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Let's make and share our list of: TRAINS IN MOVIES.

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Let's make and share our list of: TRAINS IN MOVIES.
Posted by AntonioFP45 on Wednesday, June 16, 2004 11:07 PM
While channel surfing, I landed on a movie called "Fatal Instinct". A wacky comedy. Was pleasantly shocked when I saw a Santa Fe passenger train being hauled by an FP45 in Warbonnet colors! [:)][:D][8D][8)][;)]

Made me remember that seeing our "favorite vehicles" on the big and small screen can be fun and refreshing (except when they "wreck", of course!).

SUGGESTION: List movies with significant TRAIN scenes in them?
Give the title and brief "train scene" description. We can take notes. When any of these movies come on, we can be on the lookout! I'll write down your tips and keep them near my t.v.

Here's some that I've either seen or have been tipped off by some of you:

Fatal Instinct: Santa Fe Red, Yellow, Silver Warbonnet FP45 hauling stainless steel passenger train. Train looks sharp!

It happened to Jane: In color. 1959. New Haven Railroad featured. NH Steamer and a nice shot of an FL9 hauling a NH passenger train. Doris Day, Jack Lemmon.

Silver Streak: CANADA. Color. Beautiful, long Canadian Pacific Streamliner hauled by EMD "FP" units. Great closeup shots. Wilder & Pryor work well as a team.

The Out of Towners USA. Jack Lemmon. 1960s.Color. New Haven passenger train interior shots. The actor who played "Bookman" in the sitcom "Good Times" is one of the train's service attendents.

Trading Places. USA. 1980s. Eddie Murphy, Dan Ackroyd. Amtrak in northeast corridor. Interior & exterior shots. AEM 7 zipping by. All passenger cars are Amfleet.

Superman the Movie. USA. 1979. Christopher Reeve, Gene Hackman.
New Haven FL9 with "Hancock" horn blowing. Another scene; Amtrak Super Chief in desert, hauled by three SDP40fs!

In the Heat of The Night. USA. 1967. Sidney Poitier, Rod Steiger. What talent!
Gulf, Mobile, & Ohio ( I think). E-unit pulling short pre-Amtrak streamliner. Shot of an EMD Geep pulling a freight train on a bridge. Tense fight-standoff scene in empty railroad shop facility.

Edge of the City. USA. Black & White film. 1957. Sideny Potier, Jack Warden. Many shots of 40 foot freight cars being unloaded at warehouses in New York. A diesel switcher is seen briefly. Warehouse background gives potential ideas for modeling industrial scenes for this time period.

The Taking of Pelham 123. Early 70s. Walter Matthau. A New York City subway train is hijacked for ransom money. Those are actually Red Bird subway cars repainted into the White & Blue scheme of the MTA.

Movies that I don't know the title to:
I remember an action movie with Steve McQueen in the 70s. He rode an Amtrak passenger train, but the passenger cars were in Southern Pacific colors (Stainless steel with the red stripe along the top).

Old movie with Ronald Reagan. Theatrical performances for the military during WWII. Several quick shots of Santa Fe streamliners.

Another movie with Ernest Borgnine. In color. Plays a very cold, mean conductor who enjoys wreaking havoc on hobos! His nickname is "The Shack!"
Steam freight train. All action is on the train or area immedietly next to the railroad.

Movies I didn't care for:
The Cassandra Crossing EUROPE - Climax is a horrid train crash. Depressing. Burt Lancaster should have turned down this one bomb. Train wreck was performed with HO scale equipment.
Saturday Night Fever- USA. 1977, (Red Birds in MTA scheme) Subway graffitti inside and out. Trains look like they belong in the trash. O.K, Amigos! Let's go for it![:)][:D][8D][8)]

Cheers with an E7 in Run 8!





"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"

 


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Posted by TrainFreak409 on Wednesday, June 16, 2004 11:19 PM
I know two good ones. Both are available to rent from Hollywood Video, maybe Blockbuster.

The Train- A good movie from the late 40's. It takes place in Germany/France during WWII. It's all about a train, and its cargo of stolen artwork. Very good, most of it is a train scene. It was also listed in Trains magazine, as one of the best train movies! I thought it was very good!

Atomic Train- This was a special two or three part NBC or ABC (whatever) movie. A runaway train carrying nuclear weapondry needs to be stopped. I haven't watched it in so long, I don't remember much. It first came on, five or so years ago. I know I thought it was good!

