Sleepers’ beat

16 MINUTES

‘It pulls you in’: the staff seduced by the rhythms of the Trans-Siberian railway

The Trans-Siberian is as storied a railway as any in the world, the 9,289 kilometres of its route between Moscow and Vladivostok both a stark physical reality and a mystique-laden gestalt shaped by a bloody and romantic history, incomparable landscapes, thousands of artistic interpretations and the journeys of innumerable souls. For those who work on the trains, there’s something more – a kind of gravity that draws them in, or a haunting in the oldest sense of the word, the roots of which go back to frequenting a place, to going or bringing home.

Created from the rhythms of the railway itself, the short documentary Sleepers’ Beat by the Russian-Swedish filmmaker Anastasia Kirillova is a mesmerising exploration of the force that the Trans-Siberian exerts on the people who come to it for work. In the clacking and screeching of the wheels on the tracks, the pulsing flashes of landscape out the windows, shaking visions of stations, villages and cities along the way, and the constant rattle of the carriages, Kirillova finds a poetry of place that’s always in motion.

This contradictory quality of the trains – the being within a space that itself moves through many places – feels directly tied to the power that, one after another, the people working aboard ascribe to the railway. One woman tells of taking the job with her husband when she was 25 because the salary was good and they wanted to see Russia: 24 years later and ‘We never left,’ she says. Another woman started working on a whim and then got hooked. One more adds that she began grudgingly and now finds it impossible to leave. What accounts for this magnetic or addictive aspect to working on the railway? Kirillova gives us fragments of the workers’ answers – a feeling of family and camaraderie, that being aboard lets one really see ‘human souls’, a sense that the train is a living creature or that each carriage has its own ‘spirit’, and, again and again, that the train has become home.

In an essay on the appeal and rewards of train travel, the Russian writer Margarita Gokun Silver observes that the ‘experience we create when we take the time to look out of the window, start a conversation with a stranger, connect with a family member or simply read a book while rhythmically swaying to the clackety-clack of the wheels helps recuperate the parts of us we neglect and miss.’ With her film, Kirillova takes us deeper still, creating an auditory and visual spell that reaches beyond words to make us feel the ‘beat of the wheels’ and the deep enchantment of the Trans-Siberian.

Written by Kellen Quinn

Director: Anastasia Kirillova

Cinematographer: Jacob Robinson

Editor & second camera: Anastasia Kirillova

Explore more

Photo of a hiker with a backpack and two dogs on a mountain peak at sunset, above the cloudline and overlooking a valley.
Psyche Exclusive

A former office worker charts his own path, herding sheep high into the Pyrenees

Directed by Jake Joynson

Photo of a man holding a microphone and equipment standing on a walkway with blurred people passing by in the foreground.

Lonely in London, a filmmaker sets out to make a new friend

A film by Hugh Clegg

Close-up of an elderly woman’s face with eyes closed, light grey hair, and a blurred brown background. Her expression is calm.

Why one death doula sees an examined death as vital to a good life

A film by Annie Marr

Black and white photo of a hand holding a scallop shell. The background is blurred and the shell shows detailed texture.

A poetic, sea-soaked tribute to the ‘cockle women’ of Wales

Directed by Lily Tiger

Two silhouetted people stand against a dramatic orange and purple sunset sky.

In the outback, a town of two awaits visitors to their emergency airport

Directed by Yannick Jamey

Puppets with monkey faces in office attire, performing a synchronised dance in a cubicle-filled office setting, with computers and office supplies visible.

Humanoid animals sing through their existential angst in this madcap short

Directed by Niki Lindroth Von Bahr

Black and white photo of three children standing outdoors under a cloudy sky. The boy on the left wears a flat cap and checked shirt with trousers, while the two girls on the right wear patterned headscarves and dresses, smiling and looking into the distance.

For Hutterites, ‘love thy neighbour’ is both gospel and practical necessity

Directed by Colin Low

A woman runs down a dimly lit street at night wearing a headlamp. She is in a long-sleeved top and shorts, and the scene appears slightly blurred.

As a bread baker, Harriet thrives in the day’s liminal hours

Directed by David Grabias