Return from the Ashes backdrop - movieMx Review
Return from the Ashes movie poster - Return from the Ashes review and rating on movieMx
1965105 minThriller, Drama

Return from the Ashes

Is Return from the Ashes a Hit or Flop?

FLOP

Is Return from the Ashes worth watching? With a rating of 6.1/10, this Thriller, Drama film is a mixed-bag for fans of the genre. Read on for our detailed analysis and user reviews.

6.131 votes
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Return from the Ashes Synopsis

A Jewish woman, Dr. Michele Wolf, interred in a Nazi concentration camp during WWII returns to her Paris home after the war's end. She's unaware that her husband, the handsome gigolo and chess master Stanislaw Pilgrin, has been having an affair with her stepdaughter Fabi in her absence.

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Top Cast

Maximilian Schell
Maximilian SchellStanislaw Pilgrin
Samantha Eggar
Samantha EggarFabienne Wolf
Ingrid Thulin
Ingrid ThulinDr. Michele Wolf
Herbert Lom
Herbert LomDr. Charles Bovard
Talitha Pol
Talitha PolClaudine
Vladek Sheybal
Vladek SheybalManager
Viviane Ventura
Viviane VenturaReceptionist
Jacques Cey
Jacques Cey
Jacques Brunius
Jacques Brunius
Andre Charisse
Andre Charisse

Official Trailer

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Return from the Ashes worth watching?

Return from the Ashes has received mixed reviews with a 6.1/10 rating. It might be worth watching if you're a fan of Thriller, Drama movies.

Is Return from the Ashes hit or flop?

Return from the Ashes has received average ratings (6.1/10), performing moderately with audiences.

What genre is Return from the Ashes?

Return from the Ashes is a Thriller, Drama movie that A Jewish woman, Dr. Michele Wolf, interred in a Nazi concentration camp during WWII returns to her Paris home after the war's end. She's unaware that ...

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Critic Reviews

CinemaSerfMar 26, 2023
★ 7

Maximilian Schell is good in this as the pretty odious "Pilgrin". He is an intellectual philanderer whom, upon the Nazi invasion of Poland, marries the wealthy Jewish "Mischa" (Ingrid Thulin). She is incarcerated in a concentration camp, presumed dead, but after the war meets her husband again only to discover that has taken up with her step-daughter Samantha Eggar ("Fabienne") and that he will stop at very little to get hold of what is left of her fortune. It's odd to see a film about Nazis and their horrendous treatment of the Jews and for that not to be the most toxic element of a film. That accolade must go to Schell, and to the really unlikeable Eggar - a pair who really do rather deserve each there. The film is just too long, there are too many sagging points and the score from jazz legend John Dankworth drags it down, too; but it does have a decent story, is well produced and the acting is effective too.