Based on Denis Johnson's beloved novella, Train Dreams is the moving portrait of Robert Grainier, a logger and railroad worker who leads a life of unexpected depth and beauty in the rapidly-... Read allBased on Denis Johnson's beloved novella, Train Dreams is the moving portrait of Robert Grainier, a logger and railroad worker who leads a life of unexpected depth and beauty in the rapidly-changing America of the early 20th Century.Based on Denis Johnson's beloved novella, Train Dreams is the moving portrait of Robert Grainier, a logger and railroad worker who leads a life of unexpected depth and beauty in the rapidly-changing America of the early 20th Century.
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- 16 wins & 115 nominations total
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Summary
Featured reviews
The storytelling is poetic without ever slipping into sentimentality. The film largely avoids explanatory dialogue - understanding comes through the narrative itself: through music, through silence, through glances, through the landscape that wraps around the characters. In that sense, Train Dreams recalls Terrence Malick - not through imitation, but through the same deep belief in image, rhythm, and atmosphere as carriers of emotion.
The soundtrack and sound design work closely with these visuals. Music and ambient sound hold the inner lives of the characters, especially that of Robert Grainier, whose plain humanity and quiet dignity form the film's center. His performance is restrained, almost rough - and all the more powerful for it. This man lives a life marked by hardship but also by small moments of beauty; a life full of loss, time, and change; trauma, but also silent acceptance. His loneliness is never staged melodramatically, but as something observed, sometimes even poetic.
As the railroad cuts through forests and progress pushes into untamed land, the old world disappears. The film doesn't turn this into a grand thesis - it simply lets it happen: an era dies, and Grainier witnesses it in silence. The railroad becomes a symbol of humanity's intrusion into nature, the engine of a transformation no one can stop. Within all of this lies a deep sense of melancholy - an elegy for the American West dissolving inevitably into modernity.
Visually, the film rests on clear, vivid, almost crystalline compositions that are allowed to linger. Each shot feels like a memory etched into the land itself: sometimes harsh, sometimes tender, always full of atmospheric force. Nature is not just a backdrop but both mirror and counterworld - a place of beauty and of danger, of freedom and of indifference.
Emotionally, Train Dreams is unexpectedly warm. The sadness is present, but it carries dignity. The narrative is full of quiet shocks that unfold slowly. What remains in the end is a feeling that's hard to name but easy to sense: a soft, overwhelming awareness of how fragile a life is, and yet how meaningful even the smallest moments can be.
Train Dreams is less a traditional film than a poetic space of memory - a work defined not by plot but by atmosphere, time, and humanity. Its strength lies not in what happens, but in how it is shown. In details, in glances, in silence. And in that, it finds its true power.
I liked that'Grainger' never develops a romance with the Kerry Condon character, its too predictable.
The threadbare story is a criticism but Joel Edgerton carries the film to a peak of authenticity in his looks and manner that after a while one forgets there is no forward narrative drive.
It's a tricky one to pull off....
This movie isn't for everyone. There's no antagonist/protagonist face off with a satisfying conclusion. It's just a story.
That's all I'm looking for. A life that isn't mine, in a time and place I'll never know, told by someone mindful of the work they are doing.
Every couple of years, someone does this kind of work and I'm thankful for it.
This is a story of life, loss, beginnings, and end. Of loneliness, sorrow, and brief happiness, which seems to be always fleeting.
This movie has a warmth very rare in these days of "The Avengers, and Ironman, Avatar, etc, most will Find it boring, uninteresting, and vague. But it tells a very important story, and if you "Get It", you'll be much more content in your life.
Excellent Movie, with Magnificent Acting. Joel Edgerton should get an Academy Award for his role in this magnificent Masterpiece!
It's just a Very Moving Movie!!!!
Did you know
- TriviaWill Patton provided the voiceover for the film. He had also previously narrated the audiobook of Denis Johnson's novella.
- GoofsThe paper currency shown when Roberts brings home his wages does not match U.S. note designs in circulation during the 1910s. The bills appear to be modern-era prop money rather than period-accurate currency.
- Quotes
Narrator: [spoiler] When Robert Grainier died in his sleep sometime in november of 1968, his life ended as quietly as it had begun. He'd never purchased a firearm or spoken into a telephone. He had no idea who his parents might have been, and he left no heirs behind him. But on that spring day, as he misplaced all sense of up and down, he felt, at last, connected to it all.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Must Watch Movies and Shows of November 2025 (2025)
- SoundtracksTrain Dreams
Performed by Nick Cave
Written by Nick Cave & Bryce Dessner
Produced by Nick Cave, Luis Almau & Bryce Dessner
Instrumentation by Nick Cave, Luis Almau & Bryce Dessner
2025 TIFF Festival Guide
2025 TIFF Festival Guide
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 42m(102 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.46 : 1






