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Favorite movie with a train or model train

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Favorite movie with a train or model train
Posted by Lone Wolf and Santa Fe on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 3:42 PM

What are your favorite movies which feature trains or model trains?

My favorite movie is Breakheart Pass by Alistair MacLean. Set during the Gold Rush, most of the story takes place on a steam train traveling through the California mountains on the way to the coast. This is an action movie with the action taking place in the passenger cars, troop transport cars, the engine, tender, and even on the roof walks. It might not be totally accurate but it is a fun adventure.

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Posted by gmpullman on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 4:19 PM

While not exactly a "favorite" there is a rather odd film called Track 29 with Gary Oldman, Theresa Russell and Christopher Lloyd that features quite a bit of model railroading in it. There's even a glimpse of MR magazine and a national train convention in it.

As far as one some of my favorites to watch are:

North by Northwest, 20th Century Limited Thumbs Up

Danger Lights, lots of Milwaukee Road action

The Train with Burt Lancaster and the whacky

Silver Streak with that great CP FP-7 crashing into the Toronto station scene!

Those are some of the ones that come to mind... Ed

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Posted by UPinCT on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 4:40 PM

My favorite train film is "The General " with Buster Keaton from 1926.  Buster co-directed the film and did all his own stunts.  This was all before cgi so they end up sending a real full size working steam engine off the end of a destroyed bridge.   "The General " is listed 18th on the American Film Institute's 100 best films.

Derek 

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Posted by up831 on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 5:21 PM

My favorite train movie is the Cecil B DeMille epic, Union Pacific with Joel McCrea and Barbara Stanwyck, hands down.

There's another great train western movie called Denver and Rio Grande.  I forget who's in that one, but the Santa Fe are the bad guys.  Who knew?!

Less is more,...more or less!

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Posted by NittanyLion on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 6:41 PM

I like the one where Denzel and New Captain Kirk are on the train because I know virtually every filming location they used in that whole movie.

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Posted by Soo Line fan on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7:06 PM

Here are my top 3

Jim

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Posted by jjdamnit on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7:13 PM

Emperor of the North

"Uhh...I didn’t know it was 'impossible' I just made it work...sorry"

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Posted by MJ4562 on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7:14 PM

Emperorer of the North with Lee Marvin, Keith Karadeen and Ernest Borgnine. Greatest movie ever made for steam train lovers.

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Posted by ACY Tom on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7:18 PM

Strictly for fun, check out "Ticket To Tomahawk" with Dan Dailey, co-starring R.G.S. 4-6-0 #20.

Tom

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Posted by stebbycentral on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7:20 PM

Confused Snowpiercer?

No actually, "The Train" with Burt Lancaster.

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Posted by nycstlrr on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7:22 PM
Runaway Tain
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Posted by zstripe on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7:38 PM

The Train...Emperor of The North...The Great Locomotive Chase.

Take Care! Big Smile

Frank

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Posted by charlieB on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7:56 PM

"The Taking of Pelham 123",

"White Heat"

The 1930s cartoon "Play Safe"

"Von Ryans Express"

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Posted by jmbjmb on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 9:00 PM

Denver and Rio Grande.  Hands down.

 

jim

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Posted by crhostler61 on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 9:11 PM

The Train...is my all time favorite.

Speaking as a former railroad professional, Unstoppable is a great action comedy...it just has too many flaws for me to take it too seriously.

Mark H

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Posted by angelob6660 on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 11:02 PM

My favorite railroad movie is the Silver Streak (70s). I like the original half way through, the story dropped.

I also like Unstoppable.

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Posted by farrellaa on Wednesday, March 25, 2015 11:05 PM

What about The Lone Ranger?? Not the Mantua/MDC model but the real trains used/made for the movie. Cowboy Actually, I just liked Johnny Depp!

   -Bob

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Posted by twhite on Thursday, March 26, 2015 1:36 AM

A long list of favorites, including Union Pacific, Denver and Rio Grande, Ticket to Tomahawk, The Train, Unstoppable, Breakheart Pass and The General among them.  But one of the best I've ever seen is a 1946 French film directed by Rene Clement titled "La Battaile du Rail" (Battle of the Rails) concerning the French underground and their attempts to sabotage German railway movements in France just prior to the Normandy invasion.  Some of it was actually filmed under the noses of the Nazi occupiers, and there's a lot of tension and some great railway action (including probably the most spectacular train wreck I've ever seen.  Real train, not a model).  It makes a great historical "bookend" with the Burt Lancaster film "The Train".

Tom

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Posted by RideOnRoad on Thursday, March 26, 2015 4:24 AM

A couple more train movies to add to the list--"The Fugitive" with Harrison Ford and Tommy Lee Jones; and "The Wild Wild West" with Kevin Kline, Will Smith, and half of Kenneth Branagh.

