User Reviews (8)

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  • katie_yuen17 August 2009
    I'll admit that I didn't have very high expectations for this film because honestly, the Canadian film industry simply does not get enough funding and support to develop a lot of good movies.

    But when I started watching Iron Road I was taken by surprise: the cinematography and art direction are unexpectedly beautiful, and the appearance of veteran actors like Sam Neill and Peter O'Toole gave gravity to the story. I found myself intrigued by the story and I eagerly followed it through both parts on CBC. True, the story is a bit predictable; true, there are some unrealistic elements and some inaccuracies; true, there could have been more focus towards the historical premise of the film (the exploitation of the Chinese). But when I considered it as a film for entertainment, I found it to be remarkably good in that aspect. I felt that a lot of story was told in a limited amount of time, and I was especially charmed by the performances of the two leads (Sun Li and Luke MacFarlane). MacFarlane brought genuine kindness and tenderness to his role, and Li played her character with exceptional strength and conviction. Tony Leung Ka Fai's excellent performance is also worth noting. If nothing else, this film is carried by the strength of its actors.

    Overall: while Iron Road may not be as epic and profound as it could have been, I think the creators did a lot with very little time and succeeded in creating a small, but moving, dramatized excerpt from Canadian history.
  • I wouldn't pretend that this is the best film/mini series I've ever see but I believe one reviewer was off on the harsh criticism this film was given. The reviewer even mistakenly names an actor that wasn't even in the film but that is not the point. Having seen this film you are transported to another time and into the heart of a struggling nation looking to find it's way. The story and characters are interesting and developed enough to keep one glued to their couch. This may not be art cinema at it's very best but it is none the less an educational and entertaining film that is beautifully and artistically moving.The actors are gifted and the writing while not the best doesn't take away from the overall story. And who can go wrong watching the great Peter O'toole on screen again!
  • Not long ago, I was watching Cecil B. DeMille's film UNION PACIFIC and started thinking that they should make a new film about building the Canadian railroad. Sure, we have Pierre Burton's THE NATIONAL DREAM but that to me seemed too documentary like and lacked a human element like UNION PACIFIC. I also thought it would be good to have a large part of the plot involve the Chinese contribution. About a month later, I heard about a project called IRON ROAD that was nearly ready to air on CBC. Needless to say, I anticipated this miniseries. After seeing it, it held some similarities to UNION PACIFIC: the romantic element, the sense of urgency to get the railroad done, etc. Even Barbara Stanwyck's Irish accent is echoed by Ian Tracy who plays a villain to rival the best Lloyd Bochner or Kenneth Welsh villain. The movie was not what I expected but it was entertaining. Betty Sun's character Little Tiger is one of the strongest female characters I have seen in a while. A 19th century Chinese woman with her skills (martial arts, explosives expertise, psychology) would be truly amazing. Couple that with the fact that she refuses to be Luke MacFarlane's Celestrial mistress makes her a heroine par excellence. Betty Sun gives a forceful performance as does MacFarlane, an actor many Americans will know as Scotty Wandell from "Brothers and Sisters". The miniseries does connect to this dynamic era in Canadian history but should have universal appeal with its handsome stars, romantic subplots, mystery, martial arts action, and cliffhanging (literally, at times) suspense. It is the NATIONAL DREAM doubled. It deals with two nations' dreams: Canadian pioneers' dream to unite their country by rail and Chinese immigrants' dream to make a good life for its citizens, free from gangsters and corrupt leaders. The Chinese workers dealt with poor wages (the Irish workers made twice as much as them), dangerous conditions (working with short fused dynamite), political prejudice like the exorbitant head tax they had to pay after the railroad was built. Despite this, they saw potential in this new land and their efforts will never be forgotten, thanks to movies like this.
  • In 1882 British Columbia, Alfred Nichol (Sam Neill) is desperate to get Chinese labor as he falls behind crossing the Rocky Mountains. He sends his son James to Hong Kong to gather 2000 workers in one week before Chinese New Year. Their sickly drunken contact Lionel Relic (Peter O'Toole) is having trouble. Little Tiger is an orphan girl passing as a boy. She sells fireworks and learns explosives from the master. She befriends Lionel but James refuses to take her. They battle gangster Lei Mo over workers. Tiger recruits the last 100. Lionel is killed and James takes her fearing for her life. She starts out as the tea boy and volunteers to crawl in after a cave-in to set explosive charges. She starts falling for James despite her secret identity and his girlfriend Melanie Grant (Charlotte Sullivan).

