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The Train Store - The Train Killer
![The Train Killer]()
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List Price: $9.98
Our Price: $0.01
Your Save: $ 9.97 ( 100% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Miracle Pictures Starring: Michael Sarrazin, Towje Kleiner Directed By: Sandor Simo
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: DVD EAN: 0090328500078 Format: NTSC Label: Miracle Pictures Manufacturer: Miracle Pictures Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Miracle Pictures Region Code: 0 Release Date: 1990-01-01 Running Time: 103 Studio: Miracle Pictures Theatrical Release Date: 1990
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Loaded with Chinese culture Comment: The first time I saw this movie I was riveted by the immersion of Chinese culture depicted in this movie. For over a decade I've been showing this to my Eastern Culture students. It is a marvelous tool for teaching about East Asia.
Customer Rating:      Summary: GOD IS MY WITNESS... Comment: This is the incredible story of Nora Lam, a woman whose unwavering faith in God has seen her through more upheavals in her life than most people ever experience. This film is an adaptation of her book and is a condensation of Ms. Lam's extraordinary life. James F. Collier, who wrote the film adaptation, also directed the film.
In the film, her story begins in 1941, when she was a young child named Sung Neng Yee and lived in Shanghai with her wealthy parents, Dr. and Mrs. Sung (James Shigeta and Frances Nuyen), amidst unparalleled luxury and privilege. She was a spoiled and pampered child, a veritable princess. In December of 1941, Neng Yee's life would forever change, as her family was forced to flee their home, when the Japanese invaders overran all of Shanghai. For the Sung family, a life of privilege would forever be a thing of the past.
Nine years later, in 1950, Neng Yee (Julia Nickson-Soul), a beautiful young woman living in reduced circumstances with her family, was a student at Soochow University. She was living on the cusp of Chairman Mao's Cultural Revolution and was now pro-communist in her beliefs. Neng Yee studied hard at the university, and there she met and fell in love with Lam Cheng Shen (Russell Wong), a handsome young scholar with a proclivity for dressing in western clothing. Some time after graduation, Neng Yee and Cheng Shen married.
Then, everyone's re-education began. Under the auspices of the Cultural Revolution, her father, a well respected medical doctor, was forced to scrub floors in the same hospital in which he had been a prominent physician. Thus, was to begin the road of disillusionment for Neng Yee. Once persecuted by the Japanese, the Sungs now found themselves to be part of the collateral damage of the Cultural Revolution.
Shortly after, a pregnant Neng Yee and her husband found themselves subjected to interrogations by Communist officials, as they were deemed to be suspicious because of their family connections and because of that fact that Neng Yee had, at one time, held Christian beliefs. So, her nightmare began. Under interrogation, as part of her of her re-education, she re-counted to her interrogators her life at a Christian boarding school years ago. During the chaos of the Cultural Revolution, it was thought that confession and criticism were the first steps to social reform in China.
Neng Yee acknowledged that for a time she had turned to Christianity, only to have forgotten about it by the time she was sixteen, when she, instead, had turned to Chairman Mao for guidance. As Neng Yee's independent spirit began to chafe under the repressive and oppressive party line, under interrogation, Neng Yee found God again. She eventually found herself in conflict with the state and sentenced to death. Her moment of truth arrived when the pregnant Neng Yee was brought before the firing squad. What happened next is sure to make one believe in miracles. It is at that miraculous moment that life really began for Neng Yee. God promised Neng Yee that she and her family would be free and leave China. The film ends with that promise being fulfilled.
In actuality, it is not the end of her story but only the beginning. Neng Yee and her family emigrated to the United States, and Neng Yee became Nora Lam. She went on to live a life that is nearly incredible in terms of its experiential breadth. It was to be a secular life ultimately lived in the service of God in all parts of the world. It is amazing what this young woman would go on to achieve and accomplish in her life. Hers is, indeed, an inspirational story that will make one believe in a higher power, if one does not already do so. It is surely a story worth telling. Nora Lam has gone on to establish the Nora Lam Ministries, which is based in California, and she has led evangelical crusades in China and the United States. One should read the book upon which the film is based before viewing the film. As is so often the case, the book is better.
The problem with the film is that it has to cram too much into too short a time period. Consequently, it leaves parts out that would make the story a little more comprehensible. Moreover, while the venerable James Shigeta and Frances Nuyen give excellent performances, as does Russell Wong,
Julia Nickson-Soul, as pretty as she is, has too contemporary an edge and lacks the acting chops to be truly effective or convincing in the role. Consequently, this film pales when compared to James F. Collier's other inspirational film, "The Hiding Place".
Customer Rating:      Summary: GREATEST TRUE STORY Comment: HAVE MOVIE ON VHS. WONDERFUL. HAD THE HONOR OF MEETING NORA LAM IN PERSON AS AN ADULT. WONDERFUL PERSON.
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Editorial Reviews:
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The true story of survivor Nora Lam's early life, prior to her escape to freedom. Born in Peking, China, Nora's wealthy family was persecuted by the Japanese during WWII. After the war she married a former classmate and soon after, as she looked forward to the birth of her first child as well as a prestigious teaching post, she was suddenly forced to submit to relentless ideological interrogation, forced labor, and firing squads, at the hands of the oppressive Red Chinese regime. Bent on making her suffer for her privileged past, her Christian schooling, and for questioning the tactics of the new government, the authorities proceeded to put husband and wife against one another in an effort to break their love and spirit.
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