The Timekeeper
The Timekeeper
| 21 August 2009 (USA)
The Timekeeper Trailers

A l'automne 1964, la construction des 52 derniers milles du chemin de fer du Grand lac des Esclaves est en voie d'achèvement. Une bande hétéroclite de travailleurs instables, ivrognes et voleurs, est recrutée dans les tavernes par Fisk, contremaître aux poings d'acier. Martin Bishop, dix-huit ans, arrive comme nouveau pointeur au sein de cette équipe, le précédent pointeur ayant « disparu ». Bishop découvre rapidement des faits anormaux dans ce camp isolé; celui qui ne suit pas les règles de Fisk risque d'être expulsé du camp dans la nature sauvage et hostile. Fait surprenant, tous les hommes qui ont été expulsés demeurent sur la liste de paie... Le refus de Bishop de jouer le jeu de Fisk lui vaut d'être expulsé dans la forêt, dont l'immensité devient sa nouvelle prison. Incapable de s'échapper, Bishop découvre des aptitudes à la survie qu'il ne croyait pas posséder.

Reviews
Perry Kate Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
BoardChiri Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay
Huievest Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.
Abegail Noëlle While it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.
juneebuggy I struggled through this bit of Canadiana and truthfully got more from reading the synopsis afterwards than the movie itself. I think the biggest problem with this Indie drama is that nothing is explained; when is this taking place? Where is this remote location? What exactly is a timekeeper? What railroad are they building? All these things would have helped me get into this movie, as it was my favorite scene involved the men 'dump' diving with some bears and the Johnny Cash song played (Long Time) during one of the scenes -not a good sign. And what the hell was Roy Dupuis doing here, his character (and fake beard) were a mess. 02.28.14 FYI (and for my information) Set in 1964, this follows Martin Bishop (Craig Olejnik), a highly moral young man, as he attempts to work alongside a railway construction crew in the Northwest Territories.
rgcustomer Although set in NWT, it looks like credit goes to Quebec for getting their logo into the film credits. So I can't change my opinion that pretty much the only good films in Canada get funded by Quebec, and apparently this is now true even if the language is English.I checked out the reviews, and I seem to be in the minority. I've visited the north, but not that far, and I never lived or worked there. If there's an inside joke to this film, I didn't get it. It seemed like a straightforward tale of the ideal young man sent to straighten out the evil slave driver, and free the helpless slaves. It's a common-enough story, but why not retell it, if it can be told well?There are some truly goofy things in it that take away from it, like the "garbage eater" stuff. I'm fairly sure more colourful language would have been used, and as other comments noted, if they could share trash with a bear, they could probably also find other food to eat, less risky. Even I can find things to eat in the wild, without much effort. And of course, no person is THAT good and THAT lucky and THAT smart all of the time. Interesting heroes have flaws.But on the whole, there's a lot to like. I like that some of the characters might randomly kill someone, or are otherwise bizarre. That's reality, now isn't it? The scenery is beautiful, as is Craig. I did not find the details of the story predictable, so the journey was interesting. The story has a good Canadian quality that is absent from so much of Canadian film. You can tell it's from here AND it is set here, but it doesn't make you want to stab your eyes out. I don't get to say that often enough.I think this film was aiming a bit higher (or could have) but it's 7/10 for me, which is a great score for English-language Canadian film.
wilfdarr Any one who has moved to the north at a young and innocent age and worked for a boss who's motives are not always pure will understand this movie. People who have not lived here may find it a stretch, but anyone who has met an elder who doesn't speak any English, anyone who has "dump-ster dived" because they couldn't afford groceries, anyone who has felt at times trapped by the remoteness of this land, will understand this movie. Unfortunately, not enough care is taken explaining the culture, the remote location, or the characters in the movie and so unless you are privy to the inside joke, you may very well miss a good story.
vincentinparis Take a sadistic villain with the psychological depth of a cartoon character. Add a goody-two-shoe hero, who comes to right the wrongs in this world (and who never in 52 days of fleeing through the wilds or working in a chain gang never, ever needs a shave or runs out of hair gel). To this simplistic recipe, add a few supporting roles and extras who lack any interest or dialogue or intelligence (I mean, wouldn't you just catch fish or eat berries rather than scrounge scraps out of discardedtins in the garbage heap?). In their flight from the camp from hell,one character leaves (but you guessed it, he'll come crawling out of the woods just when he's needed) while another, the stereotyped strong, silent Indian who has no dialogue other than grunting in the direction of the river bank, simply disappears, with none of the other characters seeming to notice or care. (I suspect that his native wisdom told him he'd be better off in some other movie that actually had a script.)With every line of trite text, the sparse audience I saw this film with emitted groans, then nervous giggles, then was left in stunned silence at the dreadfulness of it all. I think about half a dozen of us actually managed to hang on until the final credits. Everybody else did what the exploited laborers in the film didn't have the good sense to do: they simply walked out and did something better with their time.