Reviews & Columns
Reviews
DVD
TV on DVD
Blu-ray
4K UHD
International DVDs
In Theaters
Reviews by Studio
Video Games

Features
Collector Series DVDs
Easter Egg Database
Interviews
DVD Talk Radio
Feature Articles

Columns
Anime Talk
DVD Savant
Horror DVDs
The M.O.D. Squad
Art House
HD Talk
Silent DVD

discussion forum
DVD Talk Forum

Resources
DVD Price Search
Customer Service #'s
RCE Info
Links

Columns




Night Train to Lisbon

Lionsgate Home Entertainment // R // December 17, 2013
List Price: $26.98 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Thomas Spurlin | posted February 14, 2014 | E-mail the Author
The Film:

On the way to teach a language class, Swiss professor and introverted bookworm Raimund Gregorius (Jeremy Irons) happens upon a woman in a eye-catching red coat standing along the railing of a bridge, readying herself to jump. After being rescued by Raimund and enigmatically disappearing, she mistakenly leaves her coat with the teacher, where he discovers a book in one of the pockets while searching for identification. Inside, along with a train ticket departing soon, lies an address that points to Lisbon, the capital of Portugal. Thus begins Raimund's adventure in the lethargic and motorized Night Train to Lisbon, Bille August's adaptation of Pascal Mercier's novel of the same name, where his propulsion to learn more about the woman and her fascinating book opens the door to discovering more about the author, Amadeu do Prado (Jack Huston), and his participation with the Portuguese resistance in the '70s.

From the moment Raimund flips open the book and spots his first clue, there's a mechanical ease to the chain of events in Night Train to Lisbon's modern timeline, where plot devices -- tickets, broken glasses, packages of cigarettes -- conveniently guide the teacher on his journey. Director August's makes the modern-day era feel stale and archaic as a result, like a dime-novel detective story without the immediacy of a real mystery to solve, especially once Raimund completely shifts his attention from the woman in the red coat to Amadeu's life as a doctor and writer. It's intended to be a time of reawakening and day-seizing for the professor, a break from his sleepless nights of playing chess and exploring literature, yet it's difficult to discern why this gets his heart racing, why the girl he saved and the mystery author are worth abandoning his responsibilities, instead of, say, dabbling in his research between classes.

Those questions and philosophical ponderings stirring in Raimund's mind after reading the novel bear the weight of the issues in Night Train to Lisbon, where the ideas communicated by Amadeu do Prado's book only intermittently surface for us to understand how they propel the newly-enraptured scholar. It's peculiar to see how much of Jeremy Irons' inherent, bristly charisma gets trapped under the professor's subdued persona as he ricochets between individuals from Amadeu's past -- his relatives and acquaintances in the Portuguese resistance -- building to largely mundane conversations designed for a deliberate slow-release of information that feeds into Raimund's muted soul-searching. A sole exception comes in his happenstance relationship with an optometrist, Mariana (Martina Gedeck), who coaxes those inner sensations to the surface, bringing literal and figurative clarity to Raimund as they turn philosophy into flirtation.

The other side of Night Train to Lisbon comes the historical accounts revealed by those involved in Amadeu's life, judiciously fragmented and revisited across the film as more information comes to light. While this structure serves a purpose by effortlessly filling in gaps as Raimund discovers more through alternate perspectives, it thoroughly depletes the film of urgency, making Amadeu's draw towards the Resistance less profound than it should be. Even intense moments, from body trauma to mob-mentality threats, lose their edge in this low-key jigsaw puzzle of sepia-colored recounts. The shuffle of memories, finally revealing a woman, Estefania (Melanie Laurent), who complicates his involvement, fit together into a nondescript and lethargic portrait of political inspiration and idealistic breakthroughs, working against Boardwalk Empire's Jack Huston and Inglourious Basterds' August Diehl as they cunningly simmer in their roles as enlightened friends who becomes comrades for the cause.

Through unpretentiously beautiful cinematography capturing Portugal's atmosphere, Night Train to Lisbon constructs this story within a story that fascinates Raimund yet isn't very fascinating to watch unfold, despite its historical context and eventual shift towards the melancholy of impossible relationships. Quietly potent performances from Charlotte Rampling (Swimming Pool) and Bruno Ganz (Wings of Desire) enhance the transitions between past and present without truly enlivening the scenarios built around them, while Melanie Laurent's delicate, magnetic presence almost goes to waste amidst a wholly superfluous love triangle. That leaves only the discoveries Raimund has at the end of his journey -- about the girl in the red coat and the outcome of Amadeu's affection, immaculately played by Lena Olin (The Unbearable Lightness of Being) as the aged iteration of Estefania -- to underscore some sort of catharsis and inspiration for his midlife trip away from the confines of his classrooms. It's a drawn-out and snoozy ride to get him there, but at least this fixated professor gets the chance to rebel against his comfort zone in his own way.


The DVD:





Video and Audio:

There's a lot of subtle touches to admire in the straightforward cinematography of Night Train to Lisbon, encapsulated here in a 1.78:1-framed, widescreen-enhanced transfer. Most of it comes in clothing and the fine details in close-ups: the houndstooth pattern in Raimund's jacket, the curve of glasses and the stubble of facial hair, and the slight fluctuation in paper and stone textures convincingly defy the disc's standard-definition limitations. Skin tones stay vibrant and reactive, while blasts of green and blue in outdoor sequences are quite stable and vivid. There are moments of general haziness and black levels can lean a bit gray, but it's otherwise a fine treatment from Lionsgate, impressively free of digital distortion or unsightly noise.

Audio comes in a suitable 5.1 Dolby Digital treatment that handles the dialogue-rich design of the soundtrack with noticeable brevity, while also taking on a handful of slight sound effects where needed. The clank of Raimund's broken glasses, the slam of a meat tenderizer, and the bubbling of blood escaping a wound offer more clarity and dynamism in their delivery than one might expect. But, of course, the most important thing here is the verbal intelligibility, which comes across with surprising depth in both lower and higher registries, utilizing mid-range bass around Jeremy Irons' raspy strength and higher-end tones exceptionally well. Everything is clear as a whistle and without any buckles to be heard, a very satisfying turnout for the legacy sound format.


Special Features:

Along with a Theatrical Trailer (1:32, 16x9), Lionsgate have also included a series of brief press-kit Interviews with Bille August (4:33, 16x9), Jeremy Irons (2:04, 16x9), Christopher Lee (1:37, 16x9), and Charlotte Rampling (1:29, 16x9). A Digital Download slip has also been included.


Final Thoughts:

There's enough subtlety in the performances and beauty in the Portuguese atmosphere to make the era-skipping journey in Night Train to Lisbon worth a watch, but its lethargic time structure, bland conversation-heavy rhythm, and meandering philosophical focus don't do the minimal story any favors. Rent It.



Thomas Spurlin, Staff Reviewer -- DVDTalk Reviews | Personal Blog/Site
Buy from Amazon.com

C O N T E N T

V I D E O

A U D I O

E X T R A S

R E P L A Y

A D V I C E
Rent It

E - M A I L
this review to a friend
Popular Reviews

Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links