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Return to Paradise Poster

Return to Paradise

Give up three years of their lives or give up the life of their friend. They have eight days to decide.
1998 | 109m | English

(15946 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

Lewis, Sheriff and Tony are three friends vacationing in Malaysia. Sheriff and Tony eventually leave to pursue careers in New York, but Lewis stays behind to work with orangutans. Two years later, Sheriff and Tony learn that, because of their past actions, Lewis has been arrested for drug possession. With Lewis facing a death sentence, the friends are left with a difficult decision: return to Malaysia and split Lewis' sentence, or let him die.
Release Date: Aug 10, 1998
Director: Joseph Ruben
Writer: Wesley Strick, Bruce Robinson, Pierre Jolivet
Genres: Drama, Romance, Thriller
Keywords death penalty, friendship, malaysia, marijuana, childhood friends
Production Companies Propaganda Films, PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Tetragram
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Vince Vaughn John 'Sheriff' Volgecherev
Anne Heche Beth Eastern
Joaquin Phoenix Lewis McBride
David Conrad Tony Croft
Jada Pinkett Smith M.J. Major
Vera Farmiga Kerrie
Nick Sandow Ravitch
Elizabeth Rodriguez Gaby
Ming Lee Mr. Chandran
Joel de la Fuente Mr. Doramin
Richard Chang Prosecutor
James McCauley Famous Divorce Lawyer
Brette Taylor Young Woman in Limo
Deanna Yusoff Woman in Bar
David Zayas Construction Foreman
Is Issariya Malaysian Woman in Hammock
Ed Hodson Features Editor
Kevin Scullin Doorman #1
Glenn Patrick Doorman #2
Patrick Teoh Chief Justice
Curzon Dobell Client
Amy Wong Ticket Agent
Name Job
Wesley Strick Screenplay
Mark Mancina Original Music Composer
Andrew Mondshein Editor
Jonathan Lumley Gaffer
Ezra Swerdlow Unit Production Manager
Julie A. Bloom Second Assistant Director
Pam DeMetruis-Thomas Foley Editor
Linda Shamest Post Production Supervisor
Joseph Ruben Director
Bruce Robinson Screenplay
Pierre Jolivet Novel
Craig McKay Editor
Reynaldo Villalobos Director of Photography
Barbara Parks First Assistant Sound Editor
Stan Bochner Supervising Sound Editor
William Sarokin Sound Mixer
Thomas S. Drescher Music Editor
Michelle Botticelli Assistant Editor
Kathleen Chopin Casting
Carol Silverman Assistant Set Dresser
Natalie N. Dorset Art Department Coordinator
Jennifer Davidoff Cook First Assistant Editor
Joel Hatch Production Supervisor
Kathryn Bihr Key Makeup Artist
Jimmy N. Roberts Stunt Double
Jeanne Gilliland Boom Operator
Dennis Bradford Art Direction
Malcolm Reid Construction Foreman
Michael E. Steele First Assistant Director
Barry Wetcher Still Photographer
Robert Griffon Jr. Property Master
Bill Groom Production Design
Corey B. Yugler Script Supervisor
Betsy Klompus Set Decoration
Raymond M. Samitz Construction Coordinator
Francesca Paris Key Hair Stylist
Lucille Smith Assistant Production Manager
Carrie Gerlach Unit Publicist
Juliet Polcsa Costume Design
Miguel López-Castillo Assistant Art Director
Jane McCulley ADR Editor
Jack Coffen Rigging Gaffer
Jack Gill Second Unit Director, Stunt Coordinator
Peter Bucossi Stunt Coordinator
Karl Shefelman Storyboard Designer
Lyn Pinezich Location Manager
Joe Bucaro III Stunt Double
Name Title
Charles Wang Co-Producer
Ezra Swerdlow Executive Producer
Alain Bernheim Producer
Michael E. Steele Co-Producer
Steve Golin Producer
David Arnold Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 18 29 13
2024 5 20 29 12
2024 6 17 30 7
2024 7 17 27 10
2024 8 23 54 12
2024 9 13 20 8
2024 10 16 30 8
2024 11 16 57 6
2024 12 12 27 6
2025 1 12 21 9
2025 2 10 15 3
2025 3 5 14 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 1 2 0
2025 8 1 2 1
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 3 4 1

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Reviews

Wuchak
5.0

_**Great moral conundrum and message, but too contrived**_ "Return to Paradise" (1998) is about three Americans in Malaysia. Two of them are friends from New York City (Vincent Vaughn and David Conrad) and the other they meet there, an environmental-hippie type (Joaquin Phoenix). The three have a ... great time partying together and then the two from New York go back to the grind in the USA. Two years later they find out that their friend in Malaysia has been in prison for having too much hashish, which the three purchased together. Due to the country's severe drug laws, those considered traffickers are put to death and, unfortunately, the hippie possessed beyond the limit. He'll hang in eight days unless the other two go back and they'll all get 3 years in prison; if only one goes back it's 6 years each. Will they go back? That's the set-up of the film and it's not a spoiler since this all unfolds in the first 20 minutes, which means that most of the rest of the movie takes place in New York and focuses on whether or not the other two will go back and save their friend. Keep in mind that this was a dude they met in Malaysia so it's not like they were bosom buddies from their youth or anything. The trailer of "Return to Paradise" miss-advertised the film as a thriller largely taking place in exotic SE Asia, but that's not the case. This is a drama that involves a moral conundrum, a Christ figure and possible redemption. The story concentrates on Vaughn and Anne Heche, the latter as the lawyer of the hippie who tries to convince the other two to go back to save their friend. Complicating the situation even further is the fact that there are no legal documents involved since Malaysia is a third world country and, as such, there's no guarantee that the two will "only" get three years. And what about the other potential negative possibilities, like never making it out of the hellhole alive? This is a top of the line film and the producers went all-out to serve up a quality picture; for instance, the Malaysian prison scenes are very convincing. Also, the actors are great across the board and Vaughn proves that he can nail a dramatic role. Moreover the moral is to die for, no pun intended. Unfortunately the actors are strapped to the contrivances of the plot and I had a hard time seeing them as real people in a real situation. In other words, it seemed like the characters do this-or-that merely because the screenplay says he or she is supposed to do this-or-that at that moment. And so I was never really able to embrace them as real people, but rather as puppets manipulated by the script. Still, it's not bad and it's worth catching if you like the actors and the story trips your trigger. The film runs 111 minutes and was shot in New York City, Thailand, New Jersey, Philadelphia and China. GRADE: C+

Jan 15, 2022