Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen a mysterious train accident forces a man to change his plans, he is confronted with a series of choices. Each decision he makes leads to a different scenario, each one filmed by a diffe... Tout lireWhen a mysterious train accident forces a man to change his plans, he is confronted with a series of choices. Each decision he makes leads to a different scenario, each one filmed by a different director with a different cast.When a mysterious train accident forces a man to change his plans, he is confronted with a series of choices. Each decision he makes leads to a different scenario, each one filmed by a different director with a different cast.
- Récompenses
- 8 victoires et 3 nominations au total
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10ghkfilms
I wanted to write a review as soon as I got home from the theater, but I thought it best to let the experience saturate a bit as I was still trying to find a way to describe the feeling I had after seeing "Train Station." I kept comparing it to the first time I heard Bob Dylan's "It's All Right Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" or when I first watched "E.T." as a kid, but even those moments fall short of the profound effect this movie had on me.
I have never seen the world so connected in any art form like I saw on Tuesday at The Main Art Theater in Royal Oak, MI. It was truly beautiful. The whole concept is ground breaking and CollabFeature's ability to make it happen is awe-inspiring. I know I will be talking about both the movie and my experience of seeing it for many years. I walked away feeling inspired, amazed, and incredibly grateful to have had the opportunity to attend this screening. I'm excited for others to see it and experience the innovative art of filmmaking in its purest form.
I loved every minute of it.
I have never seen the world so connected in any art form like I saw on Tuesday at The Main Art Theater in Royal Oak, MI. It was truly beautiful. The whole concept is ground breaking and CollabFeature's ability to make it happen is awe-inspiring. I know I will be talking about both the movie and my experience of seeing it for many years. I walked away feeling inspired, amazed, and incredibly grateful to have had the opportunity to attend this screening. I'm excited for others to see it and experience the innovative art of filmmaking in its purest form.
I loved every minute of it.
Just a fantastic film. Deserves to be seen again and again. Its a start of a new genre in cinema. Multiple directors from different parts of the world telling a single story in a unique way. A must watch for film lovers. Train Station is a surreal and unique journey of a single character who is never called by a name in the film, he is dressed in brown and that is how you know it's the same character changing as the demography of the story changes. The film is about the journey this character takes that starts from the 'train station'. This also has some very beautiful seamless transition in editing. Even though the main character changes its sex, age, country, the story still feels a single unit because of its editing.
This is a unique and intriguing film. The fact that this film was a collaboration of filmmakers from around the world is an impressive accomplishment. Although every director has their own unique style, the various directors did a great job of connecting each story so that the film is cohesive. This movie kept my interest from beginning to end - A must watch!
What the film 'Train Station' implies is that the simplest decisions are often the ones that send our lives into the most unexpected directions. We try to prepare ourselves for every situational outcome, but turn left rather than right and an entirely new butterfly effect occurs. This indie film selection is a remarkable exercise in the roulette of randomality and choice. 'Train Station', produced and directed by Yosef Khouwes, is a collaborative effort between forty, yes forty filmmakers and forty-three actors, playing the same character across twenty-five different countries. Every time the main character is faced with a decision the scene transforms into a new location, along with new actors continuing the previous actors' roles. At each point in time when the protagonist chooses their path, they become an entirely new person existing in an entirely new location. As a philosophical implication: Your universe changes along with your choices and you essentially become reinvented through your own actions.
WHAT IF?
