We’re told that the best laid plans are of mice and men. Many times, however, said plans do not go according to plan — and any creature (be it a man, a mouse, or otherwise) can easily attest to having experienced a case of unforeseeable failure at some point in time. As a result, we’re often told that life simply isn’t fair. And yet, despite the fact that most (or perhaps even all) of us grow up knowing full well that our plans in life may go awry — no matter how honest our intentions may be — we still tend to get upset when the shit hits the fan anyway.
Take the poor saps in Revanche (2008), for example.
Alex (Johannes Krisch) is little more than a low-level thug who lives and works in the seedy red-light district of a Viennese suburb. His Ukrainian-born girlfriend, Tamara (Irina Potapenko), is up to her pretty little neck in debt, and works as a prostitute. Both people are employed by a stout slimeball named Konecny (Hanno Poeschl), who allows his cash-paying clients to assault Tamara (as well as the other working girls), while taunting Alex for being “too soft” to do anything other than performing the most menial of tasks he gives him every step of the way.
Suffice to say, life isn’t all that Alex and Tamara were probably hoping it would be. And so, it is with the well-known “delusions of grandeur” that ex-con Alex begins to fantasize about holding up the local bank — thus giving he and Tamara the financial means to escape their squalid surroundings and start life anew.
Sadly though, Alex’s best laid plan is cut to a staggering halt when police officer Robert (Andreas Lust) happens to approach the getaway car with Tamara in it, and fires upon the fleeing vehicle — mortally wounding Tamara in the process. Fleeing to his elderly grandfather’s farm in the countryside, only to learn that officer Robert lives close by with his wife (Ursula Strauss).
Both men have been left emotionally crippled by the tragic encounter — one for having lost a life, another for taking it away. Neither man is able to open up to his family about his feelings, however. For Robert, it would mean exposing his own vulnerability. For Alex, on the other hand, it would mean going back to prison and forfeiting his distorted dream once and for all. As tensions grow, Alex is overcome with a single and insatiable desire: revenge — or, as some Europeans say, Revanche.



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