IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.4K
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A Polish chess master plots murder after his Wife returns from a Nazi death camp.A Polish chess master plots murder after his Wife returns from a Nazi death camp.A Polish chess master plots murder after his Wife returns from a Nazi death camp.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Jacques B. Brunius
- 1st Detective
- (as Jacques Brunius)
Henri Vidon
- Man in Train
- (as Henry Vidon)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
TCM keeps screwing up their ratings
TCM gave this movie two stars. Ridiculous. I saw this film YEARS ago. I never forgot it and at one point, I tried to find out the name of it and was directed to another film. I suspected when I read the plot on the channel guide that this was the movie.
Set in flashback in pre-war Paris and in the present in post-war Paris, the story concerns a doctor, Michele, (beautiful Ingrid Thulin) hopelessly in love with Stanislaus, a chess-playing roué, excellently played by Maximillian Schell.
He doesn't pretend to love her - he likes her, but what he loves is her money. They marry, but because she's Jewish, she's picked up and sent to Dachau.
During the time she's gone, her husband becomes involved with her now grown-up albeit unstable stepdaughter Fabienne (Samantha Eggar). After the war ends, and Michele doesn't return, Fabienne and Stan assume she's dead. However, because of the laws in France they can't get their hands on her money.
The truth is that Michele is alive, but had to go to a sanitarium after the war to recover from her horrendous experiences in the camp. She's scarred and aged, and when she finally returns to Paris, she stays in a hotel and turns to an old colleague, Charles (Herbert Lom) to fix her up.
When Fabienne spots what she thinks is a Michele-lookalike (actually Michele), she comes up with a plan to have her stepmother return from the dead, with the imposter taking a cut.
A really good movie, very intriguing, with good performances all around and excellent photography. I'm so sick of being burned by TCM's ratings - four stars for trash and two stars for a fine movie like this (not all the time, but occasionally).
By the way, this story is based on a novel by Hubert Monteilhet called "Return from the Ashes," and was remade into the magnificent German film "Phoenix."
Highly recommended.
Set in flashback in pre-war Paris and in the present in post-war Paris, the story concerns a doctor, Michele, (beautiful Ingrid Thulin) hopelessly in love with Stanislaus, a chess-playing roué, excellently played by Maximillian Schell.
He doesn't pretend to love her - he likes her, but what he loves is her money. They marry, but because she's Jewish, she's picked up and sent to Dachau.
During the time she's gone, her husband becomes involved with her now grown-up albeit unstable stepdaughter Fabienne (Samantha Eggar). After the war ends, and Michele doesn't return, Fabienne and Stan assume she's dead. However, because of the laws in France they can't get their hands on her money.
The truth is that Michele is alive, but had to go to a sanitarium after the war to recover from her horrendous experiences in the camp. She's scarred and aged, and when she finally returns to Paris, she stays in a hotel and turns to an old colleague, Charles (Herbert Lom) to fix her up.
When Fabienne spots what she thinks is a Michele-lookalike (actually Michele), she comes up with a plan to have her stepmother return from the dead, with the imposter taking a cut.
A really good movie, very intriguing, with good performances all around and excellent photography. I'm so sick of being burned by TCM's ratings - four stars for trash and two stars for a fine movie like this (not all the time, but occasionally).
By the way, this story is based on a novel by Hubert Monteilhet called "Return from the Ashes," and was remade into the magnificent German film "Phoenix."
Highly recommended.
If there is no God, no Devil, everything is permissable.
Following the excellent 'Cape Fear' the films of J. Lee Thompson represent a mixed bag to say the least. To be fair both 'Taras Bulba' and 'McKennas's Gold' were harmed by drastic editing but his other films simply missed the mark. This one, adapted from the novel of Hubert Moulheilhet, comes close and benefits from an excellent cast. The stupendous Maximilian Schell, brother of the equally talented Maria, is riveting as a charming, despicable sociopath. Ingrid Thulin is very touching as one who cannot or will not recognise her husband's worthlessnes until it is almost too late. Her voice is dubbed however and the voice they have given her does not seem to gel somehow. Anyway, her best work by far is for Ingmar Bergman in her native tongue. Samantha Eggar is suitably vixenish and Herbert Lom as always immaculate. Individual scenes are compelling and the film holds ones attention despite the slow pace. The film benefits not at all from John Dankworth's irritating score.
Excellent
I want this movie. I saw this as a child many times and this is my favorite movie of all time. Last time I knew it was going to be shown was when the Gulf War broke out and it never aired. I can't find it on video and it hasn't been on tv in 10 years. The plot, the actors, everything about this down to the black and white film was excellent. I have never seen another movie that I have enjoyed so much!
An unknown classic.
One of those excellent films that has never been released on video or DVD. The first time I watched this there were only 2 other channels and both were showing programs I hated at that particular moment, so I ended up watching this film by default. What luck! I was treated to a beautiful, haunting film that featured great performances by Herbert Lom, Samantha Eggar, Maxmillian Schell and Ingrid Thulin. Thulin's performance in particular is flawless. She is utterly convincing as a death camp survivor trying to return to the world. If cable ever gets tired of endlessly re-running "Jaws", "The Breakfast Club" and "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World" (Excellent films but shown 5 nights a week) and happens to air this true gem, be SURE you see/record it. The second time I caught it was on PBS--20 years after my initial viewing.
A little on the daft side but good fun nevertheless.
J. Lee Thompson may have been only a jobbing director but he was one of the best, graduating from British studio pictures in the fifties to international hits such as "Ice Cold in Alex", "Northwest Frontier" and "The Guns of Navarone". The latter earned him an Oscar nomination and the chance to work almost exclusively in America where he made "Cape Fear", one of the best thrillers of the sixties. In 1965 he made another first-rate thriller, "Return from the Ashes", which used the War and the Holocaust as jumping off points for an almost Hitchcockian tale of murder and greed, set in Paris but filmed in a British studio with an international cast.
If the plot is more than a little convoluted, Thompson's handling of Julius Epstein's fine script and first-rate performances from Maximilian Schell, Ingrid Thulin and Samantha Eggar go a long way in making this one of his most entertaining films. Thulin is the rich Jewish doctor, thought to have died in a concentration camp, Schell the gigolo who marries her for her money and Eggar the duplicitous daughter who's having an affair with Schell and the good thing is it doesn't quite go the way you expect it to. It's also superbly shot in widescreen black and white by Christopher Challis and is certainly worth seeing.
If the plot is more than a little convoluted, Thompson's handling of Julius Epstein's fine script and first-rate performances from Maximilian Schell, Ingrid Thulin and Samantha Eggar go a long way in making this one of his most entertaining films. Thulin is the rich Jewish doctor, thought to have died in a concentration camp, Schell the gigolo who marries her for her money and Eggar the duplicitous daughter who's having an affair with Schell and the good thing is it doesn't quite go the way you expect it to. It's also superbly shot in widescreen black and white by Christopher Challis and is certainly worth seeing.
Did you know
- TriviaThough set in and around Paris in the aftermath of World War II, Return from the Ashes (1965) was shot entirely on the MGM back lot at Borehamwood, the illusion of location strengthened by the importation of a large supporting cast of French character actors.
- GoofsIngrid Thulin's clothes and hairstyle in the beginning of the film are very mid-1960s, although the film begins around 1940.
- Quotes
Dr. Michele 'Mischa' Wolf: Don't grovel. If I have to remember you at all I want to remember Stan the actor, the cynic, the complete bastard.
- ConnectionsVersion of Phoenix (2014)
- How long is Return from the Ashes?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Povratak iz pepela
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 45m(105 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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