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TRANS-SIBERIAN 1 Star - Degrading The harshly
frigid setting for Brad Anderson’s “Transsiberian” fits its moral message.
Presenting a story which is brutally violent, there is no one in the film who
gives any relief from the unrelenting barrage of cold characters who murder,
betray, lie and steal. From the opening scenes of a frozen corpse, caught at
the exact moment a knife impaled the back of his skull, to the graphic torture
of a young person by that same knife in an attempt to get information, to every
character whose moral fire is extinguished by this chilling tale, the film
offers nothing that uplifts anyone’s life. Sharing the
writing with Will Conroy, Anderson centers his film on an American couple who
has gone to Beijing on a Christian mission to help children. At the conclusion
of their mission, their pastor (Mac McDonald) reminds them that this world is “not
a grey place, but a place of right and wrong.” Agreeing wholeheartedly, Roy
(Woody Harrelson) and Jessie (Emily Mortimer) head for home. But rather than
flying back to Iowa, they decide to take the Transsiberian railroad from
Beijing to Moscow, a six day journey. The reasons for this are varied and
revealed throughout the film. This internal journey matches the frigidity of
their Siberian landscape as we see how cold they can both become. Roy is a
man whose faith has compelled him to do good things for others. Jessie is a
woman who has struggled and often been in need of help. This match between
Roy’s need to help and Jessie’s need to be helped is the basis of their
marriage and their mission. Trying to impress Jessie with his adventurous
spirit to somehow satisfy her restless soul by embarking on an adventure, Roy
puts them in tremendous danger as they naively travel the Trans-Siberian route. The danger
is personified when Abby (Kate Mara) and Carlos (Eduardo Noriega) join them. A
dark and foreboding person, Abby is troubled and jealous. Carlos seems as
carefree as Abby is anxious and, bringing his Spanish charm to the cabin they all
share, sexual tension begins between Carlos and Jessie. We soon realize that
this is only the tip of the iceberg as it becomes evident that Carlos and Abby
are on a dangerous journey they have chosen for themselves. The other
representative of the danger of their journey is a paradoxical character who is
attempting to live in both the darkness and the light. Detective Grinko (Ben
Kingsley) is a police officer who has lived through the transition of the USSR
to the current Russian state. Explaining that there are two ways out of modern
Russia, “either up in a private jet or down in a coffin”, Grinko justifies his
decision to participate in a heroin drug cartel. Genuinely uneasy with his
fallen state, we watch as he struggles with Roy and Jessie as they become
accidentally enmeshed in the cartel’s affairs. The
Siberian wasteland has long been a place of banishment and a metaphor for suffering
in life. As one Russian explains that “the government has denied there is a
God and denied there is a Siberia”, we recognize people’s desire for truth,
freedom from oppression and confession of wrongdoing. The fact that human
beings can become so cold-hearted is difficult to accept and we would like to
reject that notion. But this film goes too far in breaking through any denial
of the evil in human nature. Even in Siberia, there can be the warmth of human
life and people living with faith. But in this film, the Christian is forced
to kill and the church is a dilapidated ruin. Thankfully, this does not have
to be true of Siberia nor of life.
Discussion:
________________ Cinema In Focus is a social and spiritual movie commentary.
Hal
Conklin
is
former
mayor
of
Santa
Barbara
and
Denny
Wayman
is
pastor
of
the
Free
Methodist
Church.
For
more
reviews:
http://www.cinemainfocus.com.
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