Thursday, January 22, 2026

Train Dreams (2025)

 


Train Dreams is a 2025 American period drama film directed by Clint Bentley, who co-wrote the screenplay with Greg Kwedar, based on the 2011 novella by Denis Johnson. The film stars Joel Edgerton, Felicity Jones, Nathaniel Arcand, Clifton Collins Jr., John Diehl, Paul Schneider, Kerry Condon, and William H. Macy, with narration from Will Patton.

Train Dreams had its world premiere at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2025, and was released in select cinemas in the United States on November 7, 2025, before its streaming debut by Netflix on November 21, 2025. The film received critical acclaim, with praise going to Bentley's direction and Edgerton's performance. Among its accolades, the film was named as one of the top ten films of 2025 by both the National Board of Review and the American Film Institute. For his performance, Edgerton was nominated for a Golden Globe Award.[2]

Plot

The film recounts the 80 years of the life of Robert Grainier around Bonners Ferry, Idaho.[3] Arriving in the area on the Great Northern Railway as an orphaned child, Robert drops out of school and spends his younger years without direction or purpose, until he meets Gladys Olding. They marry, build a log cabin along the Moyie River, and have a daughter, Kate.

He takes to railroad construction for the Spokane International Railway, but witnesses a Chinese worker thrown from a bridge by a group of white workers for unclear reasons, and he is continually haunted by visions of the man and dreams of him being struck by a train. Robert later takes up seasonal logging work, but it takes him away from Gladys and Kate for long periods of time. He meets many men who leave impressions on him, but he also witnesses more tragedies along the way. One worker is killed by a vigilante avenging the murder of his brother; several other workers are killed by a falling tree, their graves marked by a pair of boots nailed to a tree. Robert grows close to a fellow logger, Arn Peeples, who is killed by a falling branch.

Robert tries to take up work closer to home but struggles in the post-World War I economy. He and Gladys decide to farm and build a lumber mill so he can stop logging, but Robert returns from his final season of logging to discover the cabin destroyed in a wildfire, with Gladys and Kate missing. A despondent Robert is brought company by his friend, Ignatius Jack, and he rebuilds the cabin. As Robert returns to logging, he finds himself out of place amid new technology and younger, rougher men, and decides to stop.

Taking a job as a carriage driver for townspeople, he meets Claire Thompson of the United States Forest Service who is in town to conduct a survey, who encourages him. Robert continually walks through the woods, believing he can feel the spirits of his wife and daughter sometimes, and hopes not to drive them away; Claire in turn tells him how her husband died after a long illness. One night, he believes he sees an injured Kate apparently return to the cabin and he tends to her wounds, but after a night of dreams he awakens to find Kate gone and a window open. He determines to continue living in the cabin in case she ever returns. Years go by, and the world changes around an aging and weathered Robert, who rides the Great Northern into Spokane, witnessing John Glenn's flight into space on a television.

The film ends on a spring day when Robert decides to fly in a biplane. As the plane loops and circles in the air, sights and sounds of people and places throughout his life pass through his mind. The narrator recounts that Robert died in his sleep in the cabin in November 1968, leaving no heirs, but that on that spring day in the plane, "as he misplaced all sense of up and down, he felt, at last, connected to it all."

Cast

Influences

Train Dreams has been compared to the work of Terrence Malick, and Bentley has cited Malick as an influence, describing him as "one of the greatest filmmakers to have ever lived."

He changed the language of cinema. He created a new form, like one of those rare filmmakers that turned the medium in a new direction. There's not many of them.

So, yeah, I'm a big fan. Trying to do my own thing, but if I'm mentioned in the same sentence as him, I'm very honored.[4]

Bentley has cited Andrei Rublev, Princess Mononoke, It's Such a Beautiful Day, and Days of Heaven as films that influenced his adaptation of Denis Johnson’s novella.[5] Bentley also cited Jules et Jim and Y Tu Mamá También as key influences on the film’s use of third-person narration.[4]

Production

In February 2024, the film was reported to be produced by Marissa McMahon and Ashley Schlaifer with Black Bear as an adaptation of Denis Johnson's 2011 novella Train Dreams by Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar, and directed by Clint Bentley and starring Felicity Jones and Joel Edgerton. Producers include Marissa McMahon and Ashley Schlaifer for Kamala Films, and Will Janowitz, and Teddy Schwarzman and Michael Heimler for Black Bear.[6] In May 2024, Kerry Condon, William H. Macy, and Clifton Collins Jr. joined the cast.[7]

Principal photography started in Washington in April 2024, with filming locations including Tekoa, Snoqualmie, Spokane, Metaline Falls, and Colville.[8][9] The production was approved for support from the Production Incentive Program of Washington Filmworks.[10] Although Bentley and cinematographer Adolpho Veloso considered shooting on film, the production’s 29-day schedule made it impractical; as a result, it was shot digitally.[4]

Bentley has said that only a limited number of real trees were felled during production; scenes depicting characters cutting into a tree were performed using an artificial prop constructed from wood and fiberglass, with visual effects applied to extend the trunk and canopy to resemble a full-sized tree.[4] Will Patton provided the voiceover for the film. He had also previously narrated the audiobook of Denis Johnson's novella.[11]

Music

An original song recorded for the film and performed by Nick Cave, "Train Dreams", was not included in the version shown at the Sundance Film Festival; it was added in subsequent releases, playing over the end credits.[12]

