Thomas and the Magic Railroad

Thomas and the Magic Railroad

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Britt Allcroft
Produced by Britt Allcroft
Phil Fehrle
Written by Britt Allcroft
Based on The Railway Series
by The Rev. W. Awdry
Uncredited:
Shining Time Station
by Britt Allcroft
Rick Siggelkow
Starring Peter Fonda
Mara Wilson
Alec Baldwin
Eddie Glenn
Didi Conn
Russell Means
Cody McMains
Michael E. Rodgers
Narrated by Alec Baldwin
Music by Hummie Mann
Original Score & Songs:
Junior Campbell
Mike O'Donnell
Cinematography Paul Ryan
Edited by Ron Wisman
Production
company
Distributed by Destination Films (US)
Icon Film Distribution (UK)
Release dates
  • July 14, 2000 (2000-07-14) (United Kingdom)


  • July 26, 2000 (2000-07-26) (United States)
Running time
84 minutes
Country United Kingdom
United States
Canada
Language English
Budget $19 million
Box office $19.7 million[1]

Thomas and the Magic Railroad is a 2000 British-American-Canadian fantasy adventure film based on the British children's book series The Railway Series by The Rev. W. Awdry, its TV adaptation Thomas & Friends, and the American series Shining Time Station. The film was co-produced by Gullane Entertainment and the Isle of Man Film Commission and distributed by Destination Films in the United States, and Icon Film Distribution in the United Kingdom.[2] It was written, produced and directed by Britt Allcroft, who created both of the previous TV series.

When it was first released in the U.K. where critics were unfamiliar with the characters from Shining Time Station, the film was accused of "Americanizing" Thomas.[3] Critical reception in the U.S. was somewhat better, but still mostly negative, in stark contrast to the praise given to the original Shining Time Station, which was an award-winning show.[4][5][6] General criticism of the film has been directed towards its plot, characterization, acting and special effects. This is Mara Wilson's final film appearance to date.

Plot

Sir Topham Hatt is on holiday with Edward, leaving Mr. Conductor of Shining Time Station in charge. Meanwhile, while talking at Killaban, Thomas and Gordon encounter Diesel 10. Meanwhile, in Shining Time, Mr. Conductor has his own problems as his supply of gold dust is running low and not enough to allow him to travel back from Sodor.

Later that day, while Thomas and James are at Tidmouth Sheds, Diesel 10 arrives and announces his evil plan to get rid of the steam engines on Sodor; Thomas leaves to collect Mr. Conductor. The 'lost engine', named Lady, is hidden in a workshop on Muffle Mountain. Burnett Stone has kept her hidden after Diesel 10's last attempt to destroy her. Despite having rebuilt Lady, Burnett is unable to steam her despite using different types of coal. At night, Diesel 10 attacks the shed where the steam engines are sleeping, but Mr. Conductor repels him with sugar after his gold dust fails him and Diesel 10 quickly retreats.

While talking at Knapford, Percy and Thomas conclude that there is a secret railway between Sodor and Shining Time. Diesel 10 overhears them and goes to the Sodor Ironworks to tell Splatter and Dodge of his plans to destroy the lost engine and the other steam engines on Sodor. Toby rings his bell to distract him, causing Diesel 10 to knock the roof of the shed. Later, Henry has a bad cold, so Thomas collects six special coal trucks for him, but he only has five according to Bertie, because one rolled through the Magic Buffers.

Lily Stone is being sent from a big city to visit Burnett on Muffle Mountain. While at the railway station, she meets Mutt, who puts her on the Rainbow Sun instead of the right train. On arriving at Shining Time, she meets Junior and Stacy Jones, who takes her to Burnett's house. The next day, Lily meets Patch, who takes her on a horse ride to Shining Time where she meets Junior again. Junior takes her through the Magic Railroad to Sodor where they meet Thomas.

Thomas is not happy to see Junior, but agrees to help Lily and Junior and takes them to the windmill where they find Mr. Conductor. Junior climbs onto one of the windmill sails and ends up being thrown onto Diesel 10's roof; later that night, Percy finds that Splatter and Dodge have located the Sodor entrance to the Magic Railroad and goes to warn Thomas.

Thomas agrees to take Lily home to Shining Time and sets off. While travelling through the Magic Railroad, Thomas discovers the missing coal truck, which he collects and arrives at Muffle Mountain. Lily goes to find Burnett, leaving Thomas stranded on the mountain, but as the wind picks up, Thomas rolls down the mountain and re-enters the Magic Railroad through another secret portal.

Lily finds Burnett in his workshop where he shows her Lady and explains his problem in getting her to steam. Lily suggests using Sodor coal, and when Patch goes back to retrieve the truck, Burnett uses the coal to fire Lady up. Now able to steam, Burnett, Lily, Patch and Mutt take Lady back along the Magic Railroad, regenerating both Lady and the railroad in the process. Thomas then arrives and the two engines return to Sodor where they meet Mr. Conductor and Junior.

