Starring: Tom Hanks, Chris Coppola, Eddie Deezen, Michael Jeter, Nona Gaye
Directed by: Robert Zemeckis
Journey Beyond Your Imagination
The Polar Express is a classic children's story written and illustrated by Chris
Van Allsburg and translated to the big screen with an equally original vision by
Robert Zemeckis who directed the movie and co-wrote the screenplay.
Zemeckis adds many original details to the story about a boy who lacks the faith to
believe in Santa Claus. On Christmas Eve the parents remark how much the sleeping boy
has grown and that it will soon be the "end of the magic" of childhood. The boy hears
and wonders at this, even as a magical train stops outside his house. The conductor
tells him that their destination is the North Pole, and he gets in a car with other
children who are also in their pajamas.
Zemeckis colors the story with the same Baroque surrealism of the book. The
atmosphere is similar to that in Robert Frost's "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy
Evening" darkly mysterious and faintly menacing. Fat snowflakes fall throughout
the night-time journey as the train passes over high mountains, across an icy desert,
and through gloomy, moon-lit forests filled with hungry wolves.
The children learn what their peculiar
faults are and how they must overcome them. In this sense, it bears a strong likeness
to the Wizard of Oz in that it has four characters sharing a journey to a magic city
where they receive the knowledge about themselves they were lacking. Thematically, it is
even more similar to John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress because of the underlying spiritual
theme of belief.
The premise of the movie is that as one grows old one loses one's ability to hear the
ringing of a bell from Santa's sleigh. This belief in Santa, unlike a Christian's belief
in God, is at first based on the act of seeing. During the journey the Hobo tells the boy
that "Seeing is believing." When they arrive at the North Pole the boy is saddened that
he cannot hear the bells on Santa's sleigh and that he cannot see Santa through the crowd
of elves. In desperation, he repeats to himself "I believe, I believe," and in that
moment, as if in answer to a prayer, Santa appears at his side. Afterwards, the conductor
tells him that "Seeing is believing, but sometimes the most real things are those you
can't see."
At this point the movie transcends the book's simple story and may remind the Christian
viewer that "Faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see"
(Hebrews 11:1). The boy believed before he saw Santa, in much the same way that
Hebrews further describes: "And without faith it is impossible to please God, because
anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists, and that he rewards those who
earnestly seek him" (Hebrews 11:6). Having earnestly sought and believed first,
the boy receives the reward of the bell, which the Conductor said was "the wonderful
spirit of Christmas." Thus, the bell is an emblem of belief, it is the "spirit" of
Christmas, and it is the reward that the boy receives from Santa.
The triangulation of meanings in the bell is echoed by the trinitarian aspect of the
boy's guides. First, the Hobo is a "ghost" who asks the boy if he believes in ghosts.
This explains his earlier statement that "Seeing is believing." If you see a ghost, it
must exist, right? Second, it is the Conductor who mediates the boy's journey from the
reality of his unbelieving life to the life of faith in the city of lights where Santa
dwells. And third, it is Santa who dispenses his rewards to every boy and girl who
believes in him.
Thus, Santa is the Father figure who rewards belief, the ghost is the Holy Ghost who
saves the boy's life, and the Conductor is the Christ-like figure through whom alone
the children can go to Santa's city. Seen in such a light, the movie is a striking
Christian allegory of seeking God, finding faith, and earning redemption as a reward.
We also learn that not everyone retains the faith of a child as they grow older and
this is an important lesson for children to be taught. However, the boy does retain
his faith, and small children should be prepared in advance by their parents to see
a Christmas story containing characters whose function and relationship to one another
is much like the function of the Trinity in the life of a Christian. By instructing
children how the movie functions as an allegory, parents will have a useful object
lesson for teaching their children about the allegories in the Bible, such as the
sower and the seeds and the prodigal son.
Finally, the message of childhood as possessing a special innocence is famously
illustrated by Jesus' own words when he says, "I tell you the truth, unless you
change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven"
(Matthew 18:3 NIV). Likewise, the movie and the book may remind us as Christians
that unless we retain a child-like innocence we will never hear the "spirit" of
Christmas which is the gospel of Jesus Christ. It is through Jesus alone that we
receive the Holy Spirit, and it is through His "work" that we are transported on
the journey of life to "the city of the Great King" (Matthew 5:35).
In the book, the North Pole is a "huge city standing alone at the top of the world."
Just as the boy approached the magical city, conveyed there by the ghost and the
conductor, so too will we approach the New Jerusalem, conveyed by our own "ghost"
and Conductor:
"And he carried me away in the Spirit to a mountain great and high, and showed me
the Holy City, Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God" (Revelation 21:10)
The movie contains nothing objectionable and is suitable for every age group. Very
small children will be entranced by the beautiful visuals of the story, older children
will be struck by the magic of a transforming faith, and adults will be gratified by
an unusual story which seems so strongly to convey the message of the gospel. The
Christian symbols will not be evident to non-believers, but they may give pleasure
to believers. Christians of every age will hear the question asked of the little boy
"Someone saved you?" and will answer in their hearts: "Yes. Jesus saved me," in words
sweet as the ringing of a silver bell.
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