Archive for the ‘The Train’ Category

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Watch The Train Online

Lundi, janvier 18th, 2010
Watch The Train Online. Watch The Train Online.

Movie Title: The Train
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The Train is available for streaming or downloading.

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When Burt Lancaster called on director John Frankeheimer yet again to rescue another describe from another director who had left the project, the call took Frankenheimer to Paris to bring his luminous murky and white coarse depth of focus shots to contain on view provoking subject matter.

La Bisch, the unwilling resistance man leisurely in WWII (Lancaster) is pitted despite his objections against a cultured German general who is attempting to catch every painted masterpiece out of Paris that can be found.

Knowing that delays to shipment in the face of the german retreat and allied approach, La Bisch uses both ingenuity and expansive physical pains to attempt to block the movement of a suppose laden with stolen art, eastbound from Paris.

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The status twists are the stuff of chronicle, and each twist provokes controversial positions regarding the importance of art and the brevity of human life.

The long shot action scenes in this film are intelligent, and Lancaster, who was injured during filming, performs noteworthy of the astonishing scenes in the movie with a accurate (not feigned) limp.

Fine ensemble cast, including many of the best French character actors of the time, a serious script saved by brevity from the melodramatic and arguably the best camerawork and editing of any action film in history (you read suitable) effect this film great to Frankenheimer’s other B&W films from the period (e.g., The Manchurian Candidate and even The Birdman of Alcatraz) .

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The Sigh belongs in any serious English language cine collection. This is one of the top 100 films of all time.

Fankenheimer is a director’s director - something of an icon in contemporary American Film. He has worked with the best, and has made some of the most innovative and colorful movies of the last forty years. While always a director of “luminous” films, he mastered the action-film early in his career and to a determined extent this has over-shadowed his deeper (and darker) side.

On a superficial level “The Protest” is the last of the “full-scale” action films. They blow up everything in seek for precise, they fracture precise steam-locomotives, and many of the actors are doing their hold stunts. In fact Burt Lancaster not only does all his gain stunts, he stands in for other actors too!

But unlike most action-flicks, “The Deliver” goes deeper. Lancaster plays the French resistance leader asked to end Nazi Colonel Paul Schofeild from leaving Paris with a direct load of paintings. “Let them have the paintings,” Lancaster replies. He doesn’t sight the point in risking anyone’s life for a work of art. “But they are the soul of France”. And this is where the exact interest (and the subtext) starts.

Imagine your house is on fire. You accelerate inside and you can assign your well-liked pet, or the Van Gogh hanging on the wall. What do you decide? Well that’s the thesis tedious “The Deny” - why are these paintings worth dying for? Why are they worth killing for? (Incidentally Lancaster took a similar area a few years later in “Castle Withhold”) . Lancaster could care less about the paintings. And Schofeild will waste anyone and anything that tries to halt him leaving with them. Not only is it a clash of cultures, it’s a clash about culture. A Nazi kills to set aside the artwork his occupy ideology has called degenerate; a partisan kills to achieve the art he has never wanted to ogle.

The DVD has an satisfactory commentary by Frankenheimer. He describes the slack the scenes action, the difficulties and joys of this production, the demolishion of locomotives (and cameras), and the joys of working with Burt Lancaster. And he’s very bellow about it. The DVD is also in the new wide-screen aspect, opening up the image considerably.

If you’re a fan of the war film or the action genre, The Affirm is a must have. And if oyu fair like ample film making, then it’s serene a must gape.
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