Smash the Engine
7.3.14 ~ by Peter Frase
Snowpiercers underlying themes go beyond merely pointing out class exploitation to challenge the logic of capital
Bong Joon-Hos Snowpiercer has been praised for its action-movie spectacle and its message of class struggle. It exceeds expectations on both counts. Amid tightly-paced sequences that eschew standard-issue Hollywood pyrotechnics, it evokes some of the thorniest dilemmas of socialism and revolution, in the twentieth century and today.
This is a science-fiction adventure set entirely on a train. Or rather, the train, which forever zooms around the planet carrying the last remnants of humanity because the outside world has been rendered uninhabitable. The class hierarchy within the train is expressed physically: the closer you are to the front of the train, the more opulent and leisurely your existence.
The script, written by Bong and Kelly Masterson, takes the central conceit of the train from a decades-old French graphic novel of the same name, though the plots of the two stories are quite different.
Most of the movies story focuses on the figures of Curtis and his mentor Gilliam (wonderfully portrayed by John Hurt). They lead a proletarian revolution, touched off by a police raid that seizes several working-class children and takes them away for reasons unknown. They are fighting to make it to the front car and confront the mysterious Wilford, who controls the train and whose corporate emblems appear throughout it.
Curtis makes the stakes plain in an early conversation with Gilliam. If we control the engine, we control the world, he says. Without that, we have nothing. All past revolutions have failed because they couldnt take the engine. Not exactly subtle ...
More here - https://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/07/smash-the-engine/