THE TRAIN: 4K UHD Blu-ray (UA, 1964) Kino Lorber
What would the collected
masterpieces, created by some of the world’s most distinguished artists,
cumulatively be worth – not just in dollars – and, how far would you go to
preserve them for future generations? This question is at the crux of John
Frankenheimer’s The Train (1964); an esoteric tour de force, long
neglected in reputation as one of the truly outstanding war epics. War movies were
- arguably - a dime a dozen, Hollywood keeping the genre alive with
permutations on the appealing 'good versus evil' with the Nazis, of course, as the
perennially satisfying villains everyone loves to hate. Pause a moment, and
very interesting to consider the concept of valor here – only virtuous from the
vantage of the victors. Today, stories of the ‘great war’ have acquired a sort
of quaintness never intended. Lest we forget not even twenty-years had passed
since the end of WWII when Frankenheimer elected to make this movie, the sting
of memory still fresh as paint, perhaps even more so with the resulting frost
off the Cold War lingering in the air as the threat of nuclear annihilation
loomed large on the horizon. Based on Rose Villand’s memoir, Le front de
l'art, written after the war, and, about her own heady times as an art
historian for the Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume, The Train is an
exceptional piece of pseudo-biographical fiction - an action picture wrapped in
a philosophical debate with historic trappings.
In 1944, the German army began its
systematic liquidation of France’s rare treasures, culled not from vast
storehouses, but from the private collections expropriated from exiled Jewish
gentry; priceless artifacts cleared through the Jeu de Paume to be shipped to
Berlin, presumably, later to be sold as fuel to retool Hitler’s already
lumbering war machine – fast running out of steam. In a sort of ‘truth is
stranger than fiction’ postscript, after these works of art were liberated
by the Allies, Lt. Alexander Rosenberg was to discover the archived contents of
many a plundered piece from his own father's (famed art dealer, Paul Rosenberg)
private collection. All this is history
of a kind, and mostly of no interest to Frankenheimer or his screenwriters,
Franklin Coen and Frank Davis (assisted by an unaccredited Walter Bernstein,
Howard Dimsdale and Nedrick Young). In fact, Frankenheimer’s involvement on the
project came at the eleventh hour and at the behest of star, Burt Lancaster who
demanded The Train’s original director, Arthur Penn be immediately
sacked. Lancaster’s concerns were many, but mostly stemmed from the fact he had
an uneven string of only moderately successful to downright abysmal flops to
add to his own body of work since segueing from his studio-sanctioned rogues’
gallery of rakishly handsome adventurers into more seriously-minded dramatic
character parts. Lancaster was, to be sure, older too - at fifty-one, still
agile and athletic, although perhaps carrying the weight of his troubled youth
and struggles in early adulthood, more plainly writ across his very lived-in
face.
To some extent, Lancaster toted a
bit of that youthful ‘chip’ on his shoulders for the rest of his days,
affecting the ‘tough guy’ persona both on and off the screen, yet always with
an air of nobility and a modicum of compassion to recommend it. With a
background in circus acrobatics and an athletic physique, Lancaster was a
natural for the movies, although initially he regarded acting as a very
unnatural and not altogether engaging profession. Producing/directing,
arguably, suited him better, or rather, was where Lancaster would have preferred
to concentrate his efforts. Undoubtedly accomplished, Hollywood nevertheless
repeatedly courted the star come indie producer to return to the screen in
front of the camera. Increasingly, however, Lancaster’s reputation for being
intractable and demanding began to out-way and out-charm his formidable
talents. By the time of The Train, Lancaster was effectively calling the
shots in his own career. What he wanted and expected he generally received
without fail, star temperament taking a backseat to his peerless chops as a
seasoned professional. And Lancaster was infinitely more interested in how his
performance fit into these pictures as a whole, rather than self-involved in
simply making himself look good. When he recognized a scene would play better
with an emphasis on some other actor sharing in the spotlight, he would
magnanimously recommend to his directors the other person be favored in camera
set-ups.
