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Train movies.....

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Train movies.....
Posted by JanOlov on Friday, March 16, 2007 7:03 AM

Which one would you like to put on a top 20 list? Which is your alltime favourite?

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Posted by MOJAX on Friday, March 16, 2007 9:21 AM
I always liked Emperor of the North, with Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine.

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Posted by wjstix on Friday, March 16, 2007 3:29 PM

"Danger Lights" - IF you can find a tape / DVD of the entire movie, not one all chopped up in a 'railfan version' as was done a few years ago. One of the first (maybe the first?) sound movies to be shot entirely 'on location' (Milwaukee Road in Montana).

"Titfield Thunderbolt" - If we can sneak in a little British 'humour'. ;) 

 

Stix
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Posted by bobbygreg on Friday, March 16, 2007 3:55 PM
"The Great Locomotive Chase" from Walt Disney, starring Fess Parker, and "The Train" with Burt Lancaster.  Both are excellent, I can watch them over and over.
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Posted by gregrudd on Friday, March 16, 2007 4:16 PM
Von Ryans express and the Classic Australian short film "A steam train passes"
Let me reiterate, what I was saying to you previously -Rex Mossop
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Posted by alexweiihman on Saturday, March 17, 2007 2:12 PM

 gregrudd wrote:
Von Ryans express and the Classic Australian short film "A steam train passes"

 

Have to agree with von ryans express

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Posted by train18393 on Sunday, March 18, 2007 1:35 AM

I am not sure it qualifies as a train movie, but the segment in How The West Was Won has a great segment in it which includes a steam donky on a flatcar as well as a steam train. It was shot with Cinerama cameras so there has to be some great footage in that format that did not make it into the movie

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Posted by wjstix on Sunday, March 18, 2007 5:15 PM
Course it depends whether we're rating how good the movie is as a movie, or how good the train shots within the movie are, or both. There have been some bad movies that have good train scenes - and some good movies that have goofy train scenes...you know, the people are going from New York to Boston and they run stock footage of UP or the "Super Chief".
Stix
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Posted by MOJAX on Sunday, March 18, 2007 9:05 PM

 wjstix wrote:
Course it depends whether we're rating how good the movie is as a movie, or how good the train shots within the movie are, or both. There have been some bad movies that have good train scenes - and some good movies that have goofy train scenes...you know, the people are going from New York to Boston and they run stock footage of UP or the "Super Chief".

In the movie White Christmas, Bing Crosby and crew leave New York on the Santa Fe and head to Vermont! 

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Posted by Texas Chief on Sunday, March 18, 2007 11:49 PM

Aw Gee Mojac, that was my favorite part of that movie.

Dick

Texas Chief

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Posted by twhite on Saturday, March 24, 2007 12:16 AM

My favorites:

THE TRAIN

UNION PACIFIC

DENVER AND RIO GRANDE

A TICKET TO TOMAHAWK

VON RYAN'S EXPRESS--especially the latter scenes in the Italian Alps. 

DANGER LIGHTS

SILVER STREAK (not the Gene Wilder film, but the 1930's film featuring the "Pioneer Zephyr" as the star. 

 

Tom

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Posted by PBenham on Saturday, March 24, 2007 7:49 AM

North by Northwest (I know, I know, just a cameo of NYC 25)

As for the "Great Locomotive Chase" the near total lack of originality really hurt it. That movie could have been about a gang of robbers in the old west trying to rob a train (to avenge having been wronged by the railroad) as much as it was about a civil war raid on the Southern rail infrastructure. Fess Parker? Please. If there ever was a drama that cries out for a quality re-make this story is it!

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Posted by twhite on Saturday, March 24, 2007 10:53 AM
 PBenham wrote:

North by Northwest (I know, I know, just a cameo of NYC 25)

As for the "Great Locomotive Chase" the near total lack of originality really hurt it. That movie could have been about a gang of robbers in the old west trying to rob a train (to avenge having been wronged by the railroad) as much as it was about a civil war raid on the Southern rail infrastructure. Fess Parker? Please. If there ever was a drama that cries out for a quality re-make this story is it!

You might want to catch the 1927 silent epic THE GENERAL starring Buster Keaton, which covers the same story as THE GREAT LOCOMOTIVE CHASE but does it with a lot more style and wit and excitement.  It's basically a silent comedy (and one of the best comedies ever made,IMO),but it's also a very thrilling Civil War epic, and the trains are an absolute marvel to watch.  And don't let the fact that it's a 'silent' deter you--the film is just TERRIFIC!  I forgot to put it on my previous posted list--why I don't know. 