Diesel 10 arrives with Splatter and Dodge, who abruptly decide to stop helping him. Thomas and Lady, driven by Burnett, flee from Diesel 10, chasing them towards a crumbling viaduct. Thomas and Lady both make it safely across, and as Diesel 10 approaches, he applies his brakes, but it is too late and he falls off the bridge and lands into a barge filled with sludge. That evening, Thomas, Lady and Burnett return to the grotto; Lily combines water from a wishing well and shavings from the Magic Railroad to make more gold dust. Junior decides to go to work on Sodor and Mr. Conductor gives him his own cap before sending him to another railway, before leaving himself to welcome Sir Topham Hatt home. Lily, Burnett, Patch and Mutt return to Shining Time, while Thomas happily steams home into the sunset.

Cast

Live-action actors

Voice Actors

Final cut

Original version

Production

Development

In the early 1990s, the character of Thomas the Tank Engine, adapted from the Rev. W. Awdry’s Railway Series into the TV series Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends, created by Britt Allcroft, was at the height of his popularity following three successful series. At the same time, a live-action American series, Shining Time Station, also created by Allcroft along with Rick Siggelkow, was made and was also successful. As early as 1994, prior to the launch of Thomas's fourth series, Britt Allcroft had plans to make a feature film based on both of these series, and would make use of the model trains from Thomas and the live-action aesthetic of Shining Time Station.[7]

In February 1996, Britt Allcroft was approached by Barry London, then vice-chairman of Paramount Pictures, with an idea for the Thomas film. Britt signed a contract to write the script for the film with the working title Thomas and the Magic Railroad. London's interest is thought to have stemmed from his 3-year-old daughter, who was enthralled by Thomas. Filming, according to a press release, was to take place at Shepperton Studios, in the United Kingdom and the United States, with the theatrical release date set for 1997. However, Paramount shelved the plans for the film after London left the company later that year. This left Allcroft to seek other sources of funding. Discussions with PolyGram about the film were held, but not for long because of the company being in the middle of a corporate restructuring and sale.[7]

In the Summer of 1998, during Series 5 of Thomas’s production, Allcroft saw an Isle of Man Film Commission advert. They were offering tax incentives to companies wanting to film on the Island. Allcroft visited and felt that the location perfect. During that year, Barry London became Chairman of the newly founded Destination Films (owned by Sony Pictures). He renewed his interest in the project and Destination Films became the main financial backer and studio for the film.[7]

Filming

The movie was filmed at the Strasburg Rail Road in Strasburg, Pennsylvania (United States), as well as in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and on the Isle of Man. Castletown railway station on the Isle of Man Railway formed part of Shining Time Station and the goods shed at Port St Mary railway station became Burnett Stone's workshop. Running shots of the "Indian Valley" train were filmed at the Strasburg Rail Road location. The large passenger station where Lily boards the train is the Harrisburg Transportation Center. Norfolk & Western 4-8-0 475 was repainted as the Indian Valley locomotive. Sodor was realised using models and chroma key. The models were animated using live action remote control, as on the television series. The model sequences were filmed in Toronto instead of Shepperton Studios, the "home" of the original TV show; however, several of the show's key staff were flown over to participate. The Magic Railway was created using models, CGI and water-coloured matte paintings.

Original version

In a 2007 interview, director Britt Allcroft commented the finished film was drastically changed from what it was originally going to be the way she had written it, with the original antagonist P.T. Boomer, (played by Doug Lennox) being removed from the film because the character was too frightening for young children.[8]

PT Boomer (Doug Lennox) atop Diesel 10 in a deleted scene.

Lily Stone (played by Mara Wilson) was intended to be the narrator of the story.[9] Before filming, Thomas's voice would be provided by John Bellis, a fireman and part-time taxi driver who worked on the film as the Isle of Man transportation co-ordinator and facilities manager. Bellis received the role when he happened to pick up Britt Allcroft and her crew from the airport. According to Allcroft, after hearing him speak for the first time, she told her colleagues, "I have just heard the voice of Thomas. That man is exactly how Thomas would sound!" Bellis accepted the role.[10] Test audiences in Los Angeles disliked Bellis's voice for Thomas due to his Liverpudlian accent saying that he made Thomas sound too old. Subsequently, Bellis was replaced by Edward Glen, who gave Thomas a lot more of a youthful-sounding voice. Bellis did receive a credit for his work on the Isle of Man, and his voice can still be heard extensively in one or two of the trailers. Bellis said he was "gutted", but wished the film-makers well. "It was supposed to be my big break, but it hasn't put me off and I am hoping something else will come along. "[11]

Release

Thomas and the Magic Railroad was released theatrically on 14 July 2000 in the United Kingdom and Ireland, and 26 July 2000 in the United States and Canada. The film was also released in Australia on 14 December 2000, and in New Zealand on 7 April 2001.

Home media

Thomas and the Magic Railroad was released onto VHS and DVD on October 31 (Halloween), 2000.

Reception

Premiere

The film was premièred at the Odeon Leicester Square; for the purpose, a steam locomotive, no. 47298 painted to resemble Thomas, was brought to the cinema by low loader on 9 July 2000.

