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Remember (2015 film)

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2015 film
Remember
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAtom Egoyan
Written byBenjamin August
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyPaul Sarossy
Edited byChristopher Donaldson
Music byMychael Danna
Production
companies
  • Egoli Tossell Film
  • Serendipity Point Films
Distributed by
Release dates
  • September 10, 2015 (2015-09-10) (Venice)
  • October 23, 2015 (2015-10-23) (Canada)
  • December 31, 2015 (2015-12-31) (Germany)
Running time
94 minutes[2]
Countries
  • Canada
  • Germany[1]
Languages
  • English
  • German
Budget$9.6 million[3]
Box office$4.2 million[4]

Remember is a 2015drama thriller film directed byAtom Egoyan and written byBenjamin August. StarringChristopher Plummer,Bruno Ganz,Jürgen Prochnow,Heinz Lieven,Henry Czerny,Dean Norris andMartin Landau, it was a co-production ofCanada andGermany. The plot follows an elderlyHolocaust survivor withdementia who sets out to kill aNaziwar criminal in retaliation for the death of his family and was inspired by August's consideration that there were fewer parts for senior actors in recent years.

After a screening at the72nd Venice International Film Festival, it was theatrically released in Canada on October 23, 2015, in Germany on December 31, 2015, and in the United States byA24 on March 11, 2016.Remember received mostly positive reviews and won a few film festival awards. At the4th Canadian Screen Awards, August received theAward for Best Original Screenplay andRemember was also nominated forBest Motion Picture.

Plot

[edit]

In a New York City nursing home,Auschwitz concentration camp survivor Zev Guttman, an 89-year-old dementia patient, awakens looking for his wife, Ruth, who died two weeks prior. Another elderly patient and fellow Auschwitz survivor, the incapacitated Max Rosenbaum, reminds Zev of what he promised to do when Ruth died. Max has continually reminded Zev that their families were murdered at the camp by theBlockführer Otto Wallisch, who was believed to have immigrated to the U.S. under the false name Rudy Kurlander. TheSimon Wiesenthal Center has located four Rudy Kurlanders, but there is no evidence to arrest any of them. Max reminds Zev that they are the only two who can still recognize Wallisch.

Max convinces Zev to avenge their families by seeking out and killing Wallisch and provides him written instructions to follow. Zev leaves the nursing home in a taxi and boards a train toCleveland as a Silver Alert is issued for his disappearance. He has moments of confusion but he relies on the letter, which reminds him Ruth is dead, and Max arranges his travel. Max directs Zev to a gun shop in Cleveland, where he buys aGlock 17, and then to the four men in the U.S. and Canada named Rudy Kurlander, one of whom is the former Blockführer.

Zev confronts the first Rudy Kurlander, a German veteran of World War II, in his home, but this Kurlander proves that he served in theNorth African Campaign and was never near Auschwitz. Zev finds the second Rudy Kurlander in a nursing home inHearst,Ontario, but he turns out to have been a prisoner in Auschwitz also, sent there as ahomosexual, which he proves by showing Zev his arm tattoo.

Zev travels toBoise, and arrives at the house of the third Rudy Kurlander inBruneau,Idaho. His son, John, anIdaho state trooper, tells Zev that his father died three months ago. John, who thinks Zev is an old friend of his father's from the war, shows him his father's Nazi memorabilia but reveals, after several glasses of whiskey, that his father was only a boy and a cook during the war. When John, who is aneo-Nazi, sees Zev's tattoo and realizes he is Jewish, he becomes enraged and lets loose his German shepherd, Eva (aptly named afterEva Braun). Zev shoots the dog and then John in self-defense, collapses in exhaustion on John's bed and leaves the house in the morning.

InReno,Nevada, Zev falls in the street and is taken to the hospital, which contacts his relieved son, who travels to Reno. After a young girl reads his letter to him, Zev leaves forSouth Lake Tahoe,California by taxi. After a night in a hotel where Zev is forced to use his credit card, he arrives at the home of the fourth Rudy Kurlander and his family, and recognizes him from his voice as the Auschwitz Blockführer. Rudy is happy to see Zev and greets him very warmly. Zev's son, who traced him through his credit card and then the taxi service, arrives to witness Zev threatening to shoot Rudy's granddaughter unless he confesses "the truth" to everyone. Rudy admits to his daughter and granddaughter that he was in the SS and killed "many" people. Rudy admits his real name is Kunibert Sturm, and that Zev is confused: he is actually Otto Wallisch. They were both Blockführers, and after the war, tattooed each other with consecutive numbers to pose as Jewish survivors. Shocked, Zev shoots Sturm and then, declaring "I remember," fatally shoots himself.