Tom

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Posted by PBenham on Saturday, March 24, 2007 3:27 PM
D'OH! I forgot "The General"!Blindfold [X-)] It really has a better "feel" to it, I agree. Now, I'll renew my call for a quality re-make, too bad we've missed out on Clint Eastwood* or The Duke doing it right, but there are stars that could get it. And there are stars that should avoid this story like the plague!  (* Clint is still alive-but will not appear in a film unless it is right for him-wish I could say that about working!)
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Posted by IRONHORSE77 on Saturday, March 24, 2007 3:35 PM
BREAKHEART PASS
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Posted by twhite on Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:33 PM

 IRONHORSE77 wrote:
BREAKHEART PASS

That's a fun film, and really SPECTACULAR train action.  Just wish they'd used models for the wreck sequence instead of smashing that cute little ex-NP caboose all over the mountainside, though (sigh!).  But then I shouldn't carp, I included DENVER AND RIO GRANDE on my list, and it had two actual narrow-gauge trains smashing head-on.  But BREAKHEART PASS is a darned good movie. 

Tom

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, March 25, 2007 1:43 PM

Turner Classic Movies recently reran Buster Keaton's silent movie "The General".  Very interesting engine pictures, but the story line is awful. Keaton is the engineer, based in the South and I'd swear the history is all screwed up, to use the vernacular.

Great comedy, though.

Art

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Posted by CMSTPP on Monday, March 26, 2007 9:46 PM
 wjstix wrote:

"Danger Lights" - IF you can find a tape / DVD of the entire movie, not one all chopped up in a 'railfan version' as was done a few years ago. One of the first (maybe the first?) sound movies to be shot entirely 'on location' (Milwaukee Road in Montana).

"Titfield Thunderbolt" - If we can sneak in a little British 'humour'. ;) 

 

I have to agree. I like the Milwaukee and it shows some really nice steam locomotives in that movie. Plus you can see the canternary lines above all the railroad. It's some good footage of the line. Something that has disappeared. I watched the movie just for the railroad really.

Happy railroadingLaugh [(-D]

James

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Posted by D&RGWRR476 on Thursday, March 29, 2007 1:54 AM

"Runaway Train" is a good movie. You will get the shivers watching it.

"Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" has some good Silverton train shots.

"Bite the Bullet" has some good Cumbres and Toltec (former DRG) shots.

 

 

 

Yours In Model Railroading,

John

Littleton, CO

 

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Posted by Joe Hohmann on Saturday, March 31, 2007 7:05 AM
"Broadway Limited". 95% of the movie is filmed on this train in 1940. I've seen these "movie" threads before...many movies listed show just a few minutes of trains. I'd like to have a list of movies that are BASED on trains.
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Posted by stocksj on Thursday, April 5, 2007 5:37 AM
How about Runaway Train with Jon Voigt and Eric Roberts.
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Posted by enr2099 on Sunday, April 8, 2007 5:26 AM

 MOJAX wrote:
I always liked Emperor of the North, with Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine.

 

That was a good movie. Heh, there's a road conductor out of Vancouver(CN) that looks like Ernest Borgnine did in the movie, I found myself watching the movie thinking "hey that looks like so-and-so!"  

Tyler W. CN hog
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Posted by DMUinCT on Sunday, April 8, 2007 8:25 AM

I hope you all know, Frank Sinatra was a "big time" rail fan and toy train collector.  A member of The Train Collectors Association, he had a building built on his west coast ranch to house an operation Lionel layout and had a very large collection. A high point, on his visit to the Pope, Sinatra was presented with a brass model train by the Vatican.

Von Ryans Express was a labor of love for him.

Don U. TCA 73-5735

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Posted by superheat on Friday, June 15, 2007 9:28 PM
In any event, it would be nice to see more movies made with trains in them. A movie was made recently ('05?), don't remember the name, where Jodie Foster's daughter was kidnapped while on a flight aboard a plane. That same movie could've just as easily been made aboard a passenger train.
It would help return travel by rail back to the American conscience. Most people don't even consider the train when making their travel plans anymore.
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Posted by MilwaukeeRoad on Friday, June 22, 2007 6:05 PM

 MOJAX wrote:
I always liked Emperor of the North, with Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine.

Bow [bow]

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Posted by J. Edgar on Friday, June 22, 2007 6:17 PM
the scene from Rio Lobo is great.......gotta love the Duke
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Posted by ssgauge on Sunday, July 1, 2007 4:39 PM

Danger Lights

Murder on the Orient Express

Terror by Night

 Von Ryan's Express

The Train

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Posted by topcopdoc on Sunday, July 15, 2007 8:30 AM

Silver Streak was a great train movie. For those who like Westerns, Whispering Smith was good also.

Doc 

 

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Posted by fsm1000 on Sunday, July 15, 2007 10:02 PM
"The General" with Buster Keaton. They used a real locomotive for the crash scene. Took three days to prepare etc for it. Also he is funny as all get out. :D
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Posted by spikejones52002 on Monday, July 16, 2007 5:54 AM

About thirty years ago I had on the TV while I was getting dressed for work, the afternoon shift. An over the air channel had a 90% on train a lot in Cab movie. It was a French Movie in French with sub-titles. It was shot in a real Cab because of the cramped shots and soot flying. A lot of Cab action.

Never again and no information of.

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