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Rédemption

Original title: The Claim
  • 2000
  • Tous publics
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
7K
YOUR RATING
Milla Jovovich, Nastassja Kinski, Sarah Polley, Wes Bentley, and Peter Mullan in Rédemption (2000)
Trailer for The Claim
Play trailer2:21
1 Video
99+ Photos
DramaRomanceWestern

A rich prospector runs a thriving mining town during the California Gold Rush. But the blind ambition, greed, and selfishness that drove him to succeed finally catch up to him with the arriv... Read allA rich prospector runs a thriving mining town during the California Gold Rush. But the blind ambition, greed, and selfishness that drove him to succeed finally catch up to him with the arrival of three travelers.A rich prospector runs a thriving mining town during the California Gold Rush. But the blind ambition, greed, and selfishness that drove him to succeed finally catch up to him with the arrival of three travelers.

  • Director
    • Michael Winterbottom
  • Writers
    • Frank Cottrell Boyce
    • Thomas Hardy
  • Stars
    • Wes Bentley
    • Peter Mullan
    • Ron Anderson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Winterbottom
    • Writers
      • Frank Cottrell Boyce
      • Thomas Hardy
    • Stars
      • Wes Bentley
      • Peter Mullan
      • Ron Anderson
    • 100User reviews
    • 36Critic reviews
    • 62Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 10 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Claim
    Trailer 2:21
    The Claim

    Photos106

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    + 99
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    Top cast50

    Edit
    Wes Bentley
    Wes Bentley
    • Donald Dalglish
    Peter Mullan
    Peter Mullan
    • Daniel Dillon
    Ron Anderson
    • Stagecoach Driver
    Marty Antonini
    Marty Antonini
    • German
    Milla Jovovich
    Milla Jovovich
    • Lucia
    Sarah Polley
    Sarah Polley
    • Hope Dillon
    Nastassja Kinski
    Nastassja Kinski
    • Elena Dillon
    Randy Birch
    • Priest
    Marie Brassard
    Marie Brassard
    • French Sue
    Bill Chesterman
    • Mr. Timpson
    Artur Ciastkowski
    • Delaney
    Fernando Davalos
    • Barman
    Duncan Fraser
    Duncan Fraser
    • Crocker
    Shirley Henderson
    Shirley Henderson
    • Annie
    Kate Hennig
    • Vauneen
    Jimmy Herman
    Jimmy Herman
    • Miner No.3
    Landon Hicks
    • Young Miner
    Matthew Johnson
    • Miner
    • Director
      • Michael Winterbottom
    • Writers
      • Frank Cottrell Boyce
      • Thomas Hardy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews100

    6.37K
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    Featured reviews

    5Chris_Docker

    Worthy but inconsistent

    Based loosely on Thomas Hardy's novel "Mayor of Casterbridge" this is a valiant recreation transposed from England to the cold mountains of early California. A man sells his wife and daughter for a gold-mining claim. Years later, when he is the local sheriff, his wife and daughter return. A sub-plot documents the arrival of the railroad construction. This has all the makings of a truly great movie but unfortunately is good without being great. The first half is particularly disappointing - the camera fails to linger where there are wonderful scenic shots of breathtaking beauty or dialogue that could have emotional impact. It lingers over boring, inconsequential scenes. The movie also veers stomach-churningly between episodes of gripping realism to episodes where it simply looks all too obviously like actors on a set reciting their lines. Verging on pretentiousness at times, The Claim still manages to pull through as a worthwhile film, largely because it is worth seeing for the bits that work well.

    The movie was shot in sub-zero Calgary, Canada, and considering the lengths to which the film makers went to in order to achieve authenticity, it is sad that the finished result was rather less than finished.
    Buddy-51

    impressive drama

    Although set in a remote Sierra Nevada mining town in 1867, `The Claim' is really Thomas Hardy's classic novel, `The Mayor of Casterbridge' transported to American soil. The move is a good one.

