The Station Agent -
Joe is the engine that drives the trio together. On the surface, he is the loud, energetic counterweight to Fin’s silence. Yet, Cannavale infuses Joe with a poignant vulnerability. Joe lives with an aging, unseen father and spends his days in a desolate parking lot. His desperate need to feed people and talk to anyone who passes by reveals an isolation just as profound as Fin's, hidden behind a wide smile and a hot espresso machine. Themes: Isolation, Disability, and Chosen Family The Modern Epidemic of Isolation
The film follows Finbar McBride (played with brilliant, muted intensity by Peter Dinklage ), a man born with achondroplasia who wishes for nothing more than to be left alone. Tired of the constant stares, pointing, and unsolicited attention that accompany his appearance in his native Hoboken, New Jersey, Fin seeks refuge in a dilapidated, abandoned train depot in rural Newfoundland, New Jersey. the station agent
The feature’s solid core is the . Fin’s first connection isn’t with another person—it’s with the tracks, the timetable, the ritual of waving at a passing train. He speaks in grunts. He doesn’t ask for help. Then two forces intrude: Joe (Bobby Cannavale), a voluble Cuban-American hot dog truck vendor who mistakes “go away” for “let’s talk,” and Olivia (Patricia Clarkson), an artist drowning in grief after her son’s death. Both are also isolated, just louder about it. Joe is the engine that drives the trio together
This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. Joe lives with an aging, unseen father and
However, his plan for isolation is soon interrupted. In the train station's new neighborhood, he meets two other lost souls: Joe Oramas (Bobby Cannavale), a loquacious and overly-friendly hot dog vendor, and Olivia Harris (Patricia Clarkson), a grieving artist struggling with the loss of her young son. Reluctantly, Fin finds himself drawn into an unlikely friendship with these two very different people, and their shared loneliness begins to forge a bond that will change all of their lives.
: A comprehensive, historical reference book for those engaged in station work, originally published in 1928 and recently reprinted [37].