I reccomend both of these movies! They get two thumbs up from me!
[8]TrainFreak409[8]

Scott - Dispatcher, Norfolk Southern

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Posted by philnrunt on Wednesday, June 16, 2004 11:46 PM
Antonio- the movie with McQueen was "The Getaway" co-star Ali McGraw.
And the one with Borgnine was Emperor of the North- Co star Lee Marvin
1-Also don't forget Silver Streak (1) starring (It's actually listed in the credits) The Burlington Zephyr- -Polio strikes workers at Hoover Dam and the Silver Streak tries to beat time and numerous disasters to get an Iron Lung to the stricken!
2-Silver Streak (2) Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor- everyone knows this one, a pretty good comedy.
3- Valley Of The Dolls- 2-3 good scenes of PennCentral RS-3 hauling commuter train through the snow.
4-Mr Blandings Builds His Dreamhouse-Cary Grant, Myrna Loy William Powell- A great comedy, has a (I Think) New Haven electric as backround pulling into the station. A movie well worth watching.
5-Bad Day At Black Rock- Spencer Tracy, Robert Ryan, Ann Francis, Marvin and Borgnine
A war vet ventures to Black Rock to give medals won by a Japanese-American of the 442nd Div, only to come face to face with prejudice, betrayal and MURDER! Opens with a close up nose shot of an SP black widow F unit, closes with the same. Another good flick
6-Crack in the World- Dana Andrews- Trying to tap an unlimited power source scientists explode a nuke in a volcano, and the earth cracks open! Not as bad as it sounds. (I'm just making these teasers up as I go)A neat little industrial diesel pulls a passenger train to it's untimely demise, quite a long tracking shot.
7-THEM!-James Stewart, James Arness- Giant ants are the result of early atomic tests. One of my favorite movies, has a very good shot and recording of a Santa Fe Zebra stripe Alco.
8-The Lady Killer- Jimmy Cagney- Not a gangster movie, a comedy. Cagney plays a small time thief that ends up in Hollywood in the movies- A great shot of an SP steamer splashing through 2 feet of rain water.
9-Fog Over Frisco- Bette Davis- Murder and mayhem abound.SP steamer and drawbridge figure in police chase.
10-Dirty Mary and Crazy Larry- Vic Morrow,Peter Fonda- Car movie, misunderstood kids, train figures prominently in closing shots.
There was a movie starring Broderick Crawford that was about rail workers, saw it way to long to remember, could look it up, maybe later. It had some fine shots of (I think) SP equip.
And if you watch The Train- pay particular attention to the scene where Burt Lancaster tries to flag a train, then slides down the tower ladder, jumps the engine and gets kicked off. All one shot, no stand-in. A very good and realistic movie.
Horrible movies- Runaway Train -John Voight- All the old train cliches, it seemed like every shot of the engine had the horn blowing,and Under Seige-Dark Territory-Steven Segal- Just watched this one the other night, a truly BAD movie.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, June 16, 2004 11:48 PM
hi
you can add
Von Ryans Express
Pow's escape take a train

The Titfield Thunderbolt
fifty's ? Syd James staring the Locomotive Lion
as the Titfield Thunderbolt basicaly the storie of a village that looses its railway and fightst to re open it under the light railway act very ammusing
in places.

The Dirty Dozen II
trainig too and taking a train load of high level ***
shame they blow up the train in the end.

regards John
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Posted by AntonioFP45 on Wednesday, June 16, 2004 11:48 PM
Philnrunt, Trainfreak, John - Thanks! [:D][tup]

"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"

 


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Posted by MudHen_462 on Wednesday, June 16, 2004 11:54 PM
I think the best one, ever, was "Emperor of the North Pole" with Lee Marvin, riding old #19.

Thanks...
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, June 16, 2004 11:56 PM
Harry Potter. Beutiful restored British Steam train hauling students to and from School.

Thomas the Tank Engine. What more needs to be said.

The General. Great silent action comedy featuring silent film great Buster Keaton.

Under Seige II. Dark Territory. Steven Segal battles with international terrorists on a luxury passenger train on the Rio Grande.

Emperor of the North. A-#1 (Lee Marvin) and the Shack (Earnest Borgnien) duke it out on the roofs of freight cars in this drama about a depression era Hobo and his efforts to ride the unridable train.

Episode of the "Days of our Lives" Drama unfolds as our hero tries to disarm a bomb aboard the Black Hills Central.

Big Boy. A 1950s NBC TV- Movie about steam locomotives and the engineers who love them in their fight against the encroaching diesle.