The film begins unassumingly enough in a Nairobi train station. The man in brown, as all the players in his persona will be wearing, has just been told that his train has been delayed for an undetermined length of time. He can either wait or return to his home. He makes his choice and immediately the scene cuts to a train station in another city with our unnamed traveler, played by a new actor, abruptly demanding a refund on his ticket. As he leaves the station a series of random events occur, demanding choices at every turn. The sequence of events and continuity moves well from city to city and actor to actor. Each choice leading to a new situation, leading to new choices, ultimately resolving themselves as the means to an end. But the story is incomplete, because what if? What if our character makes a different choice at any particular point in the sequence of events? The directors play through several series of events multiple times, each beginning at square one. As our character makes different choices leading to different outcomes, as in life; each series of events draws cleverly to its own end, but always leaving the protagonist stranded at another fork in the road. One observation is in how the juxtaposition of culture and tradition from country to country affects the decisions made by each personification of the main character. It's easy to lose track if you're not paying attention. The film takes the viewer through many examples of human nature and behavior employing a myriad of uniquely stylized scenes. The tone of the movie is set only after the unnamed traveler decides to wait for his train. There he is met on the platform by an "old man who knows"; suggesting a hint of Krishnamurti , and a philosophical conversation begins about choice, free will and awareness. The performances were convincing except for one or two rough patches of dialogue here and there, but the pacing and structure of the entire film were smoothly scripted. As each scenario unfolds the film expands into a series of short films each with its own international backdrop. Beyond the narrative, the feature itself is a fine example of the "visual art" of filmmaking. The context is relevant, the cinematography is crisp and the locations appeared to have been well scouted for color and texture. Even though I thought one or two of the scenes were a bit contrived; maybe a little too "slapstick", other scenes were very noir-esque, laced with Lynchian nuances and sublimely surreal. As artists we understand that coordinating that level collaboration is a monumental feat in itself. But when the process yields this promising of a result, well that's the icing on the cake! Bottom line? Train Station is an ambitious experiment in art house filmmaking that actually holds up.
EJ Wickes/Cult Critic Mag/CICFF
WHAT IF?
The film begins unassumingly enough in a Nairobi train station. The man in brown, as all the players in his persona will be wearing, has just been told that his train has been delayed for an undetermined length of time. He can either wait or return to his home. He makes his choice and immediately the scene cuts to a train station in another city with our unnamed traveler, played by a new actor, abruptly demanding a refund on his ticket. As he leaves the station a series of random events occur, demanding choices at every turn. The sequence of events and continuity moves well from city to city and actor to actor. Each choice leading to a new situation, leading to new choices, ultimately resolving themselves as the means to an end. But the story is incomplete, because what if? What if our character makes a different choice at any particular point in the sequence of events? The directors play through several series of events multiple times, each beginning at square one. As our character makes different choices leading to different outcomes, as in life; each series of events draws cleverly to its own end, but always leaving the protagonist stranded at another fork in the road. One observation is in how the juxtaposition of culture and tradition from country to country affects the decisions made by each personification of the main character. It's easy to lose track if you're not paying attention. The film takes the viewer through many examples of human nature and behavior employing a myriad of uniquely stylized scenes. The tone of the movie is set only after the unnamed traveler decides to wait for his train. There he is met on the platform by an "old man who knows"; suggesting a hint of Krishnamurti , and a philosophical conversation begins about choice, free will and awareness. The performances were convincing except for one or two rough patches of dialogue here and there, but the pacing and structure of the entire film were smoothly scripted. As each scenario unfolds the film expands into a series of short films each with its own international backdrop. Beyond the narrative, the feature itself is a fine example of the "visual art" of filmmaking. The context is relevant, the cinematography is crisp and the locations appeared to have been well scouted for color and texture. Even though I thought one or two of the scenes were a bit contrived; maybe a little too "slapstick", other scenes were very noir-esque, laced with Lynchian nuances and sublimely surreal. As artists we understand that coordinating that level collaboration is a monumental feat in itself. But when the process yields this promising of a result, well that's the icing on the cake! Bottom line? Train Station is an ambitious experiment in art house filmmaking that actually holds up.
EJ Wickes/Cult Critic Mag/CICFF
Watching the trailer, I know this is not going to be an artsy or high value movie but out of curiosity, I still watch it. I wonder what's the idea of those "choices" and even if the movie is bad, I hope I can still see 25 cities or train stations. It turn out NONE ! There are no major surprise in the plots or the "choices", nothing that ties up all the choices, some acting are horrible, especially the young Asian Chinese pair, hardly any outdoor scenes where I can see the cities, no train station scenes other than some close up ticketing counters. I give it a 5 just for its "idea" although there is nothing interesting or intelligent about it.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe German segment was shot on a real Street Fair on October 3rd 2012, during the celebration of the reunification of Germany at the famed Brandenburg Gate.
- ConnexionsReferences Le hasard (1987)
Meilleurs choix
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Железнодорожный вокзал
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 37min(97 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1
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