To some degree, Lancaster would
become disgruntled in mid-career by the tepid box office results he had
achieved with his own production company, Hecht-Lancaster. Although regarded as
classics today, both Sweet Smell of Success (1957) and The Leopard
(1963) had been unqualified financial disasters. And Lancaster, among the first
and most popular stars to move into the producer’s chair, ultimately forming
his own production company with writer, Ben Hecht (virtually unheard of) had
grown weary of doing any movie where philosophical debates took precedence over
a quality action yarn. To be sure, there are still elements of contemplation
within The Train. The first 30-minutes of the Coen/Davis screenplay are
expertly crafted exposition almost entirely dedicated to the logistical
quandary of preventing the Nazis in their desire to steal this storehouse of
great art. Actress Suzanne Flon, cast as the Jeu du Paume’s curator,
Mademoiselle Villard (a sort of Rose Villand knockoff) puts it best when she
confronts Lancaster’s railway inspector, Paul Labiche in his caustic refusal to
invest in their cause, suggesting the Nazis’ latest scheme to steal art is nothing,
if not a systematic extension of their master plan to break France’s national
pride and the spirit of its people.
In truth, the ‘train’ depicted in
this movie never managed to get out of Paris, the renewed bureaucratic
interventions of a select group from the faire de la résistance, suspending the
Nazis’ appropriation plan indefinitely until the Allied Invasion put a definite
period to it. The movie settles on a more intricate and daring series of
adventurous machinations, the resistance plumped out to encompass a small, and
surprisingly sophisticated underground of engineers, railway workers and
civilians pulling together to achieve their own small victories against seemingly
insurmountable odds. Undeniably, Frankenheimer’s dynamism behind the camera –
along with that of his two brilliant cinematographers, Jean Tournier and Walter
Wottitz, as well as his superb editor, David Bretherton, are matched by Burt
Lancaster’s towering performance as the man of few words to whom the survival
of France’s art legacy becomes quite personal, particularly after the Nazis
assassinate train engineer, Papa Boule (Michel Simon) for delaying their
departure by rigging the locomotive’s oil lines for a few francs.
Lancaster gives us a piebald
portrait of a man divided in his purpose at the outset, but increasingly
entrenched against an enemy he has come to despise rather than impatiently
tolerate. In later years, Lancaster’s visage could adopt an almost impenetrable
and steely-eyed gaze, that of a wounded monument. Herein, he provides us with
more substance to offset this granite-like façade. The other actor of
distinction in The Train is Paul Schofield, begun austere and maniacal
as General von Waldheim, the traditional Nazi evildoer transformed into a far
more menacing, yet, deliberately attractive villain by Schofield’s commanding
presence and bone-chilling accent. We must, of course, remember Schofield’s
star had yet to ascend at the time he made The Train, his iconic and
Oscar-winning turn in Fred Zinnemann’s A Man for All Seasons (1966)
still a good two years away. Even so, Scofield exhibits an exquisite refinement,
a sort of gentlemanly Dorian Gray, prone to bouts of rage-infested satisfaction
to pleasurably crush all who trespass against him. Despite his lack of cache
within the Hollywood community, Scofield is every bit Lancaster’s equal in The
Train, the penultimate clash of temperaments between Schofield’s insane
Nazi and Lancaster’s entrenched liberator adding to the exhilaration of the
exercise. If, as the old saying goes, a story is only as good as its villain,
then Scofield proves a formidable baddie, not so much because he is already
doomed to play the part, but rather because he presents us with evil as a
delicious underlay of self-destructiveness.
For authenticity, The Train
is also populated by some A-list French character actors in supporting parts;
Jeanne Moreau as Christine, the embittered proprietress of a hotel in the
fictional town of Rive-Reine, (who scolds Labiche for his involving her in his
narrow escape, then helps to conceal him from the Nazis who are in hot
pursuit), Jacques Marin (as
stationmaster Jacques, who orchestrates the devious arrangement to detour the
train from its scheduled route to Berlin, thus helping Lancaster’s escapee to
stage a daring murder and disappearing act), and Albert Rémy and Charles Millot
(respectively cast – and dubbed – as Libiche’s devoted compatriots, Didont and
Pesquet). It is likely each of these contributing talents was chosen, not by
Frankenheimer, but by deposed director, Arthur Penn. Frankenheimer’s
instatement on The Train was likely motivated by the fact he had already
made three movies with Burt Lancaster (1961’s The Young Savages, 1962’s Birdman
of Alcatraz and 1964’s Seven Days in May). Indeed, Lancaster worked
best with those he sincerely trusted on the same level of expertise as his own.