Back in New York, the horrified nursing home residents watch television news reports of the murder/suicide. Max reveals that he recognized Zev as Wallisch when he arrived at the nursing home, and that Wallisch and Sturm killed his family. On Max's desk, a copy of his letter to Zev is shown along with a picture of Otto Wallisch and a handwritten confession by Max.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]
FilmmakerAtom Egoyan said he directedRemember after being drawn to its unconventional story.

Benjamin August, a Jewish writer fromNew Jersey living inLos Angeles and who had never written a produced film before, toldCanadian Jewish News that the concept ofRemember "started... with wanting to write a movie starring an older man." He felt elderly actors received few leading parts and that old characters are sympathetic.[5] August sent his screenplay in to Canadian producerRobert Lantos, who envisioned Egoyan as the ideal director.[6]

On April 30, 2014, it was announced that the film would be directed by Egoyan, and would starChristopher Plummer,Martin Landau,Dean Norris,Bruno Ganz,Heinz Lieven, andJürgen Prochnow.[7] Egoyan said the film came at a time when the last of the Holocaust survivors and criminals were alive, and that trials underway in Germany also made the film timely.[8]Time magazine specifically noted that the trial ofReinhold Hanning was in the news.[9] The director claimed to find August's story unconventional and a "high-risk venture".[8] Plummer, who was Egoyan's only choice for the part of Zev,[10] stated he was also attracted to the project for its unconventional take on a historic subject.[9]

Principal photography began on July 14, 2014,[11] with scenes filmed inSault Ste. Marie, Ontario[10] andnorthern Ontario.[12] For the scene in which Zev kills John Kurlander, Egoyan intended to use astunt double for Plummer, but Plummer demanded he perform the scene himself. Plummer later toldCBC News, "For a moment, I was a little bit pissed off.... Because it made me feel suddenly rather old."[13] However, he admitted firing the gun "frightened" him because "they pack the kick of an elephant" and that he was "terrified" of the dog in the scene. Dean Norris said Plummer used this fear in his performance.[14] The film had a $13 million budget.[6]

Release

[edit]

On May 11, 2015,A24 acquired distribution rights to the film.[15]Remember was screened in the main competition section of the72nd Venice International Film Festival on September 10, 2015, where it received a 10-minute standing ovation,[12] and also screened at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival.[16][17][18] The film was released in Canada on October 23, 2015.[19] The film was released onDirecTV Cinema in the United States on December 17, 2015.[20][21] The film was originally scheduled to open in the U.S. in alimited release on January 15, 2016, but was delayed until February 12.[18][22] It was then delayed again until March 11, 2016.[23]

Reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

According toBox Office Mojo, the film grossed $1,184,564 in North America and $2,507,927 in other territories for a worldwide total of $3,692,491.[4] The film made $800,000 in Canada, which was considered disappointing.[24][25]

Critical response

[edit]
Critics praisedChristopher Plummer's performance, and he was nominated forBest Actor at theCanadian Screen Awards.

OnRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 69%, based on 100 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Remember risks wandering into exploitative territory, but it's bolstered by some of Egoyan's best latter-day directing and a typically stellar performance from Christopher Plummer".[26]Metacritic reports a score of 52 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[27]

Jeryl Brunner ofParade called it "one of the most powerful and unique Nazi revenge films to come around in a long time."[28] Robbie Collin ofThe Daily Telegraph called the John Kurlander scene "supremely tense" and the film more appealing than Egoyan's last films.[29] John Lasser ofIGN wrote "One of the things Egoyan does brilliantly here is to not only offer the larger tale but to work in incredibly tense smaller moments as well," and praised Plummer for "an utterly heartbreaking performance."[30]Tashauna Reid ofCBC News wrote "Egoyan takes audiences on an intricate, thrilling ride, with a few surprises along the way,"[31] called Plummer's acting "riveting," andMartin Landau andDean Norris "equally strong."[13] Kate Taylor ofThe Globe and Mail wrote, "Remember is admirable– remarkably, it builds a drama of genuine suspense around the quest for vengeance of a forgetful 90-year-old– but it is also frustratingly limited in ways that can't really be discussed without revealing its surprise ending."[32]

Jake Wilson ofThe Sydney Morning Herald gave a more mixed review, judging the film to have a "gimmicky script by newcomer Benjamin August that borrows heavily fromChristopher Nolan'sMemento."[33] Michael Rechtshaffen of theLos Angeles Times also wrote "Remember benefits mightily from a quietly commanding Christopher Plummer performance that almost makes you forget the wonky plot logic."[34]Richard Roeper panned the film as "bold but often ludicrous."[35] Guy Lodge ofVariety also disapproved, writing the film "puts a creditably sincere spin on material that is silly at best. At worst, tyro writer Benjamin August's screenplay is a crass attempt to fashion aMemento-style puzzle narrative from post-Holocaust trauma."[1]

