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Zemeckis' "Polar Express" Transforms Christmas into Clausmas

Zemeckis' "Polar Express" Transforms Christmas into Clausmas

Annabelle Robertson

Entertainment Critic

Release Date:  November 10, 2004
Rating:  G
Genre:   Animation/Family
Run Time: 93 min.
Director:  Robert Zemeckis
Actors:  Tom Hanks, Leslie Harter Zemeckis, Eddie Deezen, Nona M. Gaye, Peter Scolari

There is something very sick about this movie, and it isn’t the fact that Tom Hanks plays nearly every role, as annoying as that is. 

It also isn’t the fact that a Christmas movie is being released weeks before Thanksgiving, as inexplicable as that is.  It’s the way that director Robert Zemeckis (“Romancing the Stone,” “Back to the Future,” “Forrest Gump”) has beautifully and alluringly transformed Christmas into Clausmas, beckoning us to worship the jolly old elf as the heart and soul of this all-important holiday.  And that’s something that Christians should be very upset about indeed.

Based on the 1985 picture book by Chris Van Allsburg, which won the Caldecott Award, “The Polar Express” relates the story of Hero Boy (Hanks), whose belief in Santa Claus is starting to falter.  With a stack of newspaper clippings and a Norman Rockwell cover from the “Saturday Evening Post” to bolster his suspicions, Hero Boy plays along, to keep his sister and parents happy.  But he no longer “believes.”

One snowy Christmas Eve, just minutes before midnight, an express locomotive appears on Hero Boy’s front lawn.  A friendly conductor (Hanks) beckons him aboard, where children are merrily enjoying the ride to the North Pole.  Hero Boy makes friends with Hero Girl (Nona Gaye), Know-It-All Boy (Eddie Deezen) and Lonely Boy (Peter Scolari), but after losing Hero Girl’s ticket, must climb to the top of the train.  There, he encounters a mysterious hobo (Hanks) who dispenses advice.

Thanks to two slapstick engineers, the train ride becomes perilous, traveling up and down snowy peaks and racing across a frozen lake, trying to outrun an ice crack which threatens them with certain extinction.  Once at the North Pole, the adventures continue as the children eagerly await the appearance of Santa and his dispensing of the first gift of the season.

The technology behind this film is amazing, with visuals like no other seen in cinema.  Zemeckis attached dozens of motion-detecting lights to the actors then superimposed animated characters onto their faces, creating a unique blend of real and artificial.  Together with the computer-generated sets and visual effects, the results are stunning to look at.  Hanks does a good job with his many roles, which also include the boy’s father and Santa.  Unfortunately, it’s not enough to overcome the desperation and emptiness that overshadows this ambitious effort.

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Most Recent User Comments
simplicity778
11/6/2009 3:30 PM
Why we we watch secular movies and then feel disappointed that they don't proclaim the name of Jesus? Have we forgotten Jesus' words in Mark 4:11: "The secret of the kingdom of God has been given to you. But to those on the outside everything is said in parables"? Similarly, why did Jesus hide himself while walking with those people to Emmaus after his ressurection? Because it wasn't the right time, and their hearts weren't ready. That's why God speaks to unbelievers in parables. So if we want to find anything spiritual, we need to look at the symbolic meanings of movies. Santa symbolizes God, the giver of good gifts who knows all (when you are sleeping/awake) and is the judge of all (naughty or nice). Polar Express is a journey of faith, and Hero Boy is rewarded for seeking the presence of God rather than the presents that God gives. The presence of God, represented by the bell, cannot be understood without faith. Perhaps the review missed the main point of this movie.
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