Train of Life (Train de vie)

Director: Radu Mihaileanu
Screenwriters: Radu Mihaileanu

Institute History

  • 1999 Sundance Film Festival

Description

It is 1941, the year 5701 of creation, and Shlomo, the village idiot, breathlessly announces the news: The Nazis are coming, and all will be sent to the death camps. As the rabbi and the wise men of the shtetl confer on how to react, Shlomo interjects, “A fake deportation train!” The suggestion is adopted, and the preparations begin. Funds are pooled; boxcars are bought one by one, then refurbished; uniforms are made for those chosen to play Nazi soldiers; and Mordechai, the wood merchant, drills the troops that he will command.
After days of frenzied work, argument, and celebration, all is ready. With Mordechai as both Moses and German commander, the train pulls out to begin its madcap race across central Europe. Filled with high suspense and narrow escapes; tense, white-knuckle confrontations; episodes of village life, political satire, surprise turns, Jewish humor, boisterous activity, and utter hilarity, this film captures the full
spectrum of human character in the shtetl: the beautiful Esther; the awkward Yossi, her admirer; the frugal bookkeeper, the wise rabbi, and, above all, the crazy Shlomo, who speaks in words of prophecy and poetry.
Train of Life, like director Radu Mihaileanu’s earlier Betrayed (Sundance 1994), is a powerful depiction of a society gone mad and the dream of escape. A fable set inside the tragedy of the Holocaust, this moving and masterful film is both an affirmation of life and, by artful
evocation, a remembrance of lives and a whole culture lost.

Radu Mihaileanu, Director
Radu Mihaileanu was born in Bucharest, Romania, in 1958 and worked as author, actor, and director with the Jewish Theatre before studying film at IDHEC in Paris. His first feature film, Betrayal, screened at Sundance in 1994 and won awards in festivals ranging from Montreal to Viareggio, Istanbul, and St. Louis. Train of Life, his second feature, won the FIPRESCI Award at the Venice Film Festival as well aas awards in Sao Paulo and Cottbus, Germany. He is also a published poet.

— Nicole Guillemet

Screening Details

Sundance Film Festival Awards

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