Review of The Train

The Train (1964)
10/10
Frankenheimer turns The Train into a breathing character of steam and steel
13 November 2016
During WWII, in the final day of the German occupation of France, a German colonel and a true art lover, Col. Von Waldheim (Paul Scofield), orders his troops to crate and transport all the great impressionistic paintings (from the Jeu de Paume Museum) that he can possibly get his hands on. These paintings are not only among the best in the world, they are worth millions in Reichsmarks.

The crated paintings are loaded onto a train to be sent to Germany. But, the train must arrive in Germany before the Allies liberate France. While von Waldheim is obsessed with getting the train OUT of France, the French Resistance, represented by Labiche (Burt Lancaster), becomes equally determined to keep the train IN France while waiting for the Allied liberation. Very few in the Resistance understand the artistic value of the cargo, but they know that it represents 'their nation's honor' and see how valuable it must be, based on von Waldheim's determination to have it. And, while the Germans control the trains, the railroad workers form a great network of Resistance fighters.

The Resistance does everything in its power to sabotage their own rail system and lead the Germans away from Germany. Small French towns are 're-labeled' to make the Germans (riding on the train) think that they are going one way when they are really going in another; trains are re- routed by conductors, switchmen, and engineers; and rail cars are separated from engines, used to block tracks and cause train wrecks. Germans, in their frustration, kill many Frenchman in retaliation. However, the battle over the train continues to the bitter end.

Another Frankenheimer black-and-white masterpiece, this action movie is riveting from beginning to end. It pits the wills, skills, and ingenuity of the two principal characters in a seemly ceaseless series of cat-and-mouse ploys to control the train. The cinematography is also great. The constant imagery of trains being twisted and turned, stopped and started, heaving and letting off stem, stand in stark contrast to the art that they carry and the men that try to control them. In this movie, Frankenheimer turns trains and rails into 'living, breathing characters of steam and steel.'

Scofield and Lancaster are both excellent in their opposing roles. I would rank this movie among the best movies I have ever seen!!
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