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 In Malaysia, three young Americans with little else in common are united  in a  shared enthusiasm for beer, women, and righteous hashish.  Eventually,  "Sheriff" (Vince Vaughn) and Tony (David Conrad) head back to New York.   Lewis (Joaquin Phoenix), a spacey but good-hearted sort, stays on with the  notion of helping save the orangutans. Two years later, a brassy lawyer  (Anne Heche) shows up in Manhattan with the news that her client, Lewis, has  spent the interim in Penang prison.  Arrested for a prankish misdemeanor they  all shared in, he's taking the rap for something worse: the dope stash they left him holding was a fatal few grams over the limit. Unless his fellow  Americans return voluntarily to (literally) share the weight, in eight days  Lewis will be hanged as a drug trafficker.
   Eight days is about as long as Return to Paradise stayed on theater  screens--the victim, perhaps, of Anne Heche-Ellen DeGeneres burnout in the press, or just  too damn many movies out there to keep track of.  Whatever the reason, it's a  pity, because this is one of the most compelling movie-movies in recent  memory.  The screenplay turns the ethical-psychological thumbscrews with  insidious effectiveness, despite the probability that the two writers brought  separate agendas to the project--Wesley (Cape Fear) Strick working the  complicity of the two home boys (each represents the halving of the other's prison sentence if they both agree to go back), and Bruce (The Killing  Fields) Robinson revving his engines for another face-off of implacable East  and irresponsible West.  And director Joseph Ruben, specialist in serving up  B-movie excitement with class-A skill (Dreamscape, The Stepfather), does  his sleekest work yet.   But the real news is a trio of career-best performances: Phoenix, harrowing as  a child-man whose sanity has been all but eaten away by terror; Vaughn limning  a fascinating portrait of a man at war with himself, self-interest and  furtive decency seesawing in his conscience; and Heche, part cagey poker player, part angel of mercy, mixing strength, delicacy, and desperation with  devastating precision. Oscar blinked, three times. --Richard T.  Jameson
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