    The story concerns a wealthy miner named Daniel Dillon who practically runs the town of Kingdom Come as his own personal fiefdom. One fateful day three groups of people arrive into town: some railroad surveyors who offer the possibility that a train may soon be passing through the town, bringing with it people, wealth and prosperity; some prostitutes who plan to open up shop in this all-male community; and a sickly woman and her beautiful young daughter, who, it turns out, are the wife and daughter that Dillon sold for a bag of gold in his desperate youth – a decision he has lived to rue ever since.

    Given this multi-character canvas, writer Frank Cottrell Boyce and director Michael Winterbottom take an almost painterly approach, allowing the drama to unfold at an unhurried pace, so that they can concentrate on the bleak snowy winter setting which ends up playing as great a role in the drama as the characters themselves. The most compelling of these is Dillon, a figure of almost tragic proportions, a man who seizes the chance to make amends for his heinous sin, yet who discovers, all too late, that, for some sins, there can be no redemption. Peter Mullan provides a superbly understated interpretation of a man whose acquisition of immense wealth and power only mask the loneliness and guilt he feels inside. Wes Bentley as the chief railroad surveyor, Nastassja Kinski as Dillon's ailing wife, Sarah Polley as their daughter and Milla Jovovich as Dillon's devoted mistress all turn in outstanding performances. Although none of these characters are afforded the same richness and depth that Dillon is, they still create a fascinating tapestry of conflicting dreams and emotions. For the concept of `dreams' is a core element of the story's pioneer theme. Here are a group of rugged individualists, all enduring great hardships on a wild outpost far away from the soothing amenities of civilized life – yet all dreaming of being a part of the building of a burgeoning new nation, of which the makeshift towns and railroad-building are truly indelible symbols.

    And, indeed, in many ways, it is the images – of rugged mountains, of the relentlessly falling snow, of a house being pulled by horses across a snowy plain – that stick with us most profoundly. `The Claim' is a somber, moving and fascinating glimpse into our pioneer past.
    8zirh

    Recommended

    My fave film of 2001 yet. In another week I may not have gone to see this, so I'm glad there were no other releases that appealed to me, because I wouldn't want to have missed this - I enjoyed it more than I was expecting to. Yes, it is reminiscent of 'Heaven's Gate', but this is probably better, if only for the fact that you won't have to devote half a day to see it. It has its flaws certainly - for instance, Wes Bentley's character doesn't really convince - but its positives far outweigh those: it looks great, the performances are excellent, and it's moving without being sentimental. Although her character was maybe just a little too sweet and humble for me (but that's not really her fault) Sarah Polley steals the show. Peter Mullan was class too, but (again, not the actor's fault) I did find it hard to reconcile how old he looked given the timescale and his character as depicted in flashback - though I guess the hard life of a prospector in 1860's America would have taken it's toll. This movie does give you a feel for how life would have been at that time and place, and for the importance the railways played in the country's development. The moral of the story is the old one about selling your soul for filthy lucre, you have to live with your sins and your mistakes, and you can't put a price on love. I rarely pay to go see a movie twice, but I might just make an exception for this one. Don't miss.
    8wildstrawbe

    Winterbottom's masterpiece

    I have been following this director for a while and I always liked his films but this time he has exceeded my expectations.

    'The Claim' is like an ancient greek tragedy and Dillon is its' hero. Dillon is a man who goes West with his wife and new born daughter in order to find gold. In the process he sells his wife and his daughter in exchange for that gold. Years later his wife will come back to haunt him and Dillon comes to realize how empty his life has been, how irrelevant wealth can be to happiness. The story is so beautifully told and the last scene where the people of the new city of Lisboa prey on Dillon's gold is a metaphor or at least I would like it to be. I think Winterbottom wanted to show how the world will never change, how people will continue to go after that gold. Dillon came and went, but he didn't leave anything behind him. He achieved all those things, he was a pioneer he went out West, he was one of the people who built America but he didn't win his daughter's heart. And it makes one wonder, what was the point of his life. 'The Claim' is the story of America itself, an America that was built on greed, on the quest for new lands, new conquers and prosperity. Peter Mullan gives us an excellent performance, as well as Sarah Polley as the elegant young daughter and Milla Jovovich. Nastasia Kinsky has a rather insignificant role and Wes Bentley is disappointing. Overall, a very good film, a piece of art by Winterbottom and a story that you won't forget for a while.
    Spleen