Release

Train Dreams premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2025.[13][14] Shortly after, Netflix acquired distribution rights to the film.[15] The film was released in select theaters in the United States on November 7, 2025, before being made available for streaming on Netflix globally on November 21.[16][17]

It competed in Stockholm Competition of the 2025 Stockholm International Film Festival on November 8, 2025.[18]

Reception

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 95% of 228 critics' reviews are positive. The website's consensus reads: "A gorgeous meditation on America, ably shouldered by one of Joel Edgerton's very best performances, Train Dreams takes on mythic proportions while maintaining an intimate emotional delicacy."[19] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 88 out of 100, based on 43 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[20]

Writing for RogerEbert.com, Brian Tallerico gave the film 4 stars out of 4, calling it "a meditation on the beauty of everyone and everything", and commenting that "the reason it's one of the best [films] of the year is how [Bentley] threads the needle between brutal reality and wistful poetry."[21]

Accolades

Award Date of ceremony Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
AARP Movies for Grownups Awards January 10, 2026 Best Picture Train Dreams Nominated [22]
Best Actor Joel Edgerton Nominated
American Film Institute Awards December 4, 2025 Top 10 Films Train Dreams Won[b] [23]
Artios Awards February 26, 2026 Feature Studio or Independent – Drama Avy Kaufman Pending [24]
Astra Film Awards January 9, 2026 Best Picture – Drama Train Dreams Nominated [25]
Best Actor – Drama Joel Edgerton Nominated
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Nominated
Best Voice Over Performance Will Patton Nominated
December 11, 2025 Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Nominated [26]
Best Original Song "Train Dreams" – Nick Cave and Bryce Dessner Nominated
Austin Film Critics Association December 18, 2025 Best Picture Train Dreams Nominated [27]
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Nominated
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Nominated
Best Voice Acting/Animated/Digital Performance Will Patton Nominated
Camerimage November 22, 2025 Actor's Award Joel Edgerton Won [28]
Chicago Film Critics Association December 11, 2025 Best Film Train Dreams Nominated [29]
Best Actor Joel Edgerton Nominated
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Nominated
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Nominated
Best Original Score Bryce Dessner Nominated
Chicago International Film Festival October 19, 2025 Artistic Achievement Award Joel Edgerton and Clint Bentley Won [30]
Critics Choice Awards January 4, 2026 Best Picture Train Dreams Nominated [31]
Best Actor Joel Edgerton Nominated
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Nominated
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Won
Best Song "Train Dreams" – Nick Cave and Bryce Dessner Nominated
Deauville American Film Festival September 11, 2025 Talent Award Joel Edgerton Won [32]
Film Independent Spirit Awards January 15, 2026 Best Feature Michael Heimler, Will Janowitz, Marissa McMahon, Ashley Schlaifer, and Teddy Schwarzman Pending [33]
Best Director Clint Bentley Pending
Best Lead Performance Joel Edgerton Pending
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Pending
Georgia Film Critics Association December 27, 2025 Best Picture Train Dreams Nominated [34]
Best Director Clint Bentley Nominated
Best Actor Joel Edgerton Nominated
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Runner-up
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Runner-up
Best Original Score Bryce Dessner Runner-up
Best Original Song "Train Dreams" – Nick Cave and Bryce Dessner Nominated
Golden Globe Awards January 11, 2026 Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Joel Edgerton Nominated [2]
Best Original Song "Train Dreams" – Nick Cave and Bryce Dessner Nominated
Gotham Awards December 1, 2025 Best Feature Michael Heimler, Will Janowitz, Marissa McMahon, Ashley Schlaifer, and Teddy Schwarzman Nominated [35]
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Nominated
Middleburg Film Festival October 19, 2025 Outstanding Achievement in Acting Award Joel Edgerton Won [36]
Mill Valley Film Festival October 7, 2025 Spotlight Award Won [37][38]
National Board of Review January 13, 2026 Top 10 Films Train Dreams Won[b] [39]
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Won
Phoenix Film Critics Society December 15, 2025 Top Ten Films Train Dreams Won[b] [40]
San Diego Film Critics Society December 15, 2025 Best Actor Joel Edgerton Runner-up [41]
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Nominated
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Won
Savannah Film Festival November 1, 2025 Vanguard Award Joel Edgerton Won [42]
Seattle Film Critics Society December 15, 2025 Best Picture Train Dreams Nominated [43]
Best Director Clint Bentley Nominated
Best Actor in a Leading Role Joel Edgerton Nominated
Best Actor in a Supporting Role William H. Macy Nominated
Best Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Nominated
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Nominated
Best Costume Design Malgosia Turzanska [Wikidata] Nominated
Best Pacific Northwest Feature Film Clint Bentley Won
Society of Composers & Lyricists February 6, 2026 Outstanding Original Score for an Independent Film Bryce Dessner Pending [44]
Southeastern Film Critics Association December 16, 2025 Top Ten Films Train Dreams 7th place [45]
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Runner-up
St. Louis Film Critics Association Awards December 14, 2025 Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated [46]
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Runner-up
Best Vocal Performance Will Patton Won
Stockholm International Film Festival November 14, 2025 Golden Horse Train Dreams Nominated [47]
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association December 7, 2025 Best Actor Joel Edgerton Nominated [48]
Best Adapted Screenplay Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar Nominated
Best Cinematography Adolpho Veloso Nominated

Notes

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