Contemporary thriller-on-a-train, ultimately gripping though it takes a while to get there, not unlike an interesting train trip. Woody Harrelson and Ben Kingsley bring star power to writer-director Brad Anderson’s well constructed movie, though the script and secondary characters are also first rate.
Woody Harrelson doesn’t have to stretch to play a geeky Iowa hardware store owner. Emily Mortimer fails to impress as his troubled wife.
Ben Kingsley always impresses, here as a wizened Russian narc. First rate bad guy Thomas Kretschmann chills as a stone cold narc on the take. Between his turns here and in Wanted, he’s got to be top of the call list for casting directors looking for ruthless bad-asses.
Spaniard Eduardo Noriega delivers a terrific performance as a charismatic smuggler. Let’s hope this movie puts him on Hollywood’s radar screen.
Murder on a train – or at least on a train trip – is a classic cinematic setting, here used to great effect as a petri dish in which to examine the interplay of American and European cultures and the unhealthy state of contemporary Russian life. Based on the evidence of this movie, filmmaker Brad Anderson deserves to play with bigger budgets and more ambitious stories.
Be warned: there is a seriously cringe-inducing torture scene.
Putin’s Russia, a near criminal enterprise, is replete with corrupt officials lording over a citizenry drinking itself to death. The movie depicts this well in the form of the brutal narco-police.