Thomas and the Magic Railroad

Filed Under (Railroad Books) by admin on 19-05-2010

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Thomas and the Magic Railroad

  • ISBN13: 9780767855013
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

THOMAS T & THE MAGIC RAILROAD (DVD/DD5/DSS/ASPECTThomas, as anyone familiar with the eponymous, wildly popular TV series knows, is a very useful engine, and never more so than in his first theatrical release, which was a modest box-office success. On a tank filled with little more than pluck, determination, and goodwill, Thomas sets out full steam ahead on a danger-fraught mission to help his friend Mr. Conductor. The conductor’s stash of magic gold dust has run out, leaving him stranded on the Island of Sodor with Junior, his flaky cousin, and Lily, a little girl enlisted to lift her grandfather out of a funk on nearby Muffle Mountain. When Thomas bravely chugs beyond his hometown tracks’ buffers with Lily aboard, he’s transported to Muffle Mountain’s secret railway and to Lady, a long-lost steamer whose legendary engine makes her more powerful than Diesel, the train-yard bully. Together, Thomas and Lady lead Diesel on a chase that causes a bridge to collapse, taking the dastardly Die

Rating: (out of 181 reviews)

List Price: $ 9.95

Price: $ 3.99

215 651 8329 books of trains and railroads Kendigtown Kintnersville Kulps Corner La Trappe Lacey Park Lahaska Lakeside Landisville Langhorne*

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Comments:

5 Responses to “Thomas and the Magic Railroad”


  1. Review by for Thomas and the Magic Railroad
    Rating:
    This movie was by far the worst Thomas production ever made. I was horrified when I discovered that Britt Allcroft wrote it; now we know why she always had a co-writer when she was writing episodes for the TV series, and why she was kicked out of Gullane Entertainment afterwards.

    The script is so poorly written that I feel sorry for the trees used to make the paper that it was written on. The Island of Sodor, in the TV series an island off the coast of England that was more or less normal, has been turned into a magical ghost town populated by talking trains and literate animals. Why Britt Allcroft chose to make such a rapid departure from the TV series I will never know. She also filled the script with complicated plot devices that few children will be able to understand (you’d need to be Einstein or Stephen Hawking to figure out the answer to the riddle on the windmill wall), and threw her healthy knowledge of the Thomas characters out of the window (Thomas is portrayed as a goody-goody, Bertie as being annoyingly hyperactive, Henry as being a whiny pain in the neck, and James as being so short of brain cells that he doesn’t know what the word “shoo” means).

    Usually, bad scripts bring in bad acting, and this movie was no exception. Alec Baldwin’s character was so annoying (I’m sure I’m not the only person who wishes Diesel 10 had dropped him off the viaduct), and took the limelight that should have been given to Thomas and the other engines. Peter Fonda’s character was the most miserable, depressing character in the history of children’s movies. Mara Wilson’s character was better, but still seemed like a teenage girl younger than her years. And what was the point of having big name actors anyway? It’s not as if little children are going to recognise them.

    I also find the film to be overly violent. Diesel 10 is so nasty that it’s no wonder little children started crying and asking to leave the theater when he made his first appearance. We’re never told why he’s evil either, he just comes off as a character who wants to destroy steam engines for no reason whatsoever. In the original series, if a character was evil it was usually for a good reason. In a similar fashion, while characters in the TV series might be evil, they never went further than playing tricks on the other engines and trying to get them sent away. Here, Diesel 10 tries to kill Mr Conductor and Junior in scenes that make me amazed the film got a G rating.

    Then there’s the fact that the steam engines get what can only be described as outstanding cameos. When I went to see this at the theater, I noticed a lot of little children fidgeting and looking bored during the scenes with the human characters. Really I’m not at all surprised that they were; they came to the theater to see their favorite blue engine and his friends, not a Lilliputian railroad conductor who had lost his gold dust.

    Last but not least, what can little children learn from this movie? The TV series episodes all have morals in them, like “don’t tell lies” and “don’t get too full of yourself.” Other than a brief line at the end about helping each other, this movie has no moral value in it whatsoever (unless you count teaching children to be senselessly violent a moral).

    In September of this year a second Thomas movie is coming out, albeit shorter than this one and being released direct to video, called “Calling All Engines.” Cross your fingers and hope it’s better than this turkey.


  2. Review by for Thomas and the Magic Railroad
    Rating:
    Our 3yr old boy loves Thomas. We have all the videos and trains, etc. He wants to watch this thing every day. He repeats lines from the movie and acts them out all day. It was great for him. We took him to the movies to see it together. He loved that, too. For him, we would do it all again in a minute. As parents, we could have done without the “mean-ness” of Diesel #10 and the fact that he wants to “dominate and destroy”. He also uses the word “stupid” several times. Not nice.As adult movie critics, we saw laughably poor acting (with the exception of “Mr. Conductor” and “Junior”. (Notice that even some of the 5-star reviewers agree.) Britt Alcroft directed and wrote it, and it is obvious that she should have asked for help from someone who knew what they were doing. If you pay attention, expect to be confused. We expected more because we actually enjoy watching all of the other videos, and they are really well done.


  3. Review by C. Asher for Thomas and the Magic Railroad
    Rating:
    For some reason I can’t fathom my daughters love this movie, but sitting through it is painful. The little boy in the movie should consider another career, and Peter Fonda is more wooden than the trains (although if you’re in the right mood his performance is almost funny, but mostly it’s just painful). Alex Baldwin tried, but the script and the direction kept this movie from being anything more than dismal. The Thomas series is much more entertaining and well-written. Do yourself a favor and don’t spend money on this dog.


  4. Review by H. Spahr for Thomas and the Magic Railroad
    Rating:
    How they got Alec Baldwin to do this movie is beyond me. From the terrible, overly complicated, disjointed script to the high school film class direction to the wooden acting this is a dog from start to finish. That said, my three year old loves it. No accounting for the tastes of a toddler. Peter Fonda appears heavily sedated throughout the film. The character Junior (who for no apparent reason seems to be an Aussie surfer dude) is energetic but lost to the pathetic script and direction. Alec Baldwin plays the conductor with a wide eyed exuberence that nearly rivals Barney the purple dinosaur for sheer annoyance.I actually enjoy many of my three year old’s favorite films (Monsters, Inc., The Wizard of Oz, Stuart Little) but this film is unbareable from start to finish.


  5. Review by Allison D for Thomas and the Magic Railroad
    Rating:
    I purchased this DVD through Amazon.com in preparation for a trip I recently took with my 2 1/2 year old. He loves Thomas and I thought he’d like this video. I had read that purist Thomas fans didn’t care for it, but since we don’t have any of the regular videos, I figured it would be okay. What I didn’t realize is that there are relatively few scenes of the trains in this video, and my son found the extended dialog between the “real” people to be completely uninteresting. He would actually walk away from the TV, he was so bored.As an adult, I found the plot to be overly complicated with too many sub elements. The boy and girl characters appear to have been shoe-horned in for a little human interest, but are tedious to watch. Alec Baldwin provides a perfomance that is so bad, I couldn’t look at the screen. Peter Fonda didn’t do so well either.This video may entertain an older child, but I highly suggest renting it or checkign it out from the library before purchasing it.

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