The Girl On The Train(2016) -
The film also dives deep into the lives of three very different women: The "drunk" who has lost everything.
While some critics felt the movie felt a bit like an "overblown soap opera," most agree that Emily Blunt’s performance is nothing short of powerhouse. She portrays Rachel’s pain with such intensity that you can’t help but root for her, even when she's at her most self-destructive. The Girl on the Train(2016)
Rachel ( Emily Blunt ) is a mess. She’s an alcoholic divorcee who spends her daily commute to Manhattan obsessing over a seemingly perfect couple, Megan ( Haley Bennett ) and Scott ( Luke Evans ), who live just two doors down from her ex-husband, Tom ( Justin Theroux ). The film also dives deep into the lives
The "new" wife (Rebecca Ferguson) who is fiercely protective of her domestic bliss. Rachel ( Emily Blunt ) is a mess
Everything changes when Rachel sees something shocking from the train window. The next day, Megan is reported missing, and Rachel wakes up covered in blood with zero memory of the night before. Suddenly, she’s no longer just a voyeur—she’s a key witness (or perhaps a suspect) in a missing persons investigation. Why It Works: The Power of the Unreliable Narrator
What makes this film so unsettling isn't just the mystery; it’s the unreliable narrator . Because of Rachel's frequent blackouts, we only see the world through her fractured, alcohol-soaked lens. Director Tate Taylor uses "drunk vision" cinematography to put us right in her shoes—confused, defensive, and desperate for the truth.
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The film also dives deep into the lives of three very different women: The "drunk" who has lost everything.
While some critics felt the movie felt a bit like an "overblown soap opera," most agree that Emily Blunt’s performance is nothing short of powerhouse. She portrays Rachel’s pain with such intensity that you can’t help but root for her, even when she's at her most self-destructive.
Rachel ( Emily Blunt ) is a mess. She’s an alcoholic divorcee who spends her daily commute to Manhattan obsessing over a seemingly perfect couple, Megan ( Haley Bennett ) and Scott ( Luke Evans ), who live just two doors down from her ex-husband, Tom ( Justin Theroux ).
The "new" wife (Rebecca Ferguson) who is fiercely protective of her domestic bliss.
Everything changes when Rachel sees something shocking from the train window. The next day, Megan is reported missing, and Rachel wakes up covered in blood with zero memory of the night before. Suddenly, she’s no longer just a voyeur—she’s a key witness (or perhaps a suspect) in a missing persons investigation. Why It Works: The Power of the Unreliable Narrator
What makes this film so unsettling isn't just the mystery; it’s the unreliable narrator . Because of Rachel's frequent blackouts, we only see the world through her fractured, alcohol-soaked lens. Director Tate Taylor uses "drunk vision" cinematography to put us right in her shoes—confused, defensive, and desperate for the truth.