In January 2017,The A.V. Club posted an analysis of the scene where Zev meets the character John Kurlander. The review noted some surface-level similarities between Norris' work as John and his role asHank Schrader onBreaking Bad, but its main focus was on how events in 2016 and growing vocalization ofwhite supremacists served to make the scene much more disturbing and realistic than it felt when the film premiered in 2015.[36]

Accolades

[edit]
AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipient(s)ResultRef(s)
Calgary International Film Festival2015Audience Choice - Narrative FeatureWon[a][37][38]
Canadian Screen Awards13 March 2016Best Motion PictureRobert Lantos and Ari LantosNominated[39]
Best Original ScreenplayBenjamin AugustWon
Best ActorChristopher PlummerNominated
Best Visual EffectsEric Doiron, Sarah Wormsbecher, Nathan Larouche, Anthony De Chellis, Geoff D.E. Scott, Jason Snea, Joel Chambers, Kaiser Thomas, Lon Molnar and Rob KennedyNominated
Canadian Society of Cinematographers2 April 2016Theatrical Feature CinematographyPaul SarossyNominated[40]
David di Donatello18 April 2016Best Foreign FilmNominated[41]
Hanoi International Film Festival5 November 2016Best Feature FilmAtom EgoyanWon[42]
Best Main ActorChristopher PlummerWon
Mar del Plata Film Festival2016Audience AwardAtom EgoyanWon[43]
Saturn Awards28 June 2017Best Independent FilmNominated[44]
Vancouver Film Critics Circle6 January 2016Best Director of a Canadian FilmAtom EgoyanNominated[45]
Best Actor in a Canadian FilmChristopher PlummerNominated
Best Screenplay for a Canadian FilmBenjamin AugustNominated
Venice Film Festival2 – 12 September 2015Vittorio Veneto Film Festival AwardAtom EgoyanWon[46]
Women Film Critics Circle2016Best ActorChristopher PlummerNominated[47]

Remake

[edit]

A South Korean remake, also titledRemember, was released in 2022.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Shared withRoom

