Train Dreams

STREAMING REVIEWS:

Netflix;
Drama;
Rated PG-13 for some violence and sexuality.
Stars Joel Edgerton, Felicity Jones, Kerry Condon, William H. Macy, Nathaniel Arcand, John Diehl, Paul Schneider, Clifton Collins Jr., Will Patton.

Clint Bentley’s Train Dreams is not a film that moves with the frantic pulse of modern cinema, but rather one that breathes with the slow, deliberate respiration of the Earth itself. Adapted from Denis Johnson’s 2011 novella, the movie serves as an ode to a lost American era, centering on the life of Robert Grainier, a man whose existence is defined by the very landscape he helped scar and settle. The production design at times feels a bit too “magic hour” and curated for a period known for its documented grit, but there is an undeniable, haunting power in its aesthetic. It presents the Idaho Panhandle not as it strictly was, but as it remains, in the haze of a long-lived memory: a cathedral of timber and ghosts.

This approach evokes the spirit of Robert Redford’s 1992 A River Runs Through It. Much like that film, which earned an Academy Award for best cinematography, Train Dreams uses the natural world as a primary character. However, where Redford’s Montana was a place of grace and familial bonding, Bentley’s Idaho and Oregon are landscapes of brutal isolation. The cinematography by Adolpho Veloso captures the vastness of the Pacific Northwest through a naturalist lens, making the human figures within it look almost fragile and temporary. The panoramas of the Columbia River Gorge and the dense, claustrophobic groves of the Panhandle create a visual tension between the beauty of the wilderness and the violence required to “tame” it for the railroad.

Joel Edgerton delivers a performance of profound quiet as Grainier, an itinerant laborer. We meet him in a rugged world of “misery whip” saws and horse-drawn sleds, where the physical cost of progress is measured in the broken bodies of men like Arn Peeples. Played with a sharp, philosophical wit by William H. Macy, Arn is the camp’s resident intellectual until a falling tree branch — a “widow-maker” — clocks him into a tragic mental decline. Watching Macy transition from a man who muses that “the dead tree is as important as the living one,” to a shell-shocked dimwit whose presence quickly vanishes from the camp, is a stark reminder that while the railroad was building a nation, it was simultaneously discarding the men who laid its tracks.

The film pivots on the Great Fire of 1910, a historical “palisade of flame” that remains one of the most destructive events in American history. In reality, the “Big Burn” consumed three million acres — an area the size of Connecticut — in a mere two days, killing 87 people and leaving behind a charred landscape. In the film, this fire consumes Grainier’s home and his family. Felicity Jones brings a luminous, fleeting warmth to the role of Gladys, Grainier’s wife. Their love is portrayed through brief, tender domesticities — planning where a bed might sit in a cabin not yet built — which makes the forest’s subsequent silence all the more deafening. When the fire roars through, sounding like a thousand freight trains, it robs Grainier of his wife and their young daughter, Kate. This loss turns the film into a psychological study of grief, where the scenery begins to mirror Grainier’s fractured mind.

Between these moments of tragedy are quiet men gathered around campfires, where the movie attempts to grapple with an environmental angle. Here, the laborers speak of the “murder” of the forest for the growth of the railroad and the nation. While these dialogues are beautifully written, they feel disconnected from the characters’ reality. It is difficult to believe that hardened laborers in the early 1900s, struggling for survival in a “pre-OSHA” world, would possess such modern, eco-conscious sensibilities. This choice feels like a contemporary perspective forced into a historical context. The men were surely aware of the destruction, but the way they philosophize about it feels more like the voice of a 21st-century screenwriter than a 20th-century logger.

The movie continues to challenge our imagination through its depictions of the mystical. In a haunting sequence, Grainier encounters wolf howls followed by a feral child, played with startling, animalistic intensity by Zoe Rose Short. In the film’s literal eye, she is a girl raised by the wild, but I interpreted this encounter as a profound hallucination born of long-term isolation. To me, Grainier was caring for an injured wolf, his mind so warped by sorrow that he projected the image of his lost daughter onto the beast. When he wakes to find the “girl” gone and the window open, it feels less like a child has run away and more like the wild has reclaimed a memory he was never meant to keep, a form of grieving that transcends words.

As the story progresses over its concise yet weighty 1 hour and 45 minutes, Grainier’s subtle aging mirrors the West’s modernization. It took me a beat to realize that the world had shifted until the horse was replaced by the automobile and the hand-saw by the introduction of the chainsaw. Grainier, now too old for the dangerous work, becomes a relic. The film relies heavily on Will Patton’s narration, whose gravelly, rhythmic cadence provides the necessary “clocks” for this journey. While I prefer a film to show its story visually rather than rely on a voiceover, Patton’s performance is the exception, his voice feeling as though it were pulled directly from the bark of the trees.

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Train Dreams played in select “arthouse” cinemas in major U.S. cities (such as New York, L.A. and Chicago) and across regions of the Pacific Northwest (Spokane and Seattle), where it was filmed. Now it’s widely available on Netflix, where it has found a second life in streaming, reaching a global audience that can appreciate its slow-burn intensity from home.

