Directed by Jerzy Kawalerowicz; no producer credited
Jerzy (Leon Niemczyk) hurriedly boards an over-night train to the seaside. He appears desperate to get away from town, and buys both berths in his compartment in order to be alone. But already in the compartment is a young woman, Marta (Lucyna Winnicka), who was sold her ticket second-hand and, equally determined to get away, refuses to move. These are two of the several people on the crowded express, some bound for holidays, some searching for someone, and one individual flying from a murder, recently committed.
A quietly fascinating movie, Night Train builds interest for the viewer slowly. Its characters start off, almost all of them, aloof and rather annoying. As one comes to know them, however, sympathy is gained, and understanding is reached, and by the film’s conclusion one wants the best for all of them, even if some don’t deserve it.
Though often included in lists of film noir, Night Train is not in that genre. Nor should it be considered a psychological thriller, though it both thrills and is psychological. It is more of a character study of people, but in the context of growing tension and enlarging emotion. It is a drama, with touches of crime, romance and suspense.
The characters are intriguing. Jerzy is clearly hiding something, perhaps fleeing something, while Marta is, ironically, both running from a confrontation and racing toward one, hoping to find resolution for each. Other characters are Marta’s jilted lover (Zbigniew Cybulski); the greatly dissatisfied wife (Teresa Szmigielówna) of a lawyer; a concentration camp survivor (Zygmunt Zintel) suffering from insomnia; the carriage’s stewardess (Helena Dąbrowska); a know-it-all (Ignacy Machowski) who converses about a notorious homicide. Some seem silly or violent or boring; yet by the end the viewer sees that each has a sensitivity, a quality that mitigates their flaws.
The director / co-writer hit upon the idea of using a train as a separate world, cut off from the rest of life, its passengers a tiny community, forced to live together. This is not a new premise, but Kawalerowicz imbues it with an existential aspect. This is elaborated upon in the final scene, showing the train, emptied of its passengers and crew, resembling a ruin from the ancient past, with biscuit-wrappers and paper bags as relics for archaeologists to discover. Like the body, when the soul is gone, the train is a shell, and awaits reincarnation with new passengers.
The original Polish title of the film, Pociąg, which means simply ‘Train’, suggests a more general notion: that of being alone, temporarily part of a group, and then alone again. Almost all of the relationships are driven by a longing for companionship or love, however fleeting it may be. Yet, as Marta believes, everyone wants to be loved, but no one wants to love. There is anxiety even in finding someone.
Night Train also may be taken as a window on a communist country in the middle of the Cold War. There is less control than Westerners might think, yet the police are still to be obeyed without question. The train is very crowded, many passengers standing all night in filled corridors. Most people are pleased to be going on holiday. The movie is a social study in the best way, showing a mode of life incidentally.
Considered one of the best Polish movies, Night Train may be taken a number of ways. Some viewers might find it boring, but it conveys a truth that may be discovered in both life and in cinema: life is in the journey, not at the destination.












