Richard

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Posted by M636C on Thursday, March 26, 2015 5:04 AM

I'm amazed that nobody has mentioned "The Harvey Girls" with Judy Garland.

There are plenty of clips on U-tube that show the opening number...

The first twenty minutes of the movie are basically just the first production number with odd bits of plot interspersed.

The end of the first number has virtually the whole cast marching beside the departing train until it draws away from them. you can see the steam from the cylinder cocks drenching the feet of those in the front row and nobody flinched.

This was clearly before occupational helth and safety...

There was one big coninuity problem.

The opening sequence under the titles was the train running through open country. The three cars are painted Tuscan Red. They then cut to the filming replica cars which are yellow, and when the train rolls into town, the real cars are yellow...

Another British movie is "The Great St Trinian's Train Robbery" where the Great Train Robbers encounter a local girls only school when trying to escape with the loot.

Filmed on the Longmoor Military Railway there are an amazing number of train scenes with Keystone Cops style actionwith three different trains and a handcar.

M636C

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Posted by ACY Tom on Thursday, March 26, 2015 7:33 AM

In The Great Train Robbery, Sean Connery did his own stunts.  When you see him running/crawling/falling across the top of a moving train behind a smoky steam engine, that is actually him, doing exactly that! 

Tom 

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 26, 2015 8:19 AM

"The General" and "Ticket to Tomahawk"!

I have bookmarked both films on "the tube", so I sneak in a few minutes of viweing whenever I feel like it.

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Posted by Carnegie Falls on Thursday, March 26, 2015 8:42 AM

I don't know most of the (older) ones mentioned, so I'll try to watch them someday.  Most of these movies aren't based on trains, but they at least have some interesting train scenes:

-Throw Momma from the Train

-Indiana Jones: The Last Crusade (young Indy running through the circus train)

-Trading Places (New Year's Eve, they're all wearing costumes)

-Planes, Trains & Automobiles (they break down and Steve Martin helps John Candy carry his gian foot locker across the field to the watiing buses)

-Switchback (bad movie, OK train scene at end)

-Back to the Future 3 (they outfit the Delorean with train wheels; great scene)

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Posted by Pathfinder on Thursday, March 26, 2015 3:20 PM

To pick one it would have to be The Grey Fox, the story of Bill Miner, stagecoach robber turned train robber.  Wiki link

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Posted by dstarr on Thursday, March 26, 2015 4:24 PM

High Noon.  Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly.  The noon train brings Frank Miller back to town to get his revenge on Gary Cooper.  My father commuted in and out of Boston on B&M trains that looked just like the one in the movie.  Open platform wood truss rod coaches and steam power. 

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Posted by softail86mark on Thursday, March 26, 2015 4:29 PM

up831

There's another great train western movie called Denver and Rio Grande.  I forget who's in that one, but the Santa Fe are the bad guys.  Who knew?!

 

That was Sterling Hayden as the bad guy. Another good one with Hayden was "Timberjack" with Sterling as the good guy. Lots of Shay footage.

WP Lives

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Posted by angelob6660 on Thursday, March 26, 2015 6:19 PM

I was going to put in Throw Momma from the Train and Back to the Future 3 but I think that counted.

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Posted by Medina1128 on Friday, March 27, 2015 12:05 PM

Every couple of years, or so, someone asks this question. It never gets old; I like comparing everyone's favorites. Mine are, in no particular order are:

  • Von Ryan's Express, Frank Sinatra, Trevor Howard
  • The Train, Burt Lancaster
  • Silver Streak, Richard Pryor, Gene Wilder
  • The Great Train Chase, Fess Parker
  • Murder on the Orient Express, Peter Ustinov
  • How the West Was Won, George Peppard, Lee J. Cobb, Eli Wallach
  • Tough Guys, Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas
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Posted by The Ferro Kid on Friday, March 27, 2015 12:49 PM

The General is always at the top of my list, but Risky Business is a close second. The kid made the most of both the model and the prototype...

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Posted by Capt. Grimek on Friday, March 27, 2015 12:50 PM

Yes!!! The last section of "How the West Was Won"! The whole movie is fantastic even with a few "dated" early '60's song/number sequences.  It was originallly a "Cinerama" film and later vhs copies had the three vertical separation lines faintly showing. See it on DVD with a newly remastered (no lines) version.  This film was my introduction to the concept of a family epic and one of my fondest meories of seeing it with my father.

Jim

Raised on the Erie Lackawanna Mainline- Supt. of the Black River Transfer & Terminal R.R.

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