Miramax is positioning The Boys are  Back as a potential Oscar vehicle for Clive Owen. My suggestion would be  to go into it forgetting about the hope for high praise and you will find a  mildly unique entry in the sobby broken family melodrama genre and a solid  performance by Owen that doesn't have the steam for a nomination, but it's well  worthy of praise.
The film itself does its best to buck the genre, setting a  male character as the lead whereas we are most often watching a single woman  bounce around her hectic life trying to take care of the kids and deal with the  loss of a loved one. I also think the Australian setting will be enough to  convince some stateside moviegoers they are watching something different than  they are used to, when it really is anything but.
Owen stars as Joe Warr, a well-known Australian sports  columnist who originally hails from Blighty, but since his divorce and  subsequent marriage to an Aussie equestrian, he has moved down under and started  a new life fresh with a new son (Nicholas McAnulty) to boot. Sadly his wife  suddenly passes, leaving Joe and his son on their own. They fall into a certain  carefree and unsanitary lifestyle when Joe's son (George MacKay) from his first  marriage pays a visit revealing the flaws in Joe's parenting system, which is  simply a matter of saying "yes" to most anything.
Romance ensues and certain career entanglements cause their  own share of problems, which is to be expected in a film of this sort, and while  it is cliche and predictable the story remains sweet and entirely tolerable.
The Boys are Back is definitely a step  up from Scott Hicks' last outing with No Reservations,  but don't expect it to follow in the footsteps of Shine,  which he directed Geoffrey Rush to an Oscar in 1996 and earned himself a Best  Director nomination among five others. So to say the film comes from good stock  is a definite and is sure to be looked at as the helmer's best narrative film  since Shine, but I would never say it's a theatrical must  see. A rental should take care of this one, but you won't be kicking yourself  should you decide to buy a ticket.
