The Railway Children (2002/British Telefilm)
Picture: C+
Sound: C+ Extras: C- Telefilm: B-
In the late 1960s, Jenny Agutter appeared in the first TV
version of Edith Nesbit’s landmark 1906 novel The Railway Children, only
to appear in a theatrical feature film of the book a few years later. That was just before her breakthrough
appearance in Nicolas Roeg’s Walkabout.
Now, over thirty-five later, she is back as an adult character in a
British TV movie of the book. The story
involves a mother (Agutter) and her three children, forced to move when their
father (Michael Kitchen) mysteriously disappears.
As the children go on with their lives, occasionally
thinking about where their father may have disappeared to, they get caught up
in fascination with the railways nearby.
They are having fun at first, but this exposure to the real world
eventually makes for interesting contacts and a few may possibly lead to the
truth about where their father has gone.
The conclusion is not as far fetched as it might seem and Nesbit became
very political in her lifetime, having a permanent effect on British politics
to this day. The program is enjoyable,
though when it was over, I wondered if there was more that could have been done
with the material. I’ll have to catch
those other versions sometime, but this is well made and worth seeing.
The letterboxed 1.78 x 1 image is not bad, though
anamorphic enhancement would have been nice, because this is a nicely shot
work. The Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo has
no surrounds, but is clean and clear, making playback good enough. The few extras include a weblink that offers
more on the film, cast list and poster gallery. Too bad more could not have been on the DVD itself.
- Nicholas Sheffo