The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘The 15:17 to Paris’ doesn’t live up to film’s thrilling true story

- By Katie Walsh Tribune News Services

In the summer of 2015, three young American men from Sacramento, California, boarded a train in Amsterdam, en route to Paris, while enjoying a time-honored rite of passage: a European backpackin­g trip. In Brussels, another young man boarded the train, with a backpack full of guns and 300 rounds of ammunition. After tussling with American teacher Mark Moogalian and shooting him in the neck, he found himself in a car with a trio of young Americans filled up with youthful bravado, military training and a desire to not die lying down. What other heady combinatio­n could inspire a person to tackle a shirtless man cocking an AK-47 in a confined space?

When these events happen, especially when the heroes are as appealingl­y young and attractive as these are, there is the typical fanfare — the awards and decoration­s, the ticker tape parades, the talk show appearance­s and even “Dancing With The Stars,” for Alek Skarlatos (he came in third). Perhaps a book, and maybe even a movie made about you, such as “The 15:17 to Paris,” directed by Clint Eastwood, adapted for the screen by Dorothy Blyskal.

Eastwood decided to take a leap and go further in his biographic­al depiction, casting the major players as themselves in this blend of documentar­y and narrative filmmaking. It’s a risk that doesn’t quite pay off. While the three friends do have their charms on “Ellen” or a late night talk show, their performanc­es in the feature film are essentiall­y an argument for hiring profession­al actors.

However, the amateur performanc­es aren’t the biggest problem with “The 15:17 to Paris.” After a while, the awkward line readings fade away, and their natural charisma shines. But for an incident that took about a minute or two, expanding the story to feature length is a stretch, and Blyskal’s script doesn’t know where to focus, and features eye-roll inducing, plainly on-the-nose dialogue.

The film jumps between short moments before the attack and the boys’ upbringing as mischievou­s kids, obsessed with guns and war and bonding as outsiders at their Christian school. Years later, Spencer joins the Air Force, Alek the Oregon National Guard, and Anthony enters college.

The story could have dived into what drives someone to take a huge risk such as Spencer did, tackling attacker Ayoub El-Khazzani, narrowly escaping death when ElKhazzani’s guns jammed. Rather than searching for inner depth or meaning, it’s written off as fate and the grace of God, while much of the film is spent on shallow and essentiall­y meaningles­s scenes of the guys sightseein­g around Europe.

The action sequence on the train is truly remarkable, and Eastwood shoots with a documentar­y-style immediacy, but the surroundin­g film — especially the script and performanc­es — doesn’t serve this thrilling true-life story, or the audience. The casting is an interestin­g experiment, but “The 15:17 To Paris” fails to ever leave the station.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Spencer Stone stars as himself in a scene from “The 15:17 to Paris.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY WARNER BROS. PICTURES Spencer Stone stars as himself in a scene from “The 15:17 to Paris.”

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