Thomas and the Magic Railroad (2000)

reviewed by
Ian Waldron-Mantgani


 Thomas and the Magic Railroad      *

Rated on a 4-star scale Screening venue: Odeon (Manchester City Centre) Released in the UK by Alliance Atlantis on July 14, 2000; certificate U; 85 minutes; country of origin USA; aspect ratio 1.85:1

Directed by Britt Allcroft; produced by Britt Allcroft, Phil Fehrle. Written by Britt Allcroft. Photographed by Paul Ryan; edited by Ron Wisman.

CAST.....
Alec Baldwin..... Mr. Conductor
Peter Fonda..... Grandpa Burnett Stone
Mara Wilson..... Lily
Didi Conn..... Stacy Jones
Russell Means..... Billy Two Feathers
Michael Rodgers..... Junior
Voice of John Bellis..... Thomas the Tank Engine

To begin, some background information: "Thomas the Tank Engine" was a strange and wonderful British TV show for children, first broadcast when I was growing up in the 1980s, and still popular today. It took place at a railway station, where every day virtuous steam engines and malevolent diesel trains would pull in to tell the one human character, Fat Controller, what scrapes they'd been getting into. It was innocent fantasy, complete with a great theme tune, and narration by Ringo Starr.

Now it has been adapted to the big screen in a movie that shows why 'Americanisation' is a pejorative term. "Thomas and the Magic Railroad" is nonsensical, cheesy, saccharine drivel, with all the charm of its source material removed, and the low-tech special effects kept in. The original television programme was on a limited budget, and so the trains were plastic models with stationary painted-on expressions that talked without moving their mouths. This is a big Hollywood movie, but uses the same technique, despite having computer graphics for its other sections.

The movie's shabby, mismatched visual style prevents its multiple story threads from coming together, and creates a schizophrenic tone, especially as characters zoom across different worlds "Alice in Wonderland"-style without ever looking shocked. There are scenes in 'reality' -- where a reclusive railway tycoon, Burnett Stone (Peter Fonda), is being visited by his granddaughter Lily (Mara Wilson). Their time together is interrupted by a distress call from the film's main character, Mr. Conductor (Alec Baldwin), a midget pixie who uses a magic whistle to transport himself across the multiple universes he inhabits.

These include Shining Time -- a whitewashed theme park of a town, whose residents wear zombie-like smiles and uniform clothing -- and the Island of Sodor, which resembles episodes of "Thomas the Tank Engine" but has nothing to do with anything else in the movie. The plot follows Mr. Conductor's search for gold dust, which he needs to power his whistle. Efforts to resupply keep getting thwarted by naughty trains like Diesel, Splatter and Dodge, and he must speak to flowers, send supernatural spells to dogs and do a lot of other incomprehensible stuff to succeed.

I found this hard to follow. Kids will be so confused you might as well hand them the work of Plato in the original Ancient Greek tablets. The actors deserve sympathy, too, because they had to pretend that it all made sense. Baldwin is the most embarrassing -- wandering around on his own, attempting to breathe excitement into nothing in particular, talking as if to an imaginary friend. Fonda delivers a ridiculous series of sentimental, deadly serious speeches; he looks like he's trying to win an Oscar, even though his lines are all similar to the following: "Lady was the best steam engine in the world... ah, how I loved her... and my wife loved her, too... but Diesel chased her... and her coal all ran out! O God!"

"Thomas and the Magic Railroad" was written, produced and directed by a first-time helmsman named Britt Allcroft. He should be ashamed of himself. Projects like this -- incompetent and tortuous, but advertised as 'family entertainment' -- not only insult children's intelligence, but eat away at them, causing devastation. Kids will approach it with high expectations, because of love for the TV show; then refuse to believe it's bad, convince themselves that it must be good, and that they just weren't paying attention. Then they will slowly realise that, no, it WAS bad, and that they have been cheated and fooled.

COPYRIGHT(c) 2000 Ian Waldron-Mantgani http://members.aol.com/ukcritic


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