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcGuy Lodge (September 10, 2015)."Venice Film Review: 'Remember'".Variety. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2016.
  2. ^"Remember (15)".British Board of Film Classification. February 26, 2016. Archived fromthe original on March 5, 2016. RetrievedFebruary 26, 2016.
  3. ^"Remember – PowerGrind".The Wrap. December 12, 2014. Archived fromthe original on February 18, 2020. RetrievedApril 1, 2017.
  4. ^ab"Remember (2016) - Box Office Results".Box Office Mojo.Internet Movie Database. RetrievedJuly 17, 2017.
  5. ^Adler, Jordan (October 22, 2015)."Movie About Nazi War Criminals Opens This Week".Canadian Jewish News. RetrievedJuly 27, 2016.
  6. ^abKnelman, Martin (April 30, 2014)."Christopher Plummer to star as Holocaust survivor in Robert Lantos movie".Toronto Star. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  7. ^"Cannes: Christopher Plummer to Star in Atom Egoyan's 'Remember'".The Hollywood Reporter. April 30, 2014. RetrievedJuly 24, 2014.
  8. ^abPage-Kirby, Kristen (March 17, 2016)."Atom Egoyan's 'Remember' proves that memory is faulty".Washington Post. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  9. ^abBerman, Eliza (March 7, 2016)."Christopher Plummer on Nazi Revenge Tale Remember and the Power of Shock Value".Time. Archived fromthe original on September 5, 2021. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  10. ^abVolmers, Eric (September 27, 2015)."CIFF: Atom Egoyan examines trauma and revenge in new film, Remember".Calgary Herald. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  11. ^"On The Set For 7/14/14: Dermot Mulroney Starrer 'Insidious: Chapter 3′ Starts, Levan Akin's 'The Circle' Wraps". Studiosystemnews.com. Archived fromthe original on July 18, 2014. RetrievedJuly 24, 2014.
  12. ^abKnelman, Martin (October 24, 2016)."Producer hopes voters Remember Plummer at Oscar time".Toronto Star. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  13. ^abReid, Tashauna (October 24, 2015)."Christopher Plummer captivates in revenge thriller Remembere".CBC News. RetrievedJuly 24, 2016.
  14. ^Ouzounian, Richard (October 23, 2015)."Christopher Plummer and Dean Norris remember a terrifying scene".Toronto Star. RetrievedJuly 27, 2016.
  15. ^Fleming, Mike (May 11, 2015)."Atom Egoyan's 'Remember' Starring Christopher Plummer Sells To A24".Deadline Hollywood. RetrievedMay 30, 2015.
  16. ^"Venice Film Festival: Lido Lineup Builds Awards Season Buzz – Full List".Deadline Hollywood. July 29, 2015. RetrievedJuly 29, 2015.
  17. ^"Venice Fest Reveals Robust Lineup Featuring Hollywood Stars and International Auteurs".Variety. July 29, 2015. RetrievedJuly 29, 2015.
  18. ^abTartaglione, Nancy (September 11, 2015)."Atom Egoyan's 'Remember' Bows To Long Standing O, Mixed Reviews – Venice".Deadline Hollywood. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2015.
  19. ^"Remember". FrontRowCentre.com. RetrievedFebruary 12, 2016.
  20. ^Shoukri, Tarek (December 17, 2015)."Watch: Christopher Plummer is Haunted by Holocaust Memories in Exclusive 'Remember' Clip". Indiewire.com. RetrievedFebruary 12, 2016.
  21. ^"DIRECTV Delivers 'Remember', Directed by Academy Award-Nominated Director Atom Egoyan". Att.com. December 17, 2015. RetrievedFebruary 12, 2016.
  22. ^"Remember". BoxOfficeMojo. RetrievedDecember 5, 2015.
  23. ^"Preview". Slantmagazine.com. RetrievedFebruary 7, 2016.
  24. ^Houpt, Simon (June 10, 2016)."A lifetime in film, Robert Lantos has more stories to tell".The Globe and Mail. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  25. ^Foran, Charles (June 17, 2016)."Canada's identity is an experiment in the process of being realized".The Globe and Mail. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  26. ^"Remember (2016)".Rotten Tomatoes.Fandango. RetrievedNovember 20, 2020.
  27. ^"Remember".Metacritic.CBS Interactive. RetrievedFebruary 26, 2016.
  28. ^Brunner, Jeryl (March 14, 2016)."Filmmaker Atom Egoyan's Remember Captures Rage of Holocaust Victims".Parade. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  29. ^Collin, Robbie (September 10, 2015)."Remember review: 'supremely tense'".The Daily Telegraph. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  30. ^Lasser, John (March 11, 2016)."Remember Review".IGN. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  31. ^"TIFF 2015 Capsule movie reviews: Beasts of No Nation, Legend, The Danish Girl".CBC News. September 11, 2015. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  32. ^Taylor, Kate (October 23, 2015)."Remember: Senior seeks Second World War vengeance in clever, twisting plot".The Globe and Mail. RetrievedJuly 24, 2016.
  33. ^Wilson, Jake (May 11, 2016)."Remember review: Atom Egoyan loses the plot in pursuit of Nazi vengeance".The Sydney Morning Herald. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  34. ^Rechtshaffen, Michael (March 17, 2016)."Despite some memorable failings, Christopher Plummer is persuasive in thriller 'Remember'".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  35. ^Roeper, Richard (April 7, 2016)."'Remember': An improbable revenge story with some wrinkles".Chicago Sun-Times. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  36. ^D'Angelo, Mike (January 6, 2017)."Dean Norris plays a neighborhood Nazi in a scene that looks way too relevant today".The A.V. Club. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2017.
  37. ^"2015 Award Winners Announced" (Press release). Calgary International Film Festival. RetrievedNovember 21, 2015.
  38. ^Eric Volmers (October 7, 2015)."Room, Remember, Guatanamo's Child among Audience Choice winners at Calgary film fest". RetrievedNovember 21, 2015.
  39. ^"2016 Film".Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television. RetrievedMarch 5, 2016.
  40. ^"The 59th CSC Awards Gala"(PDF).Canadian Society of Cinematographers. April 2, 2016. p. 16. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on February 5, 2018. RetrievedJuly 25, 2016.
  41. ^Anderson, Ariston (March 22, 2016)."'Spotlight,' 'Inside Out' Among Nominees for Italian Oscars".The Hollywood Reporter. RetrievedJuly 24, 2016.
  42. ^"Phim về nạn diệt chủng đoạt hai giải lớn nhất LHP Quốc tế Hà Nội 2016".VNExpress (in Vietnamese). November 6, 2016. RetrievedNovember 6, 2016.
  43. ^"Cinema Caught Us!".Mar del Plata Film Festival. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  44. ^McNary, Dave (March 2, 2017)."Saturn Awards Nominations 2017: 'Rogue One,' 'Walking Dead' Lead".Variety. RetrievedMarch 3, 2017.
  45. ^"Vancouver Film Critics Circle announces nominations".Playback. December 15, 2015.
  46. ^Gerard, Jeremy (March 11, 2016)."Atom Egoyan On His Nazi Revenge Drama 'Remember' With Christopher Plummer & Martin Landau – Q&A".Deadline Hollywood. RetrievedJuly 23, 2016.
  47. ^"Women Film Critics Circle Nominations: "Hidden Figures," "13th," & More".Women And Hollywood. December 19, 2016. Archived fromthe original on January 11, 2018. RetrievedDecember 15, 2016.

External links

[edit]
Films directed byAtom Egoyan
Feature films
TV films
Short films
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