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I stumbled across this website/blog a few nights ago when I was looking for a particular film. It lists and has discussions about an amazing catalog of films that involve trains, many familiar but many more I have never seen ---- https://moreobscuretrainmovies...01/sudden-fear-1952/

A friend of mine brought over a DVD of an wonderful English movie from the early 1950s called "The Titfield Thunderbolt," which is about the efforts of residents of a small English village to save their branch line from closure by the government after WW-2 in the era of rationalizing English railways with the so-called "Beeching Cuts." I remembered it vaguely from seeing it with my parents when it first came out, and it is still a great movie featuring and one old and one ancient but beautiful English steam locomotive.

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In "Titfield Thunderbolt," the engine normally used on the branch line is wrecked by sabotage (a bus line that wants the commuter traffic) and at the last minute an engine from about 1840/1850 (the Titfield Thunderbolt) is hauled out of the local museum and pressed into service. It performs admirably with its two inside cylinders and is great fun to watch steaming along the branch to an interchange with the mainline train to London.

IIRC, Classic Trains magazine had a good story a while back on "Danger Lights". It was one of the first Hollywood sound movies to be filmed "on location", primarily in Montana on the Milwaukee Road.

Louis Wolheim (Dan Thorn) was an established star, having just been "All Quiet on the Western Front". The other two stars - Jean Arthur and Robert Armstrong - were still early in their careers, but would later become stars.

My favorite obscure train movie...no contest..."It Happened To Jane", 1959, starring Doris Day, Jack Lemmon, Ernie Kovacs and every classic character actor known.

Jane raises lobsters, railroad delivers dead lobsters to her customers ( because, well, it's a railroad in the late 50's) , Jane delivers lobsters operating the railroads' own steamer, Happy ending, roll credits. But oh! It is so much more!

Filmed in Connecticut pretending to be in Maine. I encourage you to seek this out and watch. A part of America that is gone forever,

John

Last edited by John Meyncke

My favorite line in Danger Lights, from tough, old, Dan Thorn, said in a very commanding and authoritative tone was...

"Hold up the Olympian? Are you off your nut? Tell 'er to come through...I'll clear the track!"

That was followed by this line, said in a very disparaging and sarcastic manner...

"You office guys...put the Olympian in the hole."

Watch the clip. LOL!

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Danger Lights Clip for OGR Forum
Last edited by Rich Melvin

Here's an obscure one for you - "The Emperor of Peru" aka "The Odyssey of the Pacific."  Stars Mickey Rooney who lives in the woods and keeps Canadian Pacific 4-6-2 #1201 hidden away.  Bunch of kids and a duck befriend him and they restore the locomotive and use it to escape.

Another one would be Steven Spielberg's amazing stories Episode 1 "Ghost Train" - kid has a Lionel set up on the floor that sets up the finale of a train literally crashing through the house.  I wonder if that's where the inspiration for this years Coors Light superbowl commercial came from with the silver bullet train crashing into the living room - there's a lot of similarities. 

Hello. I am trying to remember/find an old world war movie (and it's not The Train) that featured some great shots mostly in a train yard. The set up was that a bomb is on the train and if it doesn't get through the yard it will blow up in the yard. There is a lot of filming from the front of the locomotive that shows how it maneuvers through switches, goes back and forth , etc. etc. But it does get through the yard and blows up beyond. To be honest I think it would be WW1 era but I'm not sure. Of course there is a girl tied up somewhere. There is a plot to the story. Any help would be appreciated. Thank you. Jim K

I saw a movie the other day with a brief train scene at the beginning.  "Leave Her To Heaven," 1945.   There are some interior scenes including a round end obsevation car. The exterior scenes have a train painted in greyish blue colors and lettered Santa Fe. What Santa Fe train was decorated like this?  Or maybe it is a Hollywood paint job.  Check out the first few minutes, link below.

https://youtu.be/xR6p5HcfCpc?si=r7drdkmYJJoBFNLG

Last edited by VistaDomeScott

I saw a movie the other day with a brief train scene at the beginning.  "Leave Her To Heaven," 1945.   There are some interior scenes including a round end obsevation car. The exterior scenes have a train painted in greyish blue colors and lettered Santa Fe. What Santa Fe train was decorated like this?  Or maybe it is a Hollywood paint job.  Check out the first few minutes, link below.

https://youtu.be/xR6p5HcfCpc?si=r7drdkmYJJoBFNLG

Well, that's definitely not Santa Fe.  Santa Fe did have a medium grey with dark grey window band paint scheme for some -- not all -- heavyweight cars, and also for the smooth side Pullman sleepers.  Around 1960, it changed to all dark grey.  Google "Arizona Railroad Museum" to see what that looked like on a Valley series 6-6-4 sleeping car.  

But that's not what we see in the clip.  This could be SP equipment from the overnight Pacific Coast trains (Lark, Cascade, Owl) but the Santa Fe lettering is a Hollywood touch.  SP kept its passenger equipment clean and well-painted right to the end of passenger service, but this was filmed right after World War II and maybe the cars were still awaiting their first postwar repainting.  

It really is odd.  Railroads typically would not furnish tired-looking equipment for movie scenes.

Last edited by Number 90

Ok sleuths, help me with a cartoon I remember seeing in the 50s but I’m sure it was from earlier times. From what I remember, it’s a boy dreaming of running a real train, and he is in a rail yard with a number of streamlined steamers that have faces . He commandeers one and as he loses control he wakes up.

I've tried to find it on UTube but when I type in boy and train I keep getting the cartoon of the boy leaving his backyard and his dog saving him from harm.

A few of my favorites, 'The Train' with Burt Lancaster, who did all his own stunts in his movies.   Not too many train movies where you see someone pouring babbitt metal for a bearing and filing it.  'The Railway Children', the original, not the remake, and 'Von Ryan's Express' that has been mentioned.  Sinatra had a big layout, and I remember seeing him on an episode of the Mike Douglas show, one my Mom liked, where drinks were being delivered behind an O gauge loco from his house to where he and Douglas were sitting out near his pool, via a raised roadbed.

Last edited by CALNNC
@BRicch posted:

Ok sleuths, help me with a cartoon I remember seeing in the 50s but I’m sure it was from earlier times. From what I remember, it’s a boy dreaming of running a real train, and he is in a rail yard with a number of streamlined steamers that have faces . He commandeers one and as he loses control he wakes up.

I've tried to find it on UTube but when I type in boy and train I keep getting the cartoon of the boy leaving his backyard and his dog saving him from harm.

Sounds like Play Safe from Max and Dave Fleischer:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=8k9jbPHAg1Y

Not obscure, although I didn't discover it until a year ago: "Bad Day at Black Rock," with Spencer Tracy and Robert Ryan. A western about one man against a town with a dark secret, and it starts and ends with Southern Pacific diesels pulling a beautiful streamliner throughthe desert.

Mentioning it makes me want to see it again.

John

If you are interested in foreign trains, Netflix currently has a multi-episode show called The Railwaymen.  It's based on a true story about how the trainmen became heroes in saving people from a fatal gas leak disaster in India in 1984.  It is a foreign film with subtitles, (you can change that with over dubbing if you want) and I thought it was REALLY well done.  Lots of train action as well as twist and turning plots!

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