Nathan
"There isn't a train I wouldn't take, no matter where it's going." - Edna St. Vincent Millay
While I am not a banjo fan I liked the music to that film and thought it captured the "something venerable is about to disappear forever feel of the movie which is a good mix of talking heads and great shots of diesel and steam. Not only are the diesels it shows now as seemingly antique as the steam locomotives, but the cameras used by the railfans at the photo runbys are all museum pieces too! And it wasn't just Canadians who'd get dressed in suits and ties for a railfan jaunt. Older Phil Hastings shots show that US railfans did the same.
The same page has a link to Buster Keaton's last film, the Railrodder, where he crosses Canada on a CN "speeder" - it has sound but he doesn't say a word. There is some classic comedy -- the opening shows Keaton as a British gentleman reading his newspaper, with Big Ben in the background. A full page ad says something like "See Canada Now" so he promptly jumps in the Thames River in London. Next thing you know he is staggering to shore presumably in Nova Scotia. In a nod to his silent film The General, he simply steals a CN speeder and takes off. The speeder crew running up to the tracks when they see their speeder has been taken from them is a direct "quote" from The General.
Dave Nelson
Opening segment also has shots of a Alco FPA-16 hauling a passenger train - engine looks so stubby in the shot.
Why is is music with steam railroading is always done with banjo's? Also noticed the Pete Seeger provided some of the musci for the film.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
If you go to the site and scroll down from that, there is also a short documentary on railroaders in the Revelstoke BC area in 1958. That is also very interesting even though there is no steam.
Lone Geep
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Thanks for sharing!
The National Film Board of Canada has hundreds if not thousands of interesting films about all aspects of how life once was in Canada. One such film, made in 1959, depicts the end of steam.
http://www.nfb.ca/film/end_of_line
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