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RR: Directed by James Benning.

“I found this experimental film absorbing, even funny (intentionally) in one spot. The concept is very simple. A series of locked off shots where a train, not visible at first, enters frame, goes all the way through, and leaves frame. What makes it interesting is Benningu0026#39;s wide range of compositions and framings, from extremely wide and distant, to having the train right on top of us, along with the wide range of settings, from snow covered, to desert, to crossing bridges over water. The variations between the trains themselves are fascinating as well, so by the end this becomes a study of the nature of perception as much as anything. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBenning also adds context over a few of the images by adding audio clips from the past; Eisenhoweru0026#39;s famed military-industrial complex speech, a snatch of u0026#39;This land is your landu0026#39;. While some have understandably criticized these sound bites as too intrusive and too on the nose, to me, in such a strange context they worked wonders, opening my mind up to the filmsu0026#39; possible bigger meanings; trains as an instrument of imperialism, as a symbol of destruction of the environment, as a great equalizer that made long distance travel possible for the masses. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003ePlus, lets face it, trains are simply cool to look at. Something about their power, size, history makes them almost mythological presences in themselves.”

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