Remember

2015

Action / Drama / Mystery / Thriller

22
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 69% · 99 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 79% · 2.5K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.5/10 10 28041 28K

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Plot summary

With the aid of a fellow Auschwitz survivor and a hand-written letter, an elderly man with dementia goes in search of the person responsible for the death of his family.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
June 21, 2019 at 09:56 AM

Director

Top cast

Christopher Plummer as Zev Guttman
Dean Norris as John Kurlander
Henry Czerny as Charles Guttman
Martin Landau as Max Rosenbaum
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
809.64 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
Seeds 3
1.52 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
Seeds 6

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Seth_Rogue_One 7 / 10

Solid drama-thriller

A drama-thriller about a 80+ year old man with dementia who set out to avenge his dead family, killed by a nazi in Auswitz whom he finds out is also living in America. And goes on a road-trip to find him and bring him some cold and long-earned justice.

Christoffer Plummer plays the role very well and in a world of entertainment where the expiry-date for lead-roles is at a young age for many it is rather refreshing to see a man of his age (85 when it was being filmed) lead a drama-thriller like this.

The smaller roles are also played well, Dean Norris stands out in a memorable performance.

I'm not gonna go into too much details but it's well worth seeing and deserves more viewers for sure.

Reviewed by ferguson-6 7 / 10

Plummer and Landau shine

Greetings again from the darkness. Earlier this year, 81 year old Maggie Smith impressed with her lead role in The Lady in the Van. And now, just a few weeks later, comes 86 year old Christopher Plummer in a gut-wrenching performance as Zev Guttman, a 90 year old German grieving widower suffering from dementia. Don't let that description fool you … Zev goes on a cross-continent road trip with a mission of seeking justice against the Auschwitz guard who killed his family more than 70 years ago.

Zev lives in a nursing home and often can't remember to wear shoes, much less that his beloved wife Ruth has passed away. It turns out another resident/patient at the home shares a history at Auschwitz with him. Wheelchair-bound Max (Martin Landau) says the two men are the last surviving members of their cell block, and must work together to find the guard – now living under the assumed name of Rudy Kurlander – and find justice for their families. So we find ourselves with a coalition of sympathetic senior citizen Nazi hunters.

Given the war atrocities, it makes sense that over the years, many movies have placed Nazi hunting as a core theme. Among the most well known are: The Odessa File (1974), Marathon Man (1976), The Boys from Brazil (1978), Inglourious Bastards (2009), and The Debt (2010). But leave it to director Atom Egoyan (Ararat, Where the Truth Lies) to find a different spin and a twist on a familiar theme. At times, Zev's dementia distracts us from his vengeful mission, while at various other times, the innocence of children acts as a dual reminder – the fragility of old age vs. the eye-for-eye brutality.

It's Landau's Max who acts as a type of narrative structure for the story. His sharp and focused plan is written out in letter form so that Zev can constantly refer and be reminded of his purpose. The letter also provides us viewers with the necessary back-story to fully comprehend the what's and why's. Each time Zev re-reads the letter, he re-experiences the loss of his wife – yet another of the film's reminders of the effects of dementia.

Zev's search takes him from Ohio to Canada to Idaho to Lake Tahoe. He goes through four Rudy Kurlanders – with Bruno Ganz (Downfall, 2004) and Jurgen Prochnow (Das Boot (1981) representing two. There is also a very uncomfortable sequence involving Dean Norris ("Breaking Bad") which reminds that hatred is often passed down through generations.

The nursing home "getaway" and the purchase of a gun have us thinking Zev is some type of senior citizen Jason Bourne – sharing the lack of memory, but none of the skills. The title of "Remember" has many meanings and interpretations here, not the least of which is as a display of loss, guilt, revenge, family and old age. Even the most poignant moment of the film occurs when Zev says "I remember".

Reviewed by quincytheodore 7 / 10

A trip of remembrance and redemption

In a striking similarity to Memento, a forgetful man wanders around with one goal of finding the men from his past. This is not the ordinary thriller as it's significantly slower with a peculiar lead character, yet it's surprisingly just as effective as any high octane action . The journey is not a happy one, and it builds audience's expectation in clever way that when the goal is reached, none of the outcomes seems to be pleasant.

Zev (Christopher Plummer) is an old man with dementia. After the death of his wife, his friend hands him a letter containing a mission to find the men from Auschwitz. Christopher Plummer is truly exceptional, he displays the courage as though his character is a secret agent despite deep down he's plagued with terror and uncertainty. His often meek demeanor is sympathetic to watch, but at the same time one can invest in his endeavor and motive.

The visual and audio are designed to create suspense even in trivial moments. Its main focus is a man with dementia, and little things might rattle him, so any bump in the trip proves to be challenging. Acting from the rest of cast is commendable. Characters would most likely help Zev, yet there's an unsettling feeling that their reactions can be antagonistic, especially since Zev is not particularly suave with words.

It plays with the awkward situation really well with the solemn music and view of scenery that feels darker even though it never literally becomes that way. On the other hand, this could also hamper the pace. This is far from action thriller, more investment is made towards the drama instead of gun-slinging action.

Zev's adventure is a bizarre and slow one, it's an ironic tale of both kindness and cruelty of others. Unsettling yet charming in its somber steps.

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