, a callback to when the narrator’s mother
in Mirror sits on the fence and waits
for her husband to return. There are interesting parallels between the two
films it almost seems to me that The
Return is almost what could have been in Mirror. This sounds odd but for example, the scene in Mirror when Ignat flips through the art
book out of boredom in the apartment is recreated in The Return but it is for a different purpose this time and it is in
a different context. While Ignat is alone, there are brothers flipping through
the book in The Return, it is not
done out of boredom but out of determination, an attempt to figure out if the
man in the bed is truly their father. I found this difference interesting
perhaps it’s a suggestion that there is less boredom and curiosity when you
have a brother or a friend with you as the younger usually follows in the
footsteps of the older making their curiosity dwarfed, and their boredom dashed
as they always have someone to be with. Also it is interesting that in this film
the Father did return and it was a source of much excitement and action in the
film, but in Mirror it is only
mentioned briefly that their father never returns. The Return kind of shows the differences in a life when there is a
companion and a father, but with a more tragic twist.
The other thing that was interesting in
regards to Tarkovsky and this film is the use of the elements. Whereas
Tarkovsky has full control of the elements and uses them in a surreal and
beautiful way, this director (Andrey Zvyagintsev) sort of lets them run wild
and untamed in a equally beautiful but more oppressive way. For example,
Tarkovsky has the strange the doctor command the wind, and he has the family
and their neighbors sit and stare at the barn fire, every wet surface drips and
melts with purpose. While in this film rain comes on in an instant and tramples
down the already beaten down characters. Fire is nurturing but never focused
on, earth is necessary for their food and wind blows naturally in all
directions. I remember vividly one scene where a train drives one way, the car
another, and the wind almost a third. Leaves blow as they do in real life,
nature in this film has an emphasis on it but it is not controlled in any way,
aside from the way that humans normally control elements. Water is depicted as
rather beautiful though aside from the rain the shots of the ocean are all
breathtaking while still a little bit scary and imposing.
Aside from the
Tarkovsky comparisons which were very interesting to me, I also overall really
enjoyed this film. At first I got a little worried and that was because it
seemed to be a little bit of a slice of life film like Boyhood or Mid 90’s and
that was honestly a little bit of a red flag for me as I have an incredibly
hard time getting into those. I was pleasantly surprised however that it almost
turned into a survival film and I really enjoyed it. I really loved all the
irony in the film, the irony of the younger brother being called the coward
even though he was the one standing up to the father and the older brother
thinking he was so cool but really, he was just kissing up and going along with
it all. I’m sure that if it wasn’t for the younger boy in this film the father
would still be alive, and the older brother would have just gone along with the
abuse. I loved the shifting dynamics throughout the film especially at the end
where the older brother takes on the watch and the axe which were items
normally associated with the father. I liked the changing of seats both in the
car and in the boat, I felt it all was done very well to show bonds and also to
sort of show where people where looking up to. For example, in the car the
older brother was in the front seat with the father, the father looked up to no
one as his eyes were on the road, the older brother looked up to his father as
his eyes were on him, and the boy in the back had no idea who to look up to so
his eyes were out the window. This changes later on when the older brother
shifts to the driver seat with his eyes ahead as his only role model was dead.
I liked the stares in this film and the glances off into the distance, the use
of the space in the frame, it felt like a real call back to the early
psychological Russian films that we talked about. I even noticed a lot of reaching
out of the frame which was something that I noted in the early silent films but
then not in more recent ones.
The scene early on at the dinner table
really stuck out to me and for a few reasons. For one, in previous films we
have watched the grandmother is usually the toughest and loudest person in the
family, she doesn’t take crap from anyone, but yet in this film she was
entirely quiet and I feel that that really made us fear the father as well, the
children were too in shock to see this I feel so they remained enamored with
him. I liked this scene as well as it showed it an important connection, the
connection of child to parent. We see the mother wince as she drinks and we
hear Ivan (the younger) say that he does not like it, they are related, we know
this earlier when she waves him from his fear of heights, but not it is
reinforced that this is a bond that can withstand the intrusion of an outside
character. While Andrey the younger immediately falls for the trap of his
father with his car and booze and money. I felt this scene was very important,
another scene that really stood out to me was the scene where they were looking
for the diner. It was really interesting to me as it put the idea in my head
that eating in this film was related to females. For example, we know the
mother and grandmother made the meal we saw before, in this scene the father
ogles a woman passing by and then immediately claims he is hungry. Along with
the Andrey gets directions from an older woman and there is an awkward
interaction with the waitress at the restaurant. I thought this was an
interesting connection to put into the film, even later when they eat at the
fire I feel like this is feminine too as it relates to their mother earlier as
she smoked and made their meals there. We see Andrey go along with all this
eating his father encourages but Ivan is always against it, he doesn’t eat at
the diner and he complains that they should be making more of a dish when they
are cooking at the fire like soup or something, this furthers his connection he
has with his mother.
Overall I really enjoyed this film, I thought the tone of it mixed with
the music and the tragic story really hit hard. I had a some weird thoughts of The 400 Blows while I watched this, I
think because of the depiction of the ocean, and the sort of renegade children.
This thought became even more interesting as the film ended with various
characters frozen in time in those photographs as The 400 Blows ends with a freeze frame, trapping him in his childhood
and in his return to the sea and the feminine. I thought this film had some
really interesting views on family dynamics and gender roles as a whole and I
loved the way it presented the sort of slice of life family drama as more of a
tragedy or even at times straight horror film. I can see this directors
influence from other directors but I feel that this film is very much his own
and he has a lot to say.
I too am amazed by that scene at the dinner table--with the silences that are just as eloquent, if not more so than the very few words we hear uttered around it. And you're right--the absolutely silent (and as you point out, completely atypical) grandmother (if that's indeed who she is) serves both to balance and disbalance things at the same time.
ReplyDeleteCan definitely see the resonances you mention with *The 400 Blows*. Another good film to see in connection with this (or to rewatch, if you're familiar with it already) is the 1960 film *L'Avventura* (dire. by Michelangelo Antonioni. That, in fact, is the film that caused Zvyagintsev to want to become a director himself.