While their remained a mutual respect between star and director on the set of The
Train, Frankenheimer would later admit he genuinely feared the star, his
backlog of experience both in front of and behind the camera, coupled with
Lancaster’s explosive temperament and rough and tumble personality, causing
Frankenheimer to walk on proverbial eggshells throughout the shoot.
Another Hollywood cliché states
that out of great turmoil comes great art. If so, then the symbiosis and
occasional frictions between star and director on The Train attest to
the genius in this maxim. And Frankenheimer, while possessing his own definite
plans for the production, nevertheless could definitely recognize the cache
Lancaster’s star quality brought to the project (even if the critics could not)
and also, the contributions he made in the myriad of ‘suggestions’ offered up
along the way as per how to ‘improve’ the picture. Frankenheimer also respected
the sheer willpower it had taken for Lancaster to bring himself up from the
squalor and poverty of his youth; his self-willed transformation into one of
the greatest all-around natural talents of his – or any other – generation.
Lancaster’s teenage tenure as a circus acrobat would certainly come in handy on
the set of The Train. There are, in fact, several mind-boggling
sequences of daring Lancaster commits throughout the film: shimmying down a
metal ladder, being thrown to the gravel from a moving locomotive, climbing up
the sides and across the varied rooftops of several tall buildings, and,
finally, sliding on his back down a steep grassy incline. Aside: this latter
stunt was achieved despite a severely sprained knee and ankle. Again, remember,
Lancaster is in his fifties here, performing feats of physical prowess that would
leave most any fellow in his twenties winded.
Adopting a very documentarian look,
The Train is the last major action movie to be photographed in B&W,
affecting a newsreel quality, perfectly to evoke the war years and matched only
by its baffling and intricate long takes, the actors subtly maneuvered within
the frame from establishing two shots to close-ups. Tournier and Wottitz’
cameras allows for a constantly and subtly renewed clarity of the cinema space
in deep focus, thus affording the stars their opportunity to…well…act. Today’s
movies have entirely forgotten the importance of such carefully plotted and
meticulously staged master shots, seemingly more fascinated by their own
navel-gazing close-ups and chop-shop editing, a lot of needless (and pointless)
in-camera trickery married to post-production insertions of CGI, and, shaky
hand-held discombobulating pans, leaving no lasting significance in the mind of
the viewer. You can commit a lot of narrative sins in the movies today that
would never have been tolerated in the picture-making biz back then. The
Train is a master class in achieving thrills the old-fashioned way, via the
sheer, clear-eyed chutzpah of a razzamatazz showman like Frankenheimer, working
overtime both in front of and behind the camera. In The Train, nothing
is left to chance. The stunts, including a two locomotive pile-up and
derailment, are all done in camera and full scale. And Frankenheimer’s
execution of these sequences has style plus, his captivating bird’s eye view
intermittently interrupted by a few expertly inserted medium shots and the
sparse close-up, rife with purpose. What is rather laughingly referenced today
as ‘old-fashioned’ film-making now, herein comes across in the very best sense
as a testament to the director’s unified farsightedness for telling a great
story with outwardly graceful proficiency.
Reportedly, the exteriors depicting
the destruction of Varies rail yard were a blessing in disguise. For some
years, officials in Paris had wanted to tear down this eyesore but were faced
with a lack of funds to cover the demolition expenses. When Frankenheimer’s
crew appeared on the scene and offered to level these ruins for nothing,
filming the daring escape of the train as part of the sequence where Allied
bombers attack, it seemed like a plan tailor-made to both party’s mutual
satisfaction. However, imploding real buildings requires considerably more
explosives than blowing up a set, the intensity of these blasts placing
Frankenheimer, his cast and crew at considerable peril and managing to total at
least one camera in the process.