This next one is not well known but may be making the rounds on PBS stations.

Last Train to Spencer. The Central Wyoming College drama department and the Heber Valley Railroad put on a drama about how a the abandonment of the railroad through town changes a peoples way of life.

And Coming Soon to a Theatre Near You in November 2004. The Polar Express.
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Posted by philnrunt on Thursday, June 17, 2004 12:25 AM
Antonio- the movie with Jack Lemmon might have been the "Out Of Towners".co star Sandy Dennis
Also(can you believe I have so much useless knowledge) Murder Most Foul- Margaret Rutherford, Brit steam, starts off on a train.Good flick based on A. Christie novel.
And finally( i promise) Curse of the Demon- Dana Andrews- Niall McGinnis- Movie ends with train ride and Brit steam shots at dark.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 17, 2004 3:41 AM
Hmmm, sure you aren't thinking of '4:50 from Paddington' there Philnrunt? The murder takes place on one train and is seen by a passenger in another. Maggie as Miss Marples solves it...of course.

Then there is 'The Railway Children' and the biggy 'The Great Locomotive Chase' with Fess Parker (Davy Crockett)

Oh Yeah wasn't there a Ray Milland movie made on the Flying Scotsman?
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Posted by MAbruce on Thursday, June 17, 2004 7:07 AM
These are a bit more obscure:

The Bone Collector. Angela Jolie (as a cop) tries to preserve a crime scene by flagging down an Amtrak train headed by a P42 Genesis before it runs over a “message” left by a serial killer. Of course it stops just feet from her standing right in front of it (only in Hollywood). Nice shot of how big one of these units is.

Enemy of the State. A chase leads the two main characters by passing CSX coal trains.

Tough Guys. Burt Landcaster and Kirk Douglas are old cons out to steal the same train they failed to rob before they went to prison. Rather extensive shots and use of an old SP “Daylight Scheme” steam engine (sorry, I’m not into that era and I don’t know the exact name of the train).

The Fugitive. Classic train wreak involving a fictitious IL RR. I also recall a hilarious spoof on this scene done in one of the Leslie Neilson comedy movies. Loved the part when Leslie thought he had lost the loco that was following him through the woods only to see it peak out at him from behind a tree. LMAO.


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Posted by nslakediv on Thursday, June 17, 2004 7:28 AM
here's a few, just cant remember names. 2 convicts escape from an Alaskan prison, just remembered, Runaway Train, has some pretty cool scenes. The one I have been looking for is one I seen when I was a kid mid 70's I remember a scene were a track crew unbolted fish plates to derail train into a large grassy area then they found out the units were occupied and had to realign track and just as they did train came speeding by, the part that sticks in my mind is that this track gang had to hold the rail in place with these track bars as units came by, it also had to pass a chemical plant and of course a tight curve. Can anybody help me on that? Nuclear trian, very Hollywood, thats all I can say to that. What about the one were British POW's build bridge for jap's then blow it up on opening day. Randy
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 17, 2004 7:54 AM
Silver Streak was cool!!
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 17, 2004 8:20 AM
My favorite's "The Great Locomotive Chase".
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 17, 2004 8:27 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by AntonioFP45


Another movie with Ernest Borgnine. In color. Plays a very cold, mean conductor who enjoys wreaking havoc on hobos! His nickname is "The Shack!"
Steam freight train. All action is on the train or area immedietly next to the railroad. [/brown]




Thats Emperor of the North, ( sorry goat, no Pole in the title) great flick!

Dont forget "White Christmas!!!!
Breif clips of SP and SF f-units. Funny. they were taking a train from NYC to Pine Tree Vermont.[%-)][%-)][%-)][%-)] I guess thats Hollywood for ya!

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Posted by lupo on Thursday, June 17, 2004 8:30 AM
do not forget "Some Like It hot " with Marilyn Monroe , Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis
some great scenes during a nightly train journey
L [censored] O
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Posted by orsonroy on Thursday, June 17, 2004 9:36 AM
Well, if you include model trains and subways/the el/trolleys, this is what I come up with off the top of my head:

Broken Arrow
In The Heat of the Night
Them
Planes, Trains & Automobiles
Throw Momma From the Train
9-1/2 Weeks
Scanners
The Omen II (or was it III?)
Back to the Future III
Blues Brothers
Escape from New York
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome
Risky Business
Total Recall
Home Alone
Night and the Darkness
Matrix II
Schindler's List
Goldeneye
Doctor Ziavago
Lawrence of Arabia
Every Godzilla movie ever made
Every other Western ever made

Ray Breyer

Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 17, 2004 9:37 AM
John Ford's silent film "Iron Horse" is a classic Western about the building of the Trans-Continental railroad.

