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Ride the real Polar Express with Santa in London

Chau-Jean Lin
Alamy Conductor of the Polar Express train ride (Credit: Alamy)Alamy
The Polar Express train ride brings to life parts of the book and film (Credit: Alamy)

This year marks the 20th anniversary of the animated film, The Polar Express, and the train arrives for the first time with Santa in London from now until 23 December.

The Polar Express, the award-winning children's book by American writer and illustrator Chris Van Allsburg, has become synonymous with Christmas.

In the story, a little boy climbs aboard The Polar Express steam train that magically appears on Christmas Eve in front of his house. The train takes him and some other children on a journey to the North Pole. He receives a sleigh bell from Santa, loses it and is heartbroken. On Christmas day, Santa returns his bell, confirming to the little boy that Santa exists. He's able to hear the bell, but his parents cannot.

Steam trains and Christmas have been linked well before the book was published in 1985 (and made into an animated film in 2004), however. Model train sets were seen circling in holiday window displays of Macy's, the major retailer in the US, as early as 1883; while in the UK, model railways became popular with the 1920s Hornby Clockwork Train Set and appeared in holiday display windows in the mid 1930s at London's Whiteley's department store.

"It felt like magic for people to be able to stay in touch with each other, travel and send packages after the Industrial Revolution," explained Dr Matthew Teichman, a philosopher with a film studies background and adjunct professor of computer science at the University of Chicago. "[Rail travel] was socially transformative."

When I hear that The Polar Express train ride is coming to London for the first time this December, bringing to life parts of the book and film, I hope that some of that Christmas magic will rub off on me. My five-year-old daughter has started to doubt Santa's existence, and my own father ed away on Christmas Eve last year, so it is a poignant time. I want us to feel the spirit of Christmas by riding this 10-carriage, 640-seat train. But at around £60 per seat for a 12-mile roundtrip journey between Euston and Wembley, I'm slightly sceptical.

Chau-Jean Lin The experience runs until 23 December and departs from Euston's Platform 16 (Credit: Chau-Jean Lin)Chau-Jean Lin
The experience runs until 23 December and departs from Euston's Platform 16 (Credit: Chau-Jean Lin)

Arriving at Euston station, we manage our way through the evening rush-hour commuter chaos to Platform 16 and find a queue of families acting out the scenes from the story. There are three weeks until Christmas, but it looks like Christmas morning, with children and adults dressed in festive pyjamas to replicate scenes from the film.

We're handed wristbands and golden tickets for our journey. Above a makeshift stage, the neon-purple Polar Express sign glows like the North star. Holly and Noel, two entertainers, are singing Christmas classics as if they are on a broadcast radio station in the era of Norman Rockwell Americana. A young girl is doing cartwheels; my daughter s a crowd of dancing children. My partner and I are still dubious, especially after ing a wall of merchandise that catches the eyes of children and captures the wallets of parents.

How to book

Tickets for The Polar Express start at £59.95 and can be purchased online. Children over the age of 3 and adults over 18 pay the same fare. Five train journeys run per day from Euston Station until 23 December.

Then, a black steam engine arises out of a haze of smoke and we are enveloped by the smell of burning coal. Characters from the movie, such as the conductor, the Hobo and an elf, emerge. A Tom Hanks doppelganger appears as the conductor and instructs us to board the train. Like the movie, he is everywhere on the train – this time with a replica of himself in each carriage welcoming the engers aboard instead of playing most of the main characters.  

We alight a formerly retired British InterCity rail carriage and sit facing each other at four-seat tables, each with an electrified kerosene-like lantern. The car is decorated with Christmas lights that twinkle to the music. I feel transported to post World-War Two Midwestern America; my daughter feels like she is part of the movie.

Chau-Jean Lin The children on the train are asked to turn the book's pages as a narrator recites the story (Credit: Chau-Jean Lin)Chau-Jean Lin
The children on the train are asked to turn the book's pages as a narrator recites the story (Credit: Chau-Jean Lin)

The conductor and two women, named Chef Crumbs and Chef Cocoa, dance and sing through the narrow aisles as we start the journey. My daughter and the other children clap and dance in their seats. We listen to a narrator read the book over the loudspeaker while the conductor, Chef Crumbs and Chef Cocoa each hold an oversized book of The Polar Express and walk through the aisle. The children on the train are asked to turn the pages as the voice overhead recites the story, and we are encouraged to make hissing train noises and other sound effects to accompany the story. Hot chocolate served in take-away cups and chocolate chip cookies keep both the adults and children pacified.

There is more singing and dancing but now to Christmas carols. We receive song sheets, and my daughter sings along with the characters on the train. "Are we going to the North Pole or is it pretend">window._taboola = window._taboola || []; _taboola.push({ mode: 'alternating-thumbnails-a', container: 'taboola-below-article', placement: 'Below Article', target_type: 'mix' });