In the final act, we encounter a Department of Forestry worker, Claire, who lives in a watchtower overlooking the expanse. She speaks of loss and how the forest returns from fire with surprising speed. It is a provocative thought: that nature is indifferent to human tragedy. This is punctuated by the closing image of Grainier finally riding a train, looking out the window at the land he once walked on foot. He is a passenger now, a man who lived to see his world finally fold into history. This is a moving, atmospheric work that honors the unremembered laborers of history. It reminds us that beneath every modern vista lies a palisade of flame and the quiet, haunted dreams of those who stood before it.

 

The Forever Purge

BLU-RAY REVIEW:

Universal;
Horror;
Box Office $44.54 million;
$29.98 DVD, $34.98 Blu-ray, $44.98 UHD BD;
Rated ‘R’ for strong/bloody violence, and language throughout.
Stars Ana de la Reguera, Tenoch Huerta, Cassidy Freeman, Leven Rambin, Josh Lucas, Will Patton.

The fifth entry in the “Purge” franchise, The Forever Purge is the kind of horror movie that results when filmmakers who don’t seem to understand economics want to shove in a message about economics.

But that’s pretty par for the course for this franchise, which depicts a dystopian future in which a fascist American government makes all crime legal for one night a year in order for the population to cleanse itself of aggression.

The Forever Purge picks up following the events of 2016’s The Purge: Election Year, a politically naïve film about a challenger to the system running for president. By the end of it, she wins and the Purge is ostensibly outlawed. So, as the beginning of this film explains, eight years later the country votes the fascists back into power and they reinstate the Purge, which off the bat is a pretty clunky way to continue the storyline of the franchise.

That’s because the plot of The Forever Purge doesn’t take place during Purge night as the other films do, but in the aftermath of a Purge, as an underground movement of disgruntled citizens decides the Purge should be permanent. So it could just as easily stemmed from the attempt to ban the Purge from the last film. But that’s not the approach employed by screenwriter (and series creator) James DeMonaco.

So the film begins with a pair of migrants fleeing the Mexican cartels and settling as laborers in Texas. One of them ends up working for a rancher (Josh Lucas) who is depicted as slightly racist. After Purge night comes and goes, the Purger movement rises up, killing anyone they perceive as un-American, or who they just don’t like. One of them is a white ranch-hand whose dissatisfaction with his lot in life leads him to equate being paid a salary and a bonus to slave labor for some reason, so he tries to take over the ranch, leading to a bloody confrontation that ends with the rancher family and the migrants heading south to seek refuge in Mexico, evading racist purge groups along the way.

The attempts at social commentary by trying to put a twist on current political issues seems clever on the surface, but the allegory doesn’t hold up to actual real-world scrutiny. It’s ultimately just an excuse for some relatively effective sequences of action violence anyway. But the premise is wearing real thin at this point.

The Blu-ray offers a few skimpy extras, with an eight-minute behind-the-scenes featurette, a two-minute featurette about the Purger costumes, the film’s trailer, a mundane minute-and-a-half deleted scene, and storyboards for an expanded opening sequence.

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Warner Releasing ‘Swamp Thing’ DC Universe Series Digitally Dec. 2, on Disc Feb. 11

Warner Bros. Home Entertainment will release Swamp Thing: The Complete Series for digital download Dec. 2, and on Blu-ray and DVD Feb. 11.

The short-lived series ran for 10 episodes on the DC Universe streaming service in the middle of 2019.

Based on the DC Comics characters created by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson, “Swamp Thing” follows Dr. Abby Arcane (Crystal Reed) as she investigates a deadly swamp-born virus in Louisiana and encounters Swamp Thing (Derek Mears), an elemental supernatural force who seeks to return balance to the natural world.

The cast also includes Virginia Madsen, Andy Bean, Henderson Wade, Maria Sten, Jeryl Prescott, Jennifer Beals and Will Patton.

The Blu-ray edition will include a digital copy.

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‘Halloween’ to Stalk Digital Dec. 28, Disc Jan. 15 From Universal

Halloween, the latest sequel to the horror franchise, will come out on digital (including Movies Anywhere) Dec. 28 and 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, DVD and on demand Jan. 15 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.

The film earned $158.8 million in theaters.

The film takes place four decades after Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis, reprising her role in the 1978 John Carpenter classic) narrowly escaped the masked Michael Myers’ brutal killing spree. She now lives in a heavily guarded home on the edge of Haddonfield, where she’s spent decades preparing for Michael’s potential return. After being locked up in an institution, Myers manages to escape when a bus transfer goes terribly wrong, leading to chaos in the same town he preyed on decades earlier. Laurie now faces a terrifying showdown when the deranged killer returns for her and her family — but this time, she’s ready for him.

The film also stars Judy Greer (Ant-Man and The WaspJurassic World), Andi Matichak (“Underground”), Will Patton (Armageddon, The Punisher) and Virginia Gardner (Project Almanac, “Runaways”).

Bonus features on 4K UHD, Blu-ray, DVD and digital include deleted and extended scenes and the featurettes “Back in Haddonfield: Making Halloween,” “The Original Scream Queen,” “The Sound of Fear,” “Journey of the Mask” and “The Legacy of Halloween.”

The film will be available on 4K Ultra HD in a combo pack which includes 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray, Blu-ray and digital. The 4K Ultra HD disc will include the same bonus features as the Blu-ray version, all in 4K resolution.

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