Termini Station (film)

Termini Station
Directed by Allan King
Written by Colleen Murphy
Produced by Don Haig
Allan King
Starring Megan Follows
Colleen Dewhurst
Gordon Clapp
Debra McGrath
Cinematography Brian R.R. Hebb
Edited by Gordon McClellan
Music by Mychael Danna
Production
company
Saturday Plays Ltd.
Distributed by Northern Arts Entertainment
Astral Media
Fox Lorber Home Video
Monarch Home Video
Release date
  • September 1989 (TIFF)
Running time
108 minutes
Country Canada
Language English

Termini Station is a 1989 Canadian drama film directed by Allan King and written by Colleen Murphy.

The film stars Colleen Dewhurst and Megan Follows as Molly and Micheline Dushane, a mother and daughter living in a small Northern Ontario town. Molly is an alcoholic, which creates tension between her and Micheline, while Micheline is a retail clerk and part-time prostitute who dreams of escaping her stifling small-town existence. The film's cast also includes Gordon Clapp and Debra McGrath as Molly's son and daughter-in-law, as well as Gordon Pinsent in flashbacks as Molly's deceased husband and Micheline's father, who unsuccessfully attempted to kill Micheline before committing suicide.

Termini Station was filmed on location in Kirkland Lake, Ontario.

Distribution

The film premiered at the 1989 Toronto International Film Festival in September 1989. Its second screening was at the inaugural Cinéfest Sudbury International Film Festival two weeks later.

Awards

The film was nominated for six awards at the 11th Genie Awards: Best Picture, Best Actress (Dewhurst, Follows), Best Original Screenplay (Murphy), Best Overall Sound (Sal Grimaldi, Joe Grimaldi, Dino Pigat and Peter Shewchuk) and Best Sound Editing (Terry Burke, David Templeton, Ralph Brunjes, and Brian Ravok).

Critical response

The film received mixed reviews from critics. Rick Groen of The Globe and Mail praised the ways in which King's background in documentary filmmaking had influenced the film's depiction of the "permanently half-finished look of the mid-North", but criticized the screenplay as melodramatic, while Peter Goddard of the Toronto Star called the cast talented but wasted, and concluded that "Canadiana any more Gothic than this and you could put an Elmira stove in it and sell it in Harrowsmith."

Marke Andrews of the Vancouver Sun wrote that the film's only redeeming quality was that it liberated Follows from her wholesome Anne of Green Gables image, while Wendy Dudley of the Calgary Herald suggested that King's choice to cast Dewhurst and Follows together as a mother and daughter, so soon after the Anne of Green Gables films, was one of the film's biggest problems, concluding that "it's hard to accept Marilla as a drunk and Anne as a whore."

The Los Angeles Times, conversely, acknowledged that the film "is stuck in the usual kitchen-sink realism that makes the Anglo-Canadian--as opposed to the often exciting Quebecois--cinema so often dull", but praised the cast, and Dewhurst in particular, for their performances.