When the Hero Boy runs out of his house when The Polar Express arrives, he leaves footprints as well as a long skid mark, in the snow. After he boards the train, you can clearly see that his footprints and the skid mark are gone. When the conductor is punching the Hero Boy's ticket, you can see the holes flying out of the puncher and on to Hero Boy's face.
If you count the holes that fell out against the holes that were punched on the ticket, they do not match. There are obviously more holes that fell out and on to the Hero Boy's face than were actually punched, most likely for effect. When the children are in the sack of presents, the blimp starts to close the sack. The sack was shown closing over the children's heads, but in the next scene it was shown at eye-level.
The height of the sack of presents constantly changes. Whenever the engineer opens the throttle on the locomotive, he pushes it away from him, the further away he pushes it the faster the train will go. In reality, the engineer must pull the throttle lever towards him to accelerate while pushing it away from him closes the throttle valve.
The hero boy has to jump between cars because of the gap between them. In actuality there are metal plates between cars to cover the couplers and allow easy access. When the conductor and the hero girl move from car to car they simply walk across. After the caribou begin to step away from the track, the conductor instructs the train's engineer, "All ahead As the train approaches Glacier Gulch, the sign says degree grade. Actually, a vertical drop would be a 90 degree grade, so the sign should show something like 89 degree grade.
When the conductor is on the roof of the Polar Express, his undistorted shadow from the lantern appears on the mountain aside the train. However, the shadow would need the light source to be several feet away in order to avoid distortion. The location of the lantern would have distorted the shadow. When the bungee elves deploy, they catch up to the falling Christmas tree star. This would not be possible as everything falls at the same rate of speed.
Possible explanation: The star is large in surface-area and lightweight for its overall size, and so maybe the implication is that it would fall in a sort of "aerodynamic meander" like an oak leaf's arrested downward travel in a lazy swaying motion through still air. The bungee elves would have less surface-area-to-weight ratios, however, and so they would indeed fall straight down at a fast rate.
After the Christmas star falls, several elves bungee jump and eventually catch up with the star. Under a free fall, the elves would have never been able to catch up with the star. Is this interesting? The controls, brakes, and other machinery on the train are set up in ways that don't make sense, but that's because it's pure fantasy.
That way, she won't get sucked down under the wheels. They may slow the train down a little bit, but they're never gonna stop it.
Hero Boy : Stop it? That's it! I have to stop the train again. Know-It-All : No, please, don't do that again. View Quote Hero Girl : It says "lead. View Quote One thing about trains: It doesn't matter where they're going. What matters is deciding to get on. View Quote Conductor : Well? You coming? Hero Boy : Where? Conductor : Why, to the North Pole, of course!
This is the Polar Express! View Quote Elf General : A number-seven bow? When we're this close to liftoff? What are they thinking down there? Are they meshuggener? View Quote Billy : Christmas just doesn't work out for me. Never has. Welcome aboard! All rights reserved. Site developed by Agency Tourism Marketing. Contact Us. Tickets are now on sale! Book Now! Click here for the Polar Express Songbook.
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