Thanks to his restrained visual approach (along with the absence of sexual content and the use of only two very mild profanities) this movie may be appropriate for viewing by some older teens.Īnd being suitable for a broader audience is a good thing, not just because the film depicts a significant moment in history, but also because The Railway Man has an important message to share-especially for anyone who harbors hurt after suffering an injustice. For instance, when a character is beaten with a club, the camera stays focused on the attacker and only shows the blood-covered victim afterward. I appreciated director Jonathan Teplitzky’s decision to leave the bulk of the violence to our imagination. While these scenes are disturbing, they are not explicit. Yet when the two enemies actually do come face to face, the reunion doesn’t go exactly as planned.īased on a book written by the real Eric Lomax, this movie does include some portrayals of beatings, verbal abuse, water-boarding torture and a suicide. The reality of seeing his tormentor again has Eric consumed with the possibility of revenge. Still, Eric is reluctant to make the emotional trip so Finlay sends him a desperate message hoping to convince him to return to the point of his worst nightmares. Working with Finlay, she discovers Nagase (now played by Hiroyuki Sanada) is still alive and operating a museum where the labor camp used to be. With this disclosure Patti becomes sure of one thing: Eric needs to face his demon. When Eric bravely took personal responsibility for assembling the radio, the resulting punishment left him mentally scarred. ![]() Eric, Finlay and a small group of engineers were then taken to another place where they could be tortured and interrogated by a Japanese officer called Nagase (Tanroh Ishida). They excitedly shared news of the Allies’ progress with the legions of other POWs, until their enthusiasm was extinguished by their captors’ discovery of the device. Anxious for any sign of rescue, Eric used his skills to cobble together a radio receiver that the men could listen to in the back of a disabled truck. Captured by the Japanese in Singapore, the twenty-one-year-old soldier was sent to a brutal labor camp where he and thousands of other Allied Forces prisoners became slaves used to build the Burma Railway. In flashback we learn about the younger Eric (Jeremy Irvine), who was a bright wireless operator and electrical engineer.
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