Our most recent film only came out on DVD this week. It was based on a popular best-selling novel, which I had not read, and so we had a good audience for the screening, including several people we had not seen before.
While researching the film in order to write my notes I'd read the plot and so knew roughly what was going to happen. However the fragmented storyline muddied the water sufficiently to keep me on the edge of my seat. My only complaint was that one key flashback was subsequently (and crucially) proven not to have happened: thus I felt a bit cheated because of this.
Here are my notes:
The Girl On The Train
While researching the film in order to write my notes I'd read the plot and so knew roughly what was going to happen. However the fragmented storyline muddied the water sufficiently to keep me on the edge of my seat. My only complaint was that one key flashback was subsequently (and crucially) proven not to have happened: thus I felt a bit cheated because of this.
Here are my notes:
The Girl On The Train
USA 2016 111
minutes
Director: Tate Taylor
Starring: Emily Blunt,
Rebecca Ferguson, Haley Bennett, Justin Theroux and Luke Evans
Awards
and Nominations
- BAFTA
Nomination for Best Actress (Emily Blunt)
- A
further three wins and five nominations
Mark
Kermode
Rachel Watson (Emily
Blunt) becomes infatuated by the sight of a seemingly perfect couple visible
from her daily commuter train. On one day she sees something that shocks her,
and driven on by intrigue and obsession she starts to uncover the truth of what
has happened.
The film is based on
the best-selling thriller of the same name by Paula Hawkins, although for the
purposes of the film the action has been relocated from London to New York. The
conceit of the book echoes the classic Agatha Christie detective novel 4.50 from Paddington (filmed as Murder She Said (1961) with Margaret
Rutherford playing Miss Marple for the first time), but the dark themes of the
story in its cinematic version carry distinct echoes of the work of Hitchcock,
especially in films such The Lady Vanishes
(1938) and Rear Window (1954).
Emily Blunt began her
career on the stage in the UK before moving into TV where she won an award for
Most Promising Newcomer for her role in My
Summer of Love (2004). She won a Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress
in the TV film Gideon’s Daughter (2006)
and shortly afterwards made her Hollywood debut in the comedy The Devil Wears Prada (2006), for which
she received both BAFTA and Golden Globe nominations for Best Supporting Actress.
Since then she has demonstrated her versatility as a performer with roles in
many different genres including historical drama (The Young Victoria (2009)), science fiction (The Adjustment Bureau (2011)), and a musical (Into The Woods (2014)). She is currently filming Mary Poppins Returns in which she has
been cast in the title role.
Director Tate Taylor
also began his career as an actor with roles for both TV and cinema before
making his name as a director with The
Help (2011) (for which he also wrote the screenplay). He followed this with
Get On Up (2014) a biography of the
musician James Brown and currently has various projects as director in
development.
Here's the trailer: