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Revanche

  • 2008
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 1m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
17K
YOUR RATING
Johannes Krisch in Revanche (2008)
CrimeDramaRomanceThriller

Ex-con Alex plans to flee to the South with his girl after a robbery. But something terrible happens and revenge seems inevitable.Ex-con Alex plans to flee to the South with his girl after a robbery. But something terrible happens and revenge seems inevitable.Ex-con Alex plans to flee to the South with his girl after a robbery. But something terrible happens and revenge seems inevitable.

  • Director
    • Götz Spielmann
  • Writer
    • Götz Spielmann
  • Stars
    • Johannes Krisch
    • Irina Potapenko
    • Andreas Lust
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    17K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Götz Spielmann
    • Writer
      • Götz Spielmann
    • Stars
      • Johannes Krisch
      • Irina Potapenko
      • Andreas Lust
    • 60User reviews
    • 125Critic reviews
    • 84Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 15 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos1

    Revanche
    Trailer 1:50
    Revanche

    Photos57

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Johannes Krisch
    • Alex
    Irina Potapenko
    Irina Potapenko
    • Tamara
    Andreas Lust
    Andreas Lust
    • Robert
    Ursula Strauss
    Ursula Strauss
    • Susanne
    Johannes Thanheiser
    • Grandfather Hausner
    • (as Hannes Thanheiser)
    Hanno Pöschl
    • Konecny - Tamara's Boss
    Magdalena Kropiunig
    • Prostitute in Hotel
    Toni Slama
    Toni Slama
    • Tamara's Customer
    Elisabetha Pejcinoska
    • Cinderella Prostitute #1
    Aniko Bärkanyi
    • Cinderella Prostitute #2
    Annamaria Haytö
    • Cinderella Prostitute #3
    Nicoletta Prokes
    • Cinderella Prostitute #4
    Rainer Gradischnig
    • Harry - Man Beating Tamara
    Haris Bilajbegovic
    • Man stopping Harry
    Aleksander Reljic-Bohigas
    • Owner of Cinderella
    Michael-Joachim Heiss
    • Day Porter at Hotel
    Günther Laha
    • Night Porter at Hotel
    Max Schmiedl
    • Police Officer #1
    • Director
      • Götz Spielmann
    • Writer
      • Götz Spielmann
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews60

    7.516.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7johno-21

    Very good stylistically

    I recently saw this at the 2009 Palm Springs International Film Festival. Writer/Director Martin Gschlacht offers up a tale of crime and revenge from Austria in a good looking cinematic presentation although the story set up is a little long and characters you expect to return are discarded. Despite it's too long beginning the film never really lags and keeps your interest with it's slick story from Gschlacht and wonderful cinematography from Gotz Spielmann and a great production design by Maria Gruber. Alex (Johannes Krisch) has fallen in love with Ukrainian immigrant Tamara (Irina Potapenko) who works in a brothel where Alex does odd jobs for the underworld brothel owner. In a plan to get out of debt and the control of the brothel Alex hatches a plot to rob a bank in his grandfather's rural village. Alex is forced to assimilate into the village when his plan is botched. With Ursala Strauss as the shopkeeper Susanne and Andreas Lust as her policeman husband Robert this is a good film but would carry a strong R rating for nudity and sexual situations. Fortunately, violence is kept at a minimum. I believe this is Austria's official submission to the Oscars for Best Foreign Language film. I would give it a 7.5 out of 10 and recommend it.
    8LazySod

    Good choices, bad choices

    A guy and his woman. They both work in a brothel and are both working on their plan to escape that place for good. So far none of their plans have worked out and a new plan is devised. When the plan starts rolling the woman is anxious and afraid it will fail, but the man presses on. It all starts out really well, but it quickly turns sour. The rest of the film then is the more or less logical follow up of these events - with the one red line thought through it all being - getting even.

    Films like this work out rather well when the characters are believable - and they are in this one. All the things that happen happen in a more or less fitting way and as events turn darker and darker one cannot escape from both a grin and a grimace. It's fun and nasty at the same time and plays out as a somewhat predictable book, but in a good way. The main character plays out his role very well and most of the other characters play out very well too - there's only a few of them that fall out of style too much to be really fitting.

    8 out of 10 choices backfiring
    8domnulx

    The Bauer at the brothel, the peasant and the prostitute

    Revanche. Written and directed by Götz Spielmann. The look of the film is thoroughly authentic, and the Austrian milieu very convincing. Johannes Krisch is fabulous as Alex, the peasant brute with a broken heart and an uncontrollable sex drive. Andreas Lust is very good as well, as Robert, Alex's police officer nemesis. Caught in the middle is Ursula Strauss, who plays Susanne, Robert's wife.

    The story starts out in the squalid world of Viennese prostitution, at a tacky brothel on the periphery. Alex works for the local prostitution boss and he has fallen in love with one of the Eastern European streetwalkers, Tamara, played by Irina Potapenko. When Tamara is recruited for a promotion to call-girl, she decides instead to run away with Alex. Here the story moves to the countryside where Alex's father lives in a miserable cabin on the outskirts of modern Austrian society. But if the surrounding become simpler, the interaction does not, as Alex becomes entangled in the lives of the small town police office and his wife.

