The Return (2003, Andrey Zvyagintsev)
Confronted with their father’s sudden return, two brothers, Ivan and Andrey, were forced to embark on a cryptic journey leading to an exploration of trust, tensions, and uncertainty.
It is a film about family, with a sense of unease and mystery.

The brothers and the tower that changed their lives. A place where adventure, freedom, and tragedy begin.

The soft bright colors bathed them in a serene and dreamlike landscape, symbolizing the growth of love and bond between them throughout their journey together. It emphasizes hope and the promise of new beginnings while reflecting an uneasiness and quiet sorrow.
In a world full of possibility and effort, the fish, in which they brought back with a sense of pride only to be met with a disappointment. It’s lying there. Alone and sad just like them.
Their father’s coldness brings nothing but a cast of shadow, making the vibrant colors almost seem like an illusion of hope and desire.
The rising tower and the turquoise sea, swirling, wrapping around them like an invisible force, just like the challenges, the unpredictability that encircles their lives. They bend and twist as the brother’s bond remains steady.
Standing tall across an open field, witnessing a tragedy of a family, in which it thinks it’s just a tag game.
The two colors underscoring the tension between life and death, light and darkness, captivity and escape.
As though the world around them is burning with terror, the vivid reddish sky blends into their fear and the violent, overwhelming sorrow they feel. The weight of grief, fear, and guilt in their eyes as they row, carrying the burden of their father’s death.