Wayne
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 17, 2004 10:03 AM
Just a couple of movies that I didn't see mentioned are:

1. A River Runs Through it - Don't remember too much about this one except there was a train in it. If I remember right, the Heber Valley Railroad in Heber, Utah bought the entire train that is featured in the movie!

2. The Train Robbers - John Wayne. One of my personal Favs! Great movie!
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 17, 2004 11:24 AM
Originally posted by nslakediv

What about the one were British POW's build bridge for jap's then blow it up on opening day. Randy
[/quote}

That was "Bridge on the River Kwai" - story of the RR built in Burma by allied POWs - they were treated appallingly by the Japanese soldiers (to be expected (but certainly not justified) really - to the Japanese in that era surrendering lost you all honour, hence their behaviour towards POWs). There's been trouble recently because the Burmese government wouldn't allow relatives of those buried there to visit the graves.

I can think of a really bad one. A film I saw recently on TV. Was called "Murder on the Orient Express" and was clearly based on the A. Christie "Poirot" novel but it was truly dire. The original book was set in the 1930's, and the best film adaptation of this followed suit, but this made-for-TV film (must have been made during the '90's judging by the loco used - that paint scheme only came out then). Most obvious fault - after things like the actor playing Poirot being too young, using the wrong loco and cars, etc...was that every so often you'd hear a crossing bell ringing - we don't have those over here....!
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Posted by philnrunt on Thursday, June 17, 2004 1:47 PM
LightBender(Tony) I think what we have here is Hollywood renaming a Brit release.
I recorded that flick from TCM, and it definitely was titled Murder Most Foul. The moguls in H'wood must have thought without the word "Murder" in the title, no American would go to see it. I also have "Murder Ahoy" and" Murder at the Gallop"...hmmmm, seeing a pattern here. Dame Maggie was a fantastic actress, I love her to death....or should I say Murder!
orsonroy-pretty impressive list for winging it! The 'zilla movies alone would fill most peoples movie library. After the 30th or 40th one, I could'nt understand why 20,000 Tokyoites-Tokyoians?-Tokyoaks? would immediately load onto the 5:15 to Doomsville and become 'zilla kibble.Oh well.
Railroading Brit- A few months back, PBS did a 2 hour show on the Kwai Line and that brutal act alone, without the Bataan Death March, the forced sex camps, the biological experiments in China, the Rape of Nanking
or any other of the insanely criminal horrors the Japs (they deserve to be called Japanese only after sanity and civilization was restored post war), made them deserve anything that happened to them during the war.
They interviewed some Aussie and Brit survivors, and there is a huge amount of ill will still felt, as there should be.My dad was a combat Marine, fought quite a few battles and it never failed to amaze him how tenacious his enemy was. He told me once that it astounded the men in his squad when they read of Nazi surrenders. They thought every enemy fought to the death.
Sorry, got off the subject there. This is a good list, and I'll be on the lookout for them.
nslakediv- The movie where the trackworkers held the rail was a Movie of the Week, starred William Shatner, but I don't remember the name. TV guide had a great piece on how they did the wreck, using huge scale equip.
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Posted by AggroJones on Thursday, June 17, 2004 2:37 PM
Under Seige 2--Some modern geeps and a few tunnel motors? (if I remember correctly)

The Mummy Returns-- An Indian heavy 2-8-2 and forign old-school passenger cars.

The Ghost and the Darkness--Some forign steamer and few raggity freight cars.

"Being misunderstood is the fate of all true geniuses"

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Posted by skir4d on Thursday, June 17, 2004 2:40 PM
It may have been mentioned but Jimmiy Stewart didn't star in Them! it was James Arness and James Whitmore, Arness as the government agent and Whitmore as the New Mexico State trooper.

"Murder on the Orient Express" From the seventies with Sean Connery, Lauren Bacall, and a few other great stars wasn't to bad. At least to this North American the cars looked right as did the steam engine (at least it had buffers).

We got Von Ryans Express. Of course, if we go to TV we have Wild Wild West, which for me as a youth was pretty good.

Jack W
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Posted by egmurphy on Thursday, June 17, 2004 3:13 PM
I got to the thread late and most of the ones I would have suggested are already listed....but I can't believe you guys left off one of the greatest flicks of all time ......