    The film is satisfying on many levels. It is a veritable ethnographic study of the interface between post-modern Central European human trafficking and pre-industrial Austrian bauern culture. Alex and his father speak to each other in what has been described to me as a rich and authentic peasant dialect rarely represented in film. Not only does it look and sound authentic, but the story makes perfect sense, too. And that's saying a lot for a European "written and directed by" film, where narrative logic doesn't often get more than cursory consideration. The name "revanche" has a double meaning in German, both revenge and a return match or a second chance, and it seems that both of these ideas are being developed throughout the story, as characters juggle their need to get even with their desire to secure their own futures. The tragic consequences of their every action lead them further and further down a path not of their own choosing. We get a taste of this feeling of predestination when the camera stops still at a forested point in the road, a spot that will take on fatal significance later in the story. Yet, if fate controls the characters' destinies, it is the strength of willpower that will decide who survives and who will fade into insignificance.

    Revanche did not get nominated in any categories for the EFA awards in 2008, but it is Austria's entry for the Oscar Foreign Language film nomination in 2009.
    9ruby_fff

    A quietly fascinating journey of the hearts, from seedy to sublime, revenge to redemption, grief to giving unbeknown to all players

    Is it an accident? Or is it fate, coincidences predestined? You don't really think about these reservations as you are watching Austrian director-producer-screenwriter Götz Spielmann's quietly fascinating film, "Revanche." The one-word title in French translates to 'revenge.' But this is hardly your usual action thriller, though there are anxious suspenseful moments and bank heist involved.

    Love the film. The storyline and the characters, the occurrence of incidents all seem to follow natural development - their own course (by design 'divine'). So few dialog and no music score at all, just birds chirping, sound of raindrops, everything naturally delivered. Well, the only human music being the accordion played by grandfather Hausner. One man's revengeful thoughts or action just might turn out to be blossoming into another's hopeful, joyous beginning of future. Two men hung up on one woman dead, both men acquiesced by one woman alive, whose optimistic intuition and trustful understanding may bring full circle to the string of events, perhaps liken to how nature takes care of itself? The engaging 'fate' element is somehow unbeknown to all parties involved (while the audience might marvel at the clues, possibly unaware also).

    As I was quietly watching the film following the story progression, I said to myself at one point: I hope this is where the film ends and go on no more. The next second the screen did fade to black and the end credits start rolling, without any music other than birds chirping can be heard, and later on, sound of raindrops falling for the rest of the credit roll.

    What a script! So perfectly directed, and such steady subtle performances from the ensemble cast of characters. The four main roles are so solidly portrayed: Alex by Johannes Krisch and his girlfriend Tamara by Irina Potapenko; Robert the policeman by Andreas Lust and his wife Susanne by Ursula Strauss. A satisfying movie experience, it is. I actually appreciate this film more than the winning 2008 Oscar foreign film "Departures" - well, it's different in story layers and 'Departures' encompasses many aspects, while "Revanche" also has its layers of emotions, psychological human nature perspectives, is delivered 'clean' and focused, ever so naturally acceptable of human foibles, vulnerability and one woman's life force. A very humanistic film - a MUST SEE.
    9raskimono

    Evening things up requires giving up a piece of you

    As seen at the AFI Film Festival, Revanche is a tight thriller that is at a the same time a mood piece and a human moral drama. Austrian's official submission for the foreign language category in the 2009 Academy Awards is likely to this reviewer to get the nomination. Following the lives of two couples, a prostitute and a thug, a cop and his wife; tragic circumstances converge their lives when a bank robbery goes awry. Featuring a stand out performance by Tommy Lee Jones look-alike Johannes Krisch as the thug Alex, the man creates tension when out of frame, in the nick of shadows and in front of the camera. His character of Alex is a tortured soul that the audience is never sure off; his intentions or actions are hidden behind a mask of serenity. Not satisfied with being a replica of Jones, he also gives a very Tommy Lee Jones no-frills turn that keeps the movie afloat. Director Gotz Spielman creates tension using sound and extremely detailed camera set-ups. Not show-offy in anyway but including two long one take shots, he also uses his DP to infuse the screen with pale and desaturated color tones for nights scenes and natural lighting for daylight scenes, all used to provide a flat élan on the screen. It effectively supports the vibe of these revenge melodrama. What could be hammy in another director's hands becomes poetry in his. The sound of the ax smashing a block of wood never seemed more intimate. When a director uses it in such a way that the viewer feels inside the innards of a man's soul, you know the director knows his stuff. Intricate and detailed, it is consummate from top to bottom. If there is any qualms with the movie, it is in the character of Robert the cop played by Andreas Lust. His character arc is supposed to mirror Alex but he never earns the audience's sympathy the way Alex does; yet his story is geared toward such a response. The character is slightly underwritten and the actor never engages the character the way Johannes does. Playing against our expectations to create an ending reminiscent of Greek tragedy, it is a worthy movie experience and the best movie I've seen in 2008 along with Mike Leigh's Happy go lucky.

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    Related interests

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    Crime
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    Drama
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    Romance
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The literal English translation of the title is 'revenge', but it also has another meaning of 'second chance'. If you play a game against someone and lose, you can ask for 'revanche', another game/chance to beat your opponent.
    • Quotes

      [repeated line]

      Robert: I aimed at the tires.

    • Connections
      Featured in Willkommen Österreich: Die 62. Sendung: Götz Spielmann & Jasmin Ouschan (2009)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 16, 2008 (Austria)
    • Country of origin
      • Austria
    • Official sites
      • Janus Films (United States)
      • Official site (Austria)
    • Languages
      • German
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Tay Chơi Về Vườn
    • Filming locations
      • Waldviertel, Lower Austria, Austria
    • Production companies
      • Prisma Film- und Fernsehproduktion
      • Spielmannfilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $258,388
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $16,330
      • May 3, 2009
    • Gross worldwide
      • $886,407
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 1m(121 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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