Frankenheimer was to experience his own ‘near death’ moment while making
The Train – this time in the air. Nearly 6 weeks after principal
photography and a sneak prevue, producer, Jules Bricken suggested another
‘action sequence’ was needed to complete the story. In truth, Frankenheimer had
already conceived of a scene where an Allied Spitfire inadvertently attacks the
locomotive with Labiche, Didont and Pesquet on board, the trio eventually
taking refuge inside a tunnel until the danger has passed. To have committed to
this sequence as part of the production schedule would have meant going into
overtime and considerably over budget. Now, with Bricken’s blessing,
Frankenheimer borrowed another half-million (roughly the equivalent to five
million today) to complete this sequence. But to capture the moment, the
director and his cinematographer boarded a helicopter heading straight for the
plane. Due to last-minute miscommunication, these two flying machines passed
within ten feet of one another in the sky, causing Mrs. Frankenheimer (who had
come to watch her husband’s progress from the ground) to faint from fear over
their near mid-air collision.
The Train begins in 1944,
the dwindling hours of the Nazis’ European stranglehold. We are introduced to
Mademoiselle Villard, the curator of the Jeu de Paume, quietly observing with
pride as Colonel Franz von Waldheim studies the priceless artifacts. She
erroneously believes that despite their opposing worldviews they at least share
an innate love for the preservation of art. Alas, her faith is shattered when
von Waldheim informs Villard of the army’s intention to ship the entire
consignment back to Berlin; suggesting to her there is only monetary value in
its safeguarding. We observe as the Nazis pillage and package up the museum’s
contents in record time, the consignments loaded onto a train waiting at Varies
depot. Von Waldheim is to have a bad time of it when his orders are rescinded
by Yard Manager Paul Labiche, acting on orders from Capt. Von Lubitz (Richard
Münch). Von Waldheim appeals to Von Lubtiz’s sense of exploitation. He has,
after all, no great love of art. But art as money…ah, now that’s a horse of a
very different color – shall we say, ‘green’ – and, in the waning military
might the Nazis could certainly use more cash. Hence, new orders are drafted;
the train set to make its departure for Berlin immediately. In the meantime,
Mademoiselle Villard, who is loyal to the French Resistance, seeks out Labiche,
pleading her case for the train’s delay. It need only be a matter of a few days
since the Allies are steadily advancing and will likely liberate Rive-Reine
very soon. Labiche is hard on Villard,
explaining human casualties are too high a price he is unwilling to pay for the
salvation of a few ‘pictures’ none of them has ever seen, much less admired.
Learning of an Allied bombing raid
to take place this very afternoon Von Waldheim orders the train to leave the
station at once, his foresight narrowly saving the paintings when the aerial
assault decimates the depot. But the train’s engineer, and Labiche’s good
friend, Papa Boule has sabotaged the locomotive’s oil lines, clogging them with
a few francs. Discovering this interference, Von Waldheim has Boule publicly
executed as a warning to the other men. He furthermore orders Labiche to see to
not only to the necessary repairs but also the train gets through its mission
to Berlin, along with Didont and Pesquet.
On the afternoon before his departure, Labiche is sent to a local hotel
to rest up; the proprietress, Christine, at first believing him to be little
better than a Nazi stooge. However, when Labiche stages a daring diversion
(blowing up a nearby fuel tanker; then, murdering a foot soldier in station
manager, Jacques’ office) merely to forewarn other resistance fighters of the
Nazis’ plan, Christine takes pity on him, covering for his whereabouts and
hiding him in her cellar. As night falls, Labiche, Pesquet, Didont prepare to
take the train on their mission. At the last possible moment, Von Waldheim
orders Pesquet to stand down, sending Schwartz (Donald O’Brien) as his emissary
on the journey in his stead. The trip begins in earnest; the Nazis documenting
every length of their sojourn from Montmirial to Chalons, St. Mekehould and
Verdun. At Metz, however, the tracks are deliberately shifted to detour the
train to the south; Schwartz catching on to this change in route, but utterly
baffled when he sees the town of Remilly (the next stop on their itinerary)
rapidly approaching. Actually, the resistance has camouflaged all of the names
of each station from here on. Remilly is actually Pont A Mousson, St. Avold –
Commercy, and ZweibrucKen, the first German town, really, Vitry Le Francois.
