I have watched this movie on cable a couple of times. I seldom watch a movie more than once, but this is one where every time I see it, I catch something new. There is a lot of subtle humor in little one liners. True, everyone in the movie is a character, but that's life I think. I just enjoy it.
Tom
Pittsburgh, PA
I've seen this movie about 15 months ago.
eolafan wrote:Watched a DVD movie last night called "The Station Agent" that was recommended by a coworker who knows I am into railroads...the story is all about this guy who dies and leaves this old passenger depot he owns in New Jersey to his employee (a crumudgeon dwarf...really!). The depot is in a town called Newfoundland, NJ, and is supposedly along the NYS&W (they show a shot of two guys pacing one of their trains at speed with two big GE units on the head end). Well, aside from the train references (the side story seems to be all about odd people railfanning....I am not sure if I should have been insulted by this) but the main story line seems to have been about three really wierd people coming together to try and solve one anothers problems in life...a really wierd movie that will likely win all kinds of awards from the film critics or something like that. Has anybody else seen this movie and can you shed any light on what it was supposed to be about?
Living nearby to MP 186 of the UPRR Austin TX Sub
Check out "Closely Watched Trains." It is a Czech film from the mid 1960's dealing with the nazi occupation during WWII.
Great acting, story etc. I believe it won a foreign film academy award. Be ready for sub-titles.
I've only seen the film once, but I like it a lot. It's a little slow and pretty carefully paced in spots, but it's got some neat, off-beat characters, and a really satisfying denouement.
I think its about 'railroads' only peripherally. The main character could be 'hung up' on anything. In his case, it's trains. It's all he knows. He's probably been repairing model trains all of his life and that's what he relates to. When the owner of the hobby shop dies and leaves the station to him, he's suddenly thrust out into the 'real world' and has to take stock of himself. He learns to cope. Dwarf or not, he's been more or less 'protected' most of his life. Now he has to deal with people, in addition to his beloved trains. Granted, the people he meets (the snack-bar stud and the lost woman) are not 'normal' in any sense of the word, but the three of them make their own way in life and actually 'find' each other as a sort of family. Okay, my take on the film.
Frankly, I liked the scene where he and the 'snack-bar' stud are waiting for the train to come over the bridge, while the dwarf sits on the bench and says, "You don't need to be here, you know," and the snack-bar stud shrugs and says something like "I just want to see what makes you tick." The scene cracked me up. It funny and really touching.
The film is about people reaching out to each other, and I like that. But the trains, IMO are just peripheral. Well handled, though. I'd like to know where it was filmed--that East Coast scenery is just gorgeous!
Tom View my layout photos! http://s299.photobucket.com/albums/mm310/TWhite-014/Rio%20Grande%20Yuba%20River%20Sub One can NEVER have too many Articulateds!
yad sdrawkcab s'ti
QUOTE: Originally posted by eolafan Has anybody else seen this movie and can you shed any light on what it was supposed to be about?
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP57313 I saw most of this on one of the cable channels, a couple of weeks before Christmas. I enjoyed most of it but honestly cannot tell you what the main point was; I was never a good movie critic. Evidently it is geographically accurate.
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