Box office

The film grossed $19.7 million worldwide[1] compared to its $19 million budget. During its second weekend of screening in Britain it only took in £170,000.[12]

Critical reception

The film has a score of 19% on Rotten Tomatoes with the consensus: "Kids these days demand cutting edge special effects or at least a clever plot with cute characters. This movie has neither, having lost in its Americanization what the British original did so right."[13] Nell Minow of Common Sense Media gave the film three out of five stars and writing that it "will please [Thomas fans]" but that the plot "might confuse kids".[14] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film one star out of four, and wrote "(the fact) That Thomas and the Magic Railroad made it into theaters at all is something of a mystery. This is a production with 'straight to video' written all over it. Kids who like the Thomas books might kinda like it. Especially younger kids. Real younger kids. Otherwise, no." While he admired the models and art direction, he criticized how the engines' mouths didn't move when they spoke, the overly depressed performance of Peter Fonda, as well as the overall lack of consistency in the plot.[15]

Soundtrack

Thomas and the Magic Railroad Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by Hummie Mann
Mike O' Donnell
Junior Campbell
Released August 1, 2000
Length 48:19
Label Unforscene Music Ltd. / Nettwerk

Thomas and the Magic Railroad is a soundtrack released on both CD and cassette. It features twelve music tracks from the feature film composed by Hummie Mann.

Track listing
No. TitleArtist Length
1. "He's a Really Useful Engine"  Steven Page 1:32
2. "Shining Time"  Maren Ord 3:18
3. "I Know How the Moon Must Feel"  Dayna Manning 3:22
4. "Some Things Never Leave You"  Joe Henry 2:57
5. "Summer Sunday"  Dominic Gibbeson
Dominic Goundar
Rob Jenkins
Gerard McLachan
2:59
6. "The Locomotion"  Atomic Kitten 3:54
7. "Main Title"  Hummie Mann 3:32
8. "Lily Travels to the Island of Sodor"  Hummie Mann 4:33
9. "Burnett and Lady/Diesel 10 and Splodge"  Hummie Mann 3:28
10. "Diesel 10 Threatens Mr. C"  Hummie Mann 4:25
11. "Through the Magic Buffers"  Hummie Mann 6:36
12. "The Chase, the Clue and the Happy Ending"  Hummie Mann 7:43

Video game

A video game, called Thomas and the Magic Railroad: Print Studio, was released based on the film. Print Studio was published by Hasbro Interactive and released for PC on August 25, 2000.

Possible sequel

HiT said that its theatrical division would be piloted by a Thomas film. Originally targeted for late-2010 release,[16] in September 2009 this was revised to Spring 2011.[17] As of January 2011, the release date had been pushed back further, to 2012. The initial draft of the script was written by Josh Klausner who has also said that the film would be set around the times of World War II, Will McRobb and Chris Viscardi also helped write the script.[18] On 8 June 2011, Deadline announced that 9 director Shane Acker would direct the live-action adaptation of Thomas the Tank Engine, with Weta Digital designing the film's visual effects.[19]

References

  1. 1 2 "Thomas and the Magic Railroad (2000)". Box Office Mojo. 2002-08-28. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
  2. "Isle of Man Film | Over 100 film, television and animation projects since 1995". Gov.im. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
  3. Elley, Derek (15 July 2000). "Thomas and the Magic Railroad". Variety.
  4. "Shining Time Station (1989–1993) : Awards". IMDb.com. Retrieved 2015-12-05.
  5. "Thomas And The Magic Railroad". Daily Mail. London.
  6. Michael Thomson Updated 13 July 2000 (2000-07-13). "Films - review - Thomas and the Magic Railroad". BBC. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
  7. 1 2 3 "SiF: About the Magic Railroad". Retrieved 2013-06-08.
  8. "Magic Railroad - Revealed". Sodor-island.net. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
  9. "Interview: Britt Allcroft - Producer". Sodor-island.net. 1999-05-19. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
  10. "Thomas finds his voice". BBC News. 16 July 1998.
  11. "Hollywood vetoes Liverpool accent as voice of Thomas the Tank Engine". The Independent (London). April 29, 2000. Retrieved 27 November 2007.
  12. Guardian Wednesday, July 26, 2000 P22, In house stocks, Go off Menu
  13. "Thomas and the Magic Railroad (2000)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
  14. "Thomas and the Magic Railroad Movie Review". Commonsensemedia.org. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
  15. "Thomas And The Magic Railroad". Chicago Sun-Times. 26 July 2000.
  16. Hayes, Dade (3 March 2009). "Hit Entertainment gets into movie biz". Variety.
  17. "Hit Entertainment's Hit Movies Division Begins Development Of First Feature Film Based on the Adventures of Thomas and Friends". HIT Entertainment. 30 September 2009. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
  18. "Thomas Theatrical Film Pushed Back AGAIN!". (Thomas news). Sodor Island. 5 January 2011. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  19. Fleming, Mike. "'9' Helmer Shane Acker Boards Feature Based on the Thomas The Tank Engine Toys". Deadline.com. Retrieved 1 October 2011.

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