The train is headed back to Rive-Reine and the Nazis do not even know it.
In the meantime, Jacques has one of
the engineers derail a locomotive ‘accidentally on purpose’ to create a barrier
for the returning art train. Nearing the last length of their journey, Labiche
beats Schwartz unconscious with the shovel used to stoke the engine with coal;
he and Didont tossing Schwartz into the underbrush. Labiche also has Didont
uncouple the cars, pushing the locomotive full steam ahead and jumping off
several miles from the station. Didont and Labiche make a daring escape.
Labiche is wounded in the leg while attempting to cross an open bridge; a ‘last
minute’ sketch written into the story to account for Burt Lancaster’s
legitimate limp after he sprained his knee and ankle performing the leap from
the train. Only Didont manages a clean getaway. The runaway locomotive plows
into the derailed engine already at the depot, followed by the uncoupled cars
and another locomotive driven by Pesquet, who desperately leaps to safety only
a few moments before the impact. Regrettably, Pesquet is gunned down by the
Nazis in his feeble attempt to run away. Von Waldheim is incensed; ordering
Jacques executed. He also has the whole town thoroughly searched for Labiche.
Christine harbors the fugitive in her cellar for a time. Under the cover of
night, Didont sneaks into the rail yard to paint the roofs of the train cars
white, a sign for the advancing Allies not to bomb them in their pending aerial
assault. Discovering the ruse, Von Waldheim has Didont shot. After considerable
effort, Von Waldheim recognizes the symbolic nature of the whitewash and elects
to accompany the train to Berlin with its collected artworks. He is getting out
while the getting is good.
Working his way up the track,
Labiche detonates some explosives to derail the train. Alas, his conscience
will not allow him to create anything more than a mild diversion and
inconvenience for the Nazis. For Von Waldheim has stocked the locomotive with a
healthy sampling of locals from the town; hostages to prevent any such acts of
violence against him. Von Waldheim puts his crew to work repairing the small
stretch of track, ordering some of his own Nazi soldiers to advance on foot and
scout for more booby-traps. Climbing a perilous incline to work his way
considerably ahead of the train, Labiche slides down the other side of the
mountain and begins to dismantle the rails using equipment from a nearby
railway shed. Von Waldheim discovers his sabotage too late, the entire
locomotive shifting off the tracks, its wheels buried into the gravel
embankment. Infuriated, Von Waldheim orders the hostages shot, the slaughter
followed by Von Waldheim’s feeble ploy to commandeer a retreating Nazi convoy
of wounded soldiers; his decision met with abject resistance from its
commanding Major (Jean-Claude Bercq) whom Von Waldheim now orders to be
executed. Instead, Von Waldheim’s assistant, Herren (Wolfgang Preiss) quietly
explains the hopelessness in their situation. Like the war, the paintings are
now lost to them for all time. Better to flee in disgrace than remain and be
captured.
Von Waldheim resists, however,
telling Herren he will follow them later; already intent on waiting for Labiche
to resurface. As the convoy departs up the road, Labiche comes out of hiding.
He is sickened by the bodies of the innocent strewn about; Frankenheimer
following Labiche’s weary gaze in a brilliant juxtaposition from their bloodied
remains to the spared and still crated art. Von Waldheim suddenly appears,
challenging Labiche to explain why he so vehemently opposed his many attempts
to take the art out of France. It couldn’t be because Labiche is an art lover.
