Train Station is a multi-director feature film from CollabFeature, the filmmaking team that created The Owner.[2][3]
![]() | This article contains content that is written like an advertisement. (December 2015) |
Train Station | |
---|---|
Directed by | Xavier Agudo Ryan Bajornas Surya Balakrishnan Nicola Barnaba Petras Baronas Juliane Block Leroux Botha Julia Caiuby Gregory Cattell Therese Cayaba David Cerqueiro Diane Cheklich Violetta D'Agata Felix A. Dausend Tiago P. de Carvalho Hesam Dehghani Giovanni Esposito Todd Felderstein Ingrid Franchi Yango Gonzalez Vania Ivanova Yosef Khouwes George Korgianitis Joycelyn Lee Craig Lines Michael Vincent Mercado Athanasia Michopoulou Daniel Montoya Omer Moutasim Marc Oberdorfer Aditya Powar Tony Pietra Adam Ruszkowski Andrés Sandoval Guillem Serrano Marty Shea Nitye Sood Wilson Stiner Amirah M. Tajdin Dzenan Tarakcija Adrian Tudor John Versical Kresna D. Wicaksana Kevin Rumley Bruno Zakarewicz Rafael Yoshida |
Starring | Alan Madlane, Patrick O'Connor Cronin, Lance Alan, Chris Korte, Robert Skrok, Patrick Gorman, Judith Hoersch, Yoann Sover, Daymon Britton, Vivid Wang, Matt Broman, Bryan Carmody, Georg Anton, Paul Howard, Jim Kitson, Alessandro Luci, Alba Ferrara, Alejandro Leon, Senen Selim |
Music by | David Alonso Garzón, Martin Thornton |
Release dates |
|
Languages | English, Persian, Indonesian, Spanish, Italian, German, Greek, Chinese, Hindi, Portuguese, Arabic, Romanian, Filipino, Malay |
Train Station follows a single character, known only as "The Person in Brown", played by 40 different actors who vary in age, gender, ethnicity and sexual orientation. Along the character's journey, he/she is presented with a series of choices - some minor, some life-altering. Each time a choice is made, the film switches to a new cast in a new city, and the story continues, helmed by a new director. Cities include Berlin, Bogota, Dubai, Jakarta, Los Angeles, Singapore, Tehran and 20 others on five continents. Train Station unites cultures and breaks language barriers, reminding us that we all live in the same world full of diversity, options and consequences.[4][2][5][6]
Critical reception has been positive. PopCultureBeast called it "the definition of collaborative experimentation in cinema"[7]