Paris, August 1944. With the Allied army closing in, German commander and art fanatic Colonel von Waldheim (Paul Scofield) steals a vast collection of rare French paintings and loads them onto a train bound for Berlin. But when a beloved French patriot is murdered while trying to sabotage von Waldheim’s scheme, Labiche (Burt Lancaster), a stalwart member of the Resistance, vows to stop the train at any cost. Calling upon his vast arsenal of skills, Labiche unleashes a torrent of devastation anddestructionloosened rails, shattered tracks and head-on collisionsin an impassioned, suspense-filled quest for justice, retribution and revenge. Inspired by an actual event and highlighted by spectacular stuntwork and visual effects, The Train is “an edge-of-your-seat, thrilling, suspenseful and superior film” (The Motion Picture Guide).This is one of John Frankenheimer’s breathless gems–all marvelous action that never lets up. Burt Lancaster plays a French train engineer during the waning days of the German occupation who tries to prevent Nazi colonel Paul Scofield from transporting a precious art collection back to Germany. Utilizing sabotage and cunning deception, Lancaster and his Resistance colleagues stall for time with the Allies on their way. It’s a brilliantly made film, showing off Lancaster’s acrobatic skills (he performed all of his own stunts) and Frankenheimer’s sense of pacing and brilliant use of space. It’s choreographed with the utmost precision (those are real explosions during the pivotal strafing sequence) and extremely authentic in its details. Lancaster is in rare minimalist form, and Scofield manages to extract intelligence and sympathy. A firecracker action film shot in crisp black and white, with yet another telling audio commentary by the always instructive director. –Bill Desowitz
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April 15, 2008
#1
This endless train ride to boredom is all hardware and no heart. The whole ostentatious collage is justified–so it goes–by ponderous observations on art, and not a human being is in sight. Not a lump of coal on this director’s own “Seven Days in May,” or “The Manchurian Candidate.”
April 15, 2008
#2
I finally received this DVD and it was great…OK, it took longer than expected…but it came in good order. For some reason I can’t change the rating on the movie…so I’ll just type it here 3 1/2 Stars!
April 15, 2008
#3
I enjoyed this DVD. It starts out a bit slow, then builds to a reasonably solid pace with a good amount of action, and keeping you in doubt as to how they will stop this train (without destoying what’s on board). The acting is solid, and Lancaster, as always, has a quality that makes him stand out from most others.
I had great difficulty deciding how to rate this DVD. There are so many great WWII movies, that the choice was really only between 3 or 4 stars. But in the end, I’ll have to give the nod to “Von Ryan’s Express” when it comes to WWII train movies.
April 15, 2008
#4
Based around the French railway men and how they managed to derail NAZI efforts to smuggle french art treasures out of the country before the allied advance. It really is a good movie, don’t let the first 5 minutes or so throw you for a loop, it just sets up the main ‘evil nazi guy’s ‘ madness.
April 15, 2008
#5
Saw it on TV. This is a well done film concerning the fight of railway men against the nazi occupant in France in WWII. – It’s a fight to stop a train with stolen paintings before it gets over the french border towards Berlin. – The film is in black & white, but a must for fans of train-related films!