    Turns out, after some will have lost patience, to be fairly good

    Michael Winterbottom's decision to construct the whole movie out of extreme telephoto shots - some of which have a pane of focus so shallow you start to wonder if it's really there at all - is more dogma than style. It places a heavy strain on the eyes which some viewers will mistake for tension in the story. (Michael Nyman's music, consisting of something like the "endless melody" which Wagner threatened to write but thankfully never did, likewise creates a tension which some viewers will mistakenly think belongs to the story. Actually, for once Nyman's music isn't that bad.) You have to admire the skill, and the art direction, like the choice of location, is beyond praise, but there's NO REASON AT ALL to make as peer at every single scene through a telescope, except perhaps that it's a shortcut (far too easy a shortcut) to stylistic unity.

    It's surprising, towards the end, after all the cold, barely focused and rather absent storytelling, to find that the film packs a punch, after all. It came as a shock when I realised I'd actually been watching something GOOD. We really had been transported to another place (the journey was just a little slow); not having read Hardy's book, I found myself wondering how he could possibly have placed the story in an English setting.

    I was also surprised to find myself touched. Some sad things happen at the end. I won't say what they are, and a synopsis of the plot probably wouldn't reveal what's sad about them, anyway.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The scene where Dillon ('Peter Mullan') confronts Daglish (Wes Bentley) in the bedroom of Lucia (Milla Jovovich) had to be reshot many months after principal photography was over. Bentley had cut his hair for another role, and had to be outfitted with a wig matching his hairstyle in "The Claim" at a cost of ten thousand American dollars.
    • Goofs
      Near the end of the film, Donald and Francis arrive back to town on horseback. Several men are walking behind them. Two men in Russian style hats are wearing modern day aviator sunglasses.
    • Quotes

      Vauneen: [first lines - overlapping conversations] Alright ladies, let's go. I'm Vauneen, I take care of you from this point on. Ya get down, and we're going to get you to work real soon...

      Deputy: Alright gents, let's hand-up your firearms.

      Donald Dalglish: Why?

      Deputy: It's a town's rule.

      Donald Dalglish: These firearms are the property of the Central Pacific Railroad.

      Deputy: That don't matter, Mr. Dillon says no firearms in town, so no firearms in town, come on...

      Donald Dalglish: You can't take these weapons...

      Vauneen: I said, leave that...

      Deputy: Well then you can't come into Mr. Dillon's town.

      Foreman: We're happy to cooperate with Mr. Dillon. Boys hand him your firearms...

      Vauneen: [to overeager men] Just get back. They have to be cleaned and washed.

      Miner: That one's clean enough.

      [points at Hope]

      Vauneen: Well, she's not with me. Let's go girls...

      Miner: [to Hope] Give me a ride, and I'll give you a gold dollar.

      Hope Burn: I don't know what you mean.

      [a fight breaks out]

    • Alternate versions
      There are two versions available. Runtimes are "2h (120 min)" and "1h 55m (115 min) (DVD) (Spain)".
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Thirteen Days/Chocolat/The Gift/The Family Man/The Claim/Miss Congeniality (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      Sé Velha
      Written by Américo Durão & António Menano

      Published by SPA

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    FAQ19

    • How long is The Claim?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 13, 2001 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • Canada
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Kingdom Films / Kingdom Come Productions
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kingdom Come
    • Filming locations
      • Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad, Colorado, USA
    • Production companies
      • Alberta Foundation for the Arts
      • Alliance Atlantis Communications
      • Arts Council of England
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • CA$20,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $669,258
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $7,131
      • Jan 1, 2001
    • Gross worldwide
      • $885,836
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h(120 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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