It may be a stretch, but just imagine a single train looping around a 
track, cutting through an Earth that's completely frozen over.  This 
train has been running for years, and it has its own microcosm of 
social classes, with the rich and powerful living in the front in 
luxury, and all the poor and wretched stuck in the back.  When those in 
the back of the train stage a revolution to take over the front, all 
hell breaks loose.
That's pretty much what this film entails:  
the prologue is brief, setting the stage immediately for an all-out 
onslaught of bloody fighting, riveting peril, and startling 
revelations.  It's a rather grim and bleak film that doesn't shy away 
from the grisly details, but it's rarely trashy or distasteful.  The 
film is dark, fast-moving, and action-packed.  I personally couldn't ask for a more entertaining picture.
What's
 even more rewarding is the storytelling.  It's a bit of a weird and 
unbelievable yarn, thinking that a single train could run endlessly like
 this.  There are bound to be plot holes to uncover if you really 
analyze it on the surface level.  However, the film slowly unveils more 
and more details behind its concept that gives more background (whether 
it's plausible or not is probably debatable).  Above all, the film takes
 itself seriously, everything looks creditable, and it provides a 
self-contained world that's easy to take on its own merits.  In spite of
 all this, the plot moves fast and reaches an interesting climax (the 
likes of which would be on-par with the architect scene of The Matrix Reloaded,
 minus the mumbo-jumbo, but with the same level of plot twisting).  
Characters aren't terribly deep or refined; they ultimately serve little
 more than voices for the issues, plot complications, and conflicts that
 erupt.
The biggest asset to this film are its themes.  Some 
folks won't like them, because it's a very blatant, in-your-face 
allegory concerning the state of the world we currently live in.  The 
film asserts that we are all headed toward disaster if we continue to 
run this "train" of ours the way we have been.  Whether you look at it 
as a criticism of the upper class exploiting the lower class, or the 
depletion of the environment and resources, the film paints a bleak 
picture to expose the ugly truths of our cold world.  I find the 
parallels compelling, although I'm sure there are those who will find 
them pretentious, obnoxious, stupid, or something else.
Regardless
 of how you grade the content, the film looks great with its dark and 
gritty photography.  Editing is top-notch.  Acting is great:  Chris 
Evans is surprisingly somber as the protagonist, and I enjoyed the 
performances by John Hurt, Ed Harris, Song Kang-ho, and Go Ah-sung.  
Tilda Swinton is awesomely hammy in her role.  Every other actor pulls 
their weight really well.  Writing is pretty sharp and good.  This 
production has great-looking sets, props, and costumes.  Special effects
 tend to look fake, but it rarely detracts from the film's overall 
quality.  Music is decently somber too.
Snowpiercer is a 
rather odd tale, but one that is highly imaginative, consistently 
entertaining, and it's chock full of themes worth exploring (whether you
 want to or not).  Highly recommended!
5/5 (Entertainment:  Perfect | Content:  Good | Film:  Perfect)

No comments:
Post a Comment