Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.
Chris Van Allsburg lived in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
The Pere Marquette was the big railroad in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
The movie locomotive was based on Pere Marquette 1225.
The book "The Art of The Polar Express" will answer many of your questions.
Buy a copy of "The Art of The Polar Express" at a local bookstore. It is an excellent book.
Andrew
Watch my videos on-line at https://www.youtube.com/user/AndrewNeilFalconer
cnw1995 wrote: my youngest and I wish to express our opinion that the cars pulled by the venerable Berk are indeed streamlined... ;) Look at the picture of the PE running over the vaulted bridge into the North Pole and see the rear car - Hollywood got it wrong... what do you think?
I see what you are seeing and I understand your logic, but, I will have to disagree with you. With the artist artwork (which by the way I think is great), there is not enough level of detail in the drawings of the outside of the cars to really say if they are streamlined or not.
This is where perception rears its ugly head. The locomotive is definately not streamlined, so why should the cars be? If you have seen the Lionel Polar Express train set before the book, you may tend to automatically think of the drawings as non-streamlined cars.
The clincher for me proving that they are not streamlined cars is the view from the inside of the car as they are serving the hot chocolate. Those are definately not the windows of a streamlined car.
Taking the "perception is everything - reality...nothing!" theme one step further, I wonder how many children or parents will or have seen the movie before reading the book and then thinking that the book had it all wrong?
.
True, Jim, that pesky hot chocolate picture does seem to contradict the others - especially the vaulted ceiling and the windows - hmmm, except the double-pane windows are different too that the ones on the other pages of the book.And before anyone gets the sense I'm serious about this, let me reassure you I'm not. The author-illustrator is certainly evocative - he has a neat website too. But there's certainly precedent for a non-streamlined engine to pull streamlined or lighter-weight cars.
I've enjoyed the Art of the Polar Express book - but it's full of the movie art (which as we now know is all wrong)
In the streamlined era, many RRs rebuilt heavyweight cars with roof farings to match the roofline and profile of the streamlined cars. Some even painted "shadow fluting" on the sides to match the stainless siding on their new cars. The interiors, of course, would still reveal the old monitor roofing (but with a/c vents in place of the cloistory windowws). Therefore, some or all of the PE cars could be rebuilt heavyweights.
Just suggested as a possible way to reconcile seemingly inconsistent visuals.
Andrew Falconer wrote: The book "The Art of The Polar Express" will answer many of your questions. Buy a copy of "The Art of The Polar Express" at a local bookstore. It is an excellent book.Andrew
Andrew,
Thanks for the reminder about this book.
My copy arrived today. For the Polar Express lovers out there, this is an EXCELLENT book and a must have.
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