Runaway Train (Missed Movies)

Runaway Train Movie If you have not seen the 1985 movie Runaway Train, it will take you back to the time when action movies were about more than explosions. Even though there is plenty of action this film, there also is a lot more.

Runaway Train features one of Jon Voight’s greatest performances.  And it also has a meaningful story that has something to say about life and freedom.

The movie opens in an Alaska prison, where Voight plays an inmate.  The inmate, Manny, is despised by the prison’s warden. Another prisoner named Buck — who is played by a young Eric Roberts idolizes Manny.

When Manny makes a move to escape, Buck goes with him. Not long after getting out of prison, the two end up on a train, which as you may guess from the movie’s title, becomes a runaway train due to various circumstances.

Although that is the basic plot, there is a lot more going on in the story.  Much of the best part of the movie is the interactions between the characters and what the story has to say about life, freedom, and death.

In many ways Runaway Train is an existential movie about choices we make, either dictated by luck or by our own choosing. If the movie had nothing else going for it, the movie is worth watching for the final haunting scene.

Runaway Train
also stars Rebecca De Mornay and was directed by Andrei Konchalovsky. One may surmise that some of the depth of the film came from the original version of the screenplay that was written by the great director Akira Kurosawa.

Kurosawa explored similar themes in his own movies, including in a much quieter way in the wonderful Ikuru (1952). The acting, especially by Voight, is also excellent, as both Voight and Roberts were nominated for Academy Awards for their roles.

Conclusion?

If you have never seen Runaway Train, you are in for a treat if you enjoy thoughtful movies. Although the movie features plenty of action, it does not have the myriad of explosions of modern movies.  This movie is really about something. Runaway Train is one of the great existential action films of all time.

Other Reviews Because Why Should You Trust Me? On Rotten Tomatoes, the movie has an 86% critics rating and a 77% audience rating. If you do not believe me about the movie, Robert Ebert loved the movie, and Gene Siskel did not.

{Missed Movies is our continuing series on good films you might have missed because they have not received the recognition and attention they deserve.}

What did you think of Runaway Train? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Kasey Chambers: “Bittersweet”

    Bittersweet

    Kasey Chambers released her new album, Bittersweet (2015). The album, produced by Nick DiDia, features a range of styles, including rockers and alt-country, that touch on various topics, including love and spiritual themes. Allmusic finds the songs “unpretentiously intelligent” while dealing “with matters of the heart and soul with unrelenting honesty.”

    On the title track, the Australian singer-songwriter is joined by Bernard Fanning (former lead singer of the Australian rock band Powderfinger) in a duet about love and regret: “And I could list a thousand things / That’d make me take you back again / But I don’t really need you half as much / As I did then.” The video highlights the poignancy of new love evolving into long-term heartbreak by beginning with two young people in the role of Chambers and Fanning. Check out the official video for “Bittersweet.”

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Ryan Adams Covers Foo Fighters’ “Times Like These”

    Ryan Adams Time Like These

    This video of a live performance combines one of my favorite Foo Fighters songs with one of my favorite singers, Ryan Adams. On July 21, 2015 at the Sydney Opera House, Adams busted out an acoustic version of “Times Like These” as a tribute to Foo Fighters lead singer David Grohl, who has had some recent injuries while still being devoted to his music.

    Earlier this year, Grohl announced he had broken his rib after performing at Sasquatch! Music Festival. He continued touring only to break his leg mid-set last month. Adams noted his admiration for Grohl, who even finished the concert where he broke his leg. And then Adams gave a moving acoustic rendition of “Times Like These.” Check out his cover of the song from the Foo Fighters 2002 album One by One.

    What is your favorite cover of a Foo Fighters song? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Jason Isbell Is Thankful For Work

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    But the song is about more. “Something More Than Free” meditates on how we give meaning to our lives (“Guess I’m doin’ what I’m on this earth to do”). While the singer is thankful for the work, he also looks for something more.

    And the day will come when I’ll find a reason,
    And somebody proud to love a man like me;
    My back is numb, my hands are freezing;
    What I’m working for is something more than free.

    So, check out the title track from Something More Than Free by the Alabama-born and former Drive-By Trucker Isbell. Here, Isbell performs an acoustic version of the song at KUTX Studio 1A.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Wayne Carson, “Always on My Mind,” and the Unnecessary Bridge?

    Wayne Carson, with a little help, created a song with great versions by both Willie Nelson and Elvis Presley. But did the last-minute addition of a bridge hurt the song or make it better?

    Mind Wayne Carson, who wrote songs such as “Always on My Mind,” passed away on Monday, July 20, 2015. The 72-year-old Carson, who was born with the name Wayne Carson Head, had been suffering a number of health problems.

    Carson wrote or co-wrote a number of great songs such as “The Letter,” which was a hit for The Box Tops and for Joe Cocker, and “She’s Actin’ Single (I’m Drinkin’ Doubles),” which was a hit in 1975 for Gary Stewart. But his song “Always on My Mind,” for most people, is the first song that will come to mind.

    While living in Missouri, following his idea from a phone conversation with a wife who was angry at him for being away from home, Carson originally wrote most of “Always on My Mind.” His original version of the song, though, did not have a  bridge because he did not think it needed one.  But while he was recording the song in Memphis in 1971, Carson’s producer Tips Smallman convinced him the song needed a bridge.  Ultimately, Johnny Christopher and Mark James came along and helped Carson write the bridge.

    Tell me, tell me that your sweet love hasn’t died;
    And give me, give me one more chance,
    To keep you satisfied,
    Keep you satisfied.

    There is an argument that the lyrics of the bridge change the meaning of the song and perhaps ruins it a bit.  The verses by themselves are about a singer looking back on a lost love. But the added bridge turns the song instead to the singer pleading with the lover for another chance.

    I get the argument.  When I listen to the song, for whatever reason I tend to focus on the verses and think of the song as more about the singer looking back, so maybe I block out the meaning of the bridge while still loving the musical transition.  But either way, it remains a great song.  Since the song was written, more than 300 people have recorded “Always on My Mind,” including a hit version by Willie Nelson in 1982.

    Many people first heard “Always on My Mind” from Elvis Presley, who recorded the song on March 29, 1972 as his marriage to Priscilla Presley was falling apart. Presley recorded several excellent songs that capture the anguish he felt during the time, but “Always on My Mind” stands out. Even though he did not write the songs, Presley knew how to tap into his own emotions to reach the depths of a song’s lyrics.

    While “Always on My Mind” dwells on a common concept of heartbreak, the lyrics strip bare every ounce of pain in the opening lines of regret. Carson recognized that sometimes the worst regret is not for things that we have done but for things that we did not do.

    Maybe I didn’t treat you,
    Quite as good as I should have;
    Maybe I didn’t love you,
    Quite as often as I could have;
    Little things I should have said and done,
    I just never took the time.
    You were always on my mind.

    The greatness of the song is revealed by the fact that two of our greatest interpreters of songs — Willie Nelson and Elvis Presley — both gave definitive moving renditions of “Always on My Mind.” An it all sprung from Wayne Carson, a disappointed wife, and a couple of last-minute helpers to come together to use beautiful words and music to help capture the human condition.

    What is your favorite version of “Always on My Mind”? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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