    This is a functional love story weaving in the historical drama. Sun Li and Luke Macfarlan are surprisingly good despite being relative unknowns. She's able to shine and he's able to stay in the picture despite having to compete against some A level talents. O'Toole is in the first part. He's a frail man but he still brings it. Both the English and Chinese actors are very professional. The production value is limited. At least, they have a real train and a tunnel. The Hong Kong set looks very fake. They probably built it in Canada which explains it. It's a solid TV mini-series.
  • This 3 hour mini about Chinese workers building the Canadian Railroads is actually very watchable and well made.

    The story is well written, exciting and yet not too far out. It manages to have a gutsy brainy heroine as a central character who is a brilliant dynamite expert, with a family mission who manages to have a romance. And the whole saga finishes with a non clichéd ending. The melodramatic and action parts of the story fit in to the historical setting quite well. It has a good balance between modern sensitivities to the historical injustices and an entertaining story.

    As the heroine Sun Li the Chinese actress does a convincing job against some more established actors. In her no make up boys get up, she believably manages to attract a few admirers. Peter O'Toole has a brief but memorable supporting role in the beginning. Sam Neill plays a railway company boss. His son played by Luke Macfarlane of Brothers and Sisters develops a relationship with the heroine. The acting all round including the Chinese supporting characters is high standard.

    Worth watching.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    A poorly scripted movie and waste of time and money. It is puzzling that the movie got made given the over-boiled melodramatic elements and the plot twists that were predictable. The movie demonstrated some potential when the story was set in China and there was the effort involved in rounding up the people willing to immigrant to work on the railroad. When the story moved to the BC interior and the challenges surrounding the construction of the railroad it seems that every exhausted trick is hauled out of the bag to propel the story to its fitful end. Very little effort to generate any originality in favour of moving things along with sudden plot-turning health crises, hidden and discovered identities and comic-book caliber villains. In the end, justifying the whole exercise with its historic reference to the plight of the Chinese who worked on the CPR is a more of a cop-out for bad movie-making than it is a tribute to the victims of the unsafe working conditions they encountered and the head tax that was laid on them after they finished the work. A step backward for Canadian movie-making that resembles the tax shelter garbage that occurred in the 1970s and 80s.
  • If there was any doubt about the CBC's tragic decline into meaninglessness, this ghastly farce of a movie puts it to rest. To begin, it's obviously a cynical ploy to craft a vehicle that can be sold to Asian TV. The plot, such as it is, is absurd. The employment of Hollywood stars such as Sam Neil and Peter O'Toole is an insulting vote of non confidence in Canadian actors. Errors are rampant. There were no self-igniting wooden matches in the period depicted. Proper usage for Canada and for the era is RAILWAY and not RAILROAD. Blasting at the time was done with nitro glycerine, not powder. CBC distinguished itself and Canada several years ago with its TV adaptation of Pierre Berton's "The National Dream." Why would it want to eradicate the high standard it set then with this absurd third rate pastiche of sex and kung fu.
  • Kirpianuscus28 January 2017
    a film of a simple story. nothing special. nothing unknown. at the first sight. because "Iron Road" has a rare film. a generous one. because reminds a tragic Canadian history page. because , a simple story presents the impact between two different civilizations. because gives beautiful performances. and a touching story of love, looking of origins, build of a country and the manner to understand to be yourself. the meet with Peter O 'Toole, the fascinating work of Li Sun, Sam Neall and his portrait of a pioneer-business-self made man, the good intentions of Luke Macfarlane are good points of a film who is not different by others from the same genre but preserves its original voice.