The Last Express

Moby ID: 1172

Trivia

1001 Video Games

The PC version of The Last Express appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.

Cameo

Designer Jordan Mechner makes a cameo appearance, as one of the porters loading August Schmidt's merchandise crate onto the train at the Munich station.

Inspiration

In Marc A. Saltzman's Game Design: Secrets of the Sages (BradyGames 1999), Mechner points out several sources of inspiration for The Last Express: * The Alfred Hitchcock movie The Lady Vanishes (1938) provided the idea to use a train as the setting * The plot was modeled after spy novels such as John Buchan’s The 39 Steps and stories by John Le Carré * European comic artists François Schuiten and Enki Bilal inspired Mechner to use stylized drawings instead of real-life actors * Characters were drawn in the style of the Art Nouveau period * The game is set during World War I because “the Second World War as a scenario is overstressed, in games as well as in movies”

Music

The soundtrack of the game is available on audio CD. Its composer, Elia Cmiral says the following about the score:

The Last Express was my first composition for a computer game, as well as my first serious assignment after moving to Los Angeles. It was a large project that took three months to complete. Before I could begin, however, I had to learn the requirements of writing for this new medium, and plan how to write such a large number of short cues. Director Jordan Mechner was a great help and a good teacher to help me navigate both the game and the new genre. The story has many unique characters of different ethnicities, exotic environments and a wide range of moods including suspense, drama and love. I developed groups of cues and assigned them themes or orchestral colors. Each group expresses a certain feeling and is tied thematically to the others in the group. This reduced the number of themes and kept me focused on the characters’ emotions. The main theme evokes a touch of sadness, romanticism, and tension on the eve of the First World War. The score relies on a small ensemble of strings with violin solo, some hand percussion, and extensive use of synthesizers for color and texture.

The music Anna and Kronos play at the concert in Kronos' private car is Sonata for Violin and Piano by C. Franck, a Belgian/French composer of the end of the 19th century. It is one of the most famous violin sonatas of all times. It can be heard any time the player goes to Kronos' car.

Orient Express

Developer Smoking Car Productions went to great pains to digitally replicate the Orient Express accurately. When they tried to find an authentic train car from the period before World War I, they soon learned that there were two versions: Teakwood wagons that were in service just up to 1914, and the steel cars that replaced them since. Unfortunately, few of the fragile wooden cars had survived World War I, even less the chaos of WW II.

Through a network of train buffs, however, the production team was able to track down a sleeping car. A man in France gave the team the name of a man in Italy who knew of a car in Athens, Greece. It had lain there abandoned for some 50 years.

Lead 3D artist Donald Grahame and his crew took hundreds of photos of the car and complemented them with contemporary pictures. The design staff also rummaged through archives and dug out original blueprints, train schedules and logbooks, read pre-war newspapers and magazines, traveled and dined in trains, and watched any Orient Express movie they could lay their hands on – all this to ensure that they would be able to recreate the Orient Express and the atmosphere on board in detail.

Languages

Most characters in the game talk to each other in their native tongues, but strangely enough, the native German speakers Anna and Schmidt rarely use German when talking to each other. Also, unlike in most movies, the Russians (as well as the French and the Germans) of The Last Express are absolutely authentic. All the Russian characters speak Russian without a trace of an accent.

Sales

The project took nearly four years to complete and included a month-long blue-screen filmshoot and a round-the-clock staff of up to 50 animators, artists, asset wranglers, and programmers. The game only remained in stores for a few months. Broderbund's marketing department quit just weeks before the game was released, resulting in virtually no advertising for it. Softbank pulled out of the game market, dissolving its subsidiary GameBank and canceling several dozen titles in development, including the nearly finished PlayStation port of the game. The Last Express was out of print long before its first Christmas season and nearly a million units shy of breaking even. By dropping their support of an already completed game, Broderbund and Softbank most likely increased their losses.

Style

All the game’s characters are drawn in Art Nouveau style. Art Nouveau (French for "New Art") was a major movement in European arts, starting in the 1880s and declining with the beginning of the First World War in 1914, the time The Last Express is set in. Artists of all kinds (writers, sculptors, painters like Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec in France, architects like Gaudi in Spain) aimed for a unification of all arts and for an erasure of stylistic boundaries. Art Nouveau paintings are naturalistic, yet minimalist through the use of clear lines, strong colors and little to no shading. To modern eyes, this makes them sometimes look like cartoon drawings. The Last Express mimics this style.

Despite their ink-paint look, the passengers of The Last Express were not hand-drawn, but played by real-life actors. Smoking Car artists processed the blue-screen footage of the characters into thousands of black-and-white stills, which were then recolored in Art Nouveau fashion, rotoscoped (i.e. cut out) and finally projected into the 3D-rendered Orient Express backgrounds. To increase the cartoon look, the actors had to have distinctive features such as beards and hats and wore special costumes with marked lines and strong colors. Make-up artist also tortured them with colored streaks in the hair and a homogeneous facial make-up. Take a look at the behind-the-scenes movie here.

Awards

  • Buyers Guide
    • 1998 - Best Adventure and Role-Playing Game
  • Computer Games Magazine
    • One of the Top 10 Graphic Adventure Games of the 1990s
  • Family PC Top Rated Awards
    • 1997 - Best Adventure Game
  • Macworld Game Hall of Fame
    • 1998 - Best Role Playing Game
  • Washington Post
    • Golden Fez Award

Information also contributed by -Chris, CaptainCanuck, Isdaron, Unicorn Lynx and Ye Olde Infocomme Shoppe.

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Trivia contributed by Eurythmic, Dennis Ploeger, Cantillon, FatherJack.