High Noon - okay, so it didn't have a lot of train action shots, but it is a great classic flick. Gary Cooper, the town sherriff, stands alone against a returning convicted killer and his gang. The badguy arrives in town on the noon train, Cooper's new bride (Grace Kelly) is, iirc, a Quaker and doesn't believe in violence, and gets on the train to leave.

Phil - can't believe you listed Bad Day at Black Rock. I'd forgotten all about the trains scenes, but for years I used the expression "Bad Day at Black Rock" whenever anything went wrong.

Ed
The Rail Images Page of Ed Murphy "If you reject the food, ignore the customs, fear the religion and avoid the people, you might better stay home." - James Michener
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Posted by AntonioFP45 on Thursday, June 17, 2004 10:30 PM
Thanks Everyone! Super good info!

Funny that no one has mentioned "North by Northwest". I have never seen this movie, but a very good friend tells me that it has nice shots of a New York Central streamliner being hauled by E7s in the "lightning stripe" scheme. Could be the 20th Century Limited or Empire State Express.

Anyone know the details on this movie? Any good closeups of the train?

Cheers!

"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"

 


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Posted by philnrunt on Thursday, June 17, 2004 11:28 PM
I'm so embarrassed- THEM! as I said is one of my favorite movies, and I thought Whitmore, but wrote Stewart. My apologies.
Ed- On the mountain where I go 4-wheeling, there is a bad spot with a huge rock named Black Rock, 'cause a few of us had a real bad day there.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, June 18, 2004 3:26 AM
back to the future 3 has a good ole western train background
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, June 18, 2004 3:34 AM
"Tough Guys"--Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas rob the last run of the "Gold Coast Flyer"--actually SP 4449 pulling a passenger train over the ex-Eagle Mountain RR, to Mexico, where a model of the 4449 is "wrecked" crossing the border into Mexico.(Doyle McCormick even has a speaking role!)[:D]

"Bad Day at Black Rock"--SP F-units painted in the Black Widow scheme hauling a mostly "Daylight" consist.

"The Fugitive" Fictional Illinois Southern, filmed on the Great Smoky Mt. RR, with ex-N&W un servicable locos.(they were pushed by GSMR locos).

"Back to the Future 3"--Ventura County ex-SP S-6 destroys the DeLorean.

"Smokey and the Bandit 2"-- opening scene has a UP SD-40-2 pulling a UP business car.

"Bronco Billy"--Clint Eastwood and friends try to rob a UP passenger train--on horseback and by early '60's Olds convertible..[8D]

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, June 18, 2004 5:46 AM
HI AL
Not to mention
The Great Train Robbery and The Great Train Robbery
yes there was two movies of the same title
One with Sean connery and Donald Sutherland where the plan is to steal the gold that will pay the British soldiers in the crimea very nice period train,
and the other about the Ronnie Bigs train robbery of a mail train this one really did happen
regards john
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Posted by egmurphy on Friday, June 18, 2004 6:09 AM
Since you asked:

North by Northwest - 1959 - Cary Grant & Eva Marie Saint - Cary Grant plays an advertising executive mistaken for a spy and chased across the country on a train. Most of the scenes take place on the train, iirc.

Thanks for reminding me of this flick.

Ed
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Posted by M636C on Friday, June 18, 2004 9:09 AM
There was a 1930s movie called "Broadway Limited". I can't remember anything about the plot, except that the train was made up of the 1938 "Fleet of Modernism" cars and was hauled by the first streamlined K4s 3768. There were pacing shots on multiple track sections at night that must have used a lot of lights! For some reason, 3768 fails and the only replacement is a D16s 4-4-0, probably 1223 now at Strasburg. Somehow the 4-4-0 manages to get the train under way and runs it into Chicago (or Harrisburg, I can't recall). There were pacing shots with the 4-4-0 at night, as well as the pacific.

"The Lady Vanishes", a 1930s Hitchcock mystery, and a 1980s remake with the same title. The 1930s used a full size mock up of a French PLM pacific and some live coverage also in southern France. The remake was made in Austria using 2-10-0 No 50-685.

"Shanghai Express" with Marlene Dietrich, a 1930s movie set in a divided China in the hands of warlords (quite accurate for the time). The best scene is a departure of a passenger train through a chinese town, with marhket stalls up to the loading gauge. The locomotive was a Southern Pacific Mt-3 with chinese characters in the train number boards. Marlene manages to save her old boyfriend from the wicked Chinese while not letting on that she still likes him.

Peter

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