Eye For Film >> Movies >> Thomas & Friends: Big World! Big Adventures! The Movie (2018) Film Review
Thomas & Friends: Big World! Big Adventures! The Movie
Reviewed by: Angus Wolfe Murray
With a title like this what do you say to your five-year-old?
"Lets go and see Big World! Big Adventures! The Movie."
"Why?"
"It's Thomas the Tank Engine."
"I've seen that."
"Not the new one. You haven't seen Big World."
"What's big about it?"
"It's a road movie. I mean, a train movie."
"Is Thomas a tank?"
"He has adventures in the big world."
"How?"
Kids these days, they know. This isn't the Thomas we loved when there was nothing else to watch and then thought naff because he didn't run on diesel. He's had an animation makeover and he's not the tank engine in your Nostalgia Drawer, he's something else, shiny and stupid.
The new Thomas completely misses the point, like Postman Pat working for FedEx, or Thunderbirds in CGI. He doesn't need to go global. His popularity is based on staying local. He's not a hero, not all the time. He's smaller than the others in the yard but has a big heart, just as big as Big World, in fact bigger.
Thomas meets an Aussie racing car, called Ace, who tells him that he hasn't lived unless he takes risks, like travelling the world and having fun. Thomas points out he needs rails, durrr!
No worries, mate!
They go to Africa where they meet Nia, a black train of exceptional beauty and charm. All she wants is to help and be Thomas' friend. He keeps telling her he doesn't need help, hers or anyone's. He's so grumpy and inconsiderate and negative about the trip you wonder why she hangs around. Of course, this isn't the Ringo Starr Thomas. This is a paranoid, insecure imposter.
Ace and Thomas and Nia go to five continents. You stop questioning the business of rails and what happens when they have a crash in the middle of nowhere and who's paying for their tickets and how can The Fat Controller take time off to spend months chasing them? You have a more immediate problem sitting next to you.
"I want to go home?"
"Don't you like Thomas?"
"I don't like the car."
"It's not about the car?"
"What's it about?"
Pause.
You leave.
Reviewed on: 13 Jul 2018