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The Return

The Return

  • Status: Released
  • 28-11-2024
  • Runtime: 116 min
  • Score: 6.495
  • Vote count: 386

After twenty years away, Odysseus washes up on the shores of Ithaca, haggard and unrecognizable. The king has finally returned home, but much has changed in his kingdom since he left to fight in the Trojan war.

Ralph Fiennes

Odysseus (Ulisse)

Juliette Binoche

Penelope

Charlie Plummer

Telemachus (Telemaco)

Marwan Kenzari

Antinous (Antinoo)

Claudio Santamaria

Eumeas (Eumeo)

Ángela Molina

Eurycleia (Euriclea)

Nikitas Tsakiroglou

Laertes

Tom Rhys Harries

Pisander (Pisandro)

Jamie Andrew Cutler

Eurymachus (Eurimaco)

Moe Bar-El

Elatus (Elato)

Amir Wilson

Philetus (Filezio)

Jaz Hutchins

Hippotas

Hugh Quarshie

Imphinomous

Chris Corrigan

Polybus

Aaron Cobham

Leodes (Leode)

Amesh Edireweera

Leocritus (Leocrito)

Ayman Al Aboud

Indius (Indio)

Nicolas Exequiel Retrivi Mora

Elenus (Eleno)

Giorgio Antonini

Irus

Matthew T. Reynolds

(voice)

Fabius De Vivo

Euryades

Magaajyia Silberfeld

Melantho (Melanto)

Handrinou Ileana

Poor girl

Kaiti Manolidaki

Old woman

Francesco Dwight Bianchi

Amphimedon

Pavlos Iordanopoulos

Stratius

Roberto Serpi

Melanthius

Stefano Santomauro

Thoas

Maxim Gallozzi

Dulicheus

Karandish Hanie

Asteris

Cosimo Desii

Eurydamus

Wael Habib

Aristratos

Paolo De Candia

Ctesippus (Laerte)

Alberto Boubakar Malanchino

Eurynomous (Eurinomo)

Hans Kodi Kode

Look Out

Alexios Achilleas Mandes

Drowning Man Boat

Chris Kourtellas

Fisherman #1

Triantafyllos Omiridis

Fisherman #2

Evri Sophroniadou

Laerte's Nurse

Anastasia Ntinou

Farm Girl

Dimitris Serfas

Young Farmer

Pietro Pasqualetti

Agenor (Agenore)

Bruno Cassandra

Promachus (Promaco)

Adel Ahmed

Agelaus (Agelao)

Raul Salzano

Paralos

CinemaSerf

There something about this film that reminded me of “The Mission” (1986) as it simply depicts the rudimentary lives of the people on Ithaca many years after their King Odysseus (Ralph Fiennes) joined the forces of Agamemnon to fight the Trojan War. His wife, Queen Penelope (Juliette Binoche) has been struggling to raise their rather timid son Telemachus (Charlie Plummer) whilst being besieged by a slew of suitors who are convinced her husband is dead and want to marry their way onto the throne. When a man is washed up on the beach after a terrific storm, he is taken in by a friendly pig farmer who nurses him back to health and fills him in on the goings on in this now lawless and largely bankrupt kingdom. It’s pretty clear to us watching who he is, and the remainder of this drama illustrates the struggles of a man conflicted. Certainly, he wants to reclaim what once was his but he is also questioning whether or not he should, or even could, in the face of the scheming Antinous (Marwan Kenzari) who is fairly shamelessly using the safety of her son as leverage to be the one she chooses. Now if you are looking for a sword and sandals adventure, or anything you might have seen Ray Harryhausen animate, then this won’t be for you. It is a much more intense, personal, story of a man coming to terms with the ravages of time and war. There’s next to no sword play, no lions to fight or maidens luring him from to the rocks; indeed this whole story is entirely confined to the concluding phase of Homer’s epic that is solely based on the island. It’s also worth noting that Zeus, Apollo and their Olympian family do not feature at all in this history. It’s all told, bare bones, from the perspective of a character that Fiennes presents well enough, but for my money too theatrically. His less-is-more style coupled with a real paucity of dialogue and Uberto Pasolini’s borderline lethargic direction can make this an almost real-time and sluggish portrayal of an exhausted man, and exhausted population and an even more exhausted wife. On that last point, Binoche has precious little to say for herself throughout and though she looks the part, I didn’t think she was given enough to do to impose herself on the story until the very end, where the thing comes alive for a few moments - but again, in a very stage-bound fashion. The photography and locations do much to authenticate the story, as does the entire production design but given this project was thirty years from first page to first screening, too much objectivity had been lost to the labour of love that this clearly is for Fiennes and Pasolini and though it’s perfectly watchable, it’s just missing that something special.