Nor could it be Labiche fancies himself a wartime gallant. Indeed, Von
Waldheim’s inquiry brings out the abject futility in their conflicting
pursuits; the preservation of mere objects at the considerably expense of
sacrificing real human lives. Unable to quantify his own logic, Labiche coldly
guns down Von Waldheim without ever explaining his motives, walking away from
the carnage but also leaving the art strewn about the railroad tracks to be rescued
by somebody else. Perhaps Von Waldheim has proven his point: that in war it is
the similarities rather than the differences between enemies that stand in
stark relief side by side.
The Train is a harrowing
action/adventure movie, its chief difference, Frankenheimer’s concentration
almost entirely on developing very strong characters the audience can
appreciate. Hence, as the body count rises, we become personally invested in
Labiche’s penultimate vengeance. There is both purpose and a point to this
insanity. In its final act, The Train is almost Shakespearean in its
ramifications and tragedy. Contrast this with today’s action movies, begun in
some discombobulated no man’s land with an unclear objective never given a
moment’s explanation to provide clarity for the audience. This – at least today
– is presumably what has come to be known as ‘cinema style’ – or rather, its
lamentable lack thereof, neither clever nor affecting, but rather
anesthetizing, even as it brutalizes the audience’s curiosity with a lot of
pyrotechnics and CGI. By contrast, The Train is an embarrassment of
acting riches, supremely satisfying in ways no modern action movie is. Of
course, it immensely helps that two of the 20th century’s supreme giants –
Lancaster and Schofield are Frankenheimer’s muses, awe-inspiring talents,
transformed into riveting and formidable foes on the screen. While gushing in
their praise of Schofield, the critics never gave Lancaster his due here. In
his own time, Lancaster would endure the slings and arrows of these newspaper
wits as merely a ‘circus tumbler come stunt actor trying to be legit’,
tragically, to undermine Lancaster’s considerable presence who easily leaves
most of his competition - and virtually all of today’s musclebound action
stars, in the dust. Hence, it behooves us once more to tip our hats to Burt
Lancaster for his sublimely tortured performance. When his Labiche speaks, it is with the
weight of the world on his weary shoulders. When he breaks into action, his
bursts of energy equate to an ingenious counterbalance of rage and ill-fated compassion.
Herein, Lancaster has graduated from the swarthy athleticism of his younger
years into a bona fide thinking man’s action star. He is still a guy’s guy and
a man’s man, self-made, self-taught and not nearly as tame as his relatively
cool exterior would suggest. But you
have to go an awfully long way to find an actor of Lancaster’s caliber. Today,
I couldn’t even begin to tell you where to look.
Kino Lorber has ‘liberated’ The
Train yet again for its 4K UHD release. The upgrade is noticeable and
welcome. While the standard Blu teetered on the verge of reference quality,
this 4K remaster rises to a level of perfection not seen since its theatrical
release. In projection, it mimics a 35mm print, and on monitors it yields a
simply gorgeous visual presentation, with rich deep blacks, uniformly excellent
contrast, a light smattering of film grain looking indigenous to its source,
and oodles of fine detail that pops as it ought in ultra-hi-def. Age-related
artifacts have been eradicated. The end credits remain weaker on the whole,
possibly sourced from a badly worn dupe or second/third generation print. But
the rest of the movie looks incredible. We get two audio options: an original
2.0 theatrical and 5.1 DTS. Spatial separation in 5.1 is fairly impressive,
especially during the high-octane action sequences. The 4K contains the same
commentary by John Frankenheimer recorded eons ago for the DVD release, plus a
second commentary featuring historians, Steve Mitchell and Steven Jay Rubin. I deem
Frankenheimer one of the finest filmmakers of his generation. But he lacks
finesse in reflecting on his own work. The Mitchell/Rubin track is preferred
here. There’s also an isolated score track, showcasing Maurice Jarre’s
compositions in either 5.1 or 2.0 DTS. A secondary, standard Blu, also sourced
from the same master carries over all of these extras, and adds a barely 6 min.
featurette from 1964, a ‘trailers from hell’ episode, TV spot and 2 trailers.
Bottom line: an exceptional effort surely worth your coin in a double-dip. Very
highly recommended!
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
4
VIDEO/AUDIO
5+
EXTRAS
2
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