En 1944, un colonel allemand charge un train de trésors de l'art français pour les envoyer en Allemagne. La Résistance doit l'arrêter sans endommager la cargaison.En 1944, un colonel allemand charge un train de trésors de l'art français pour les envoyer en Allemagne. La Résistance doit l'arrêter sans endommager la cargaison.En 1944, un colonel allemand charge un train de trésors de l'art français pour les envoyer en Allemagne. La Résistance doit l'arrêter sans endommager la cargaison.
- Nommé pour 1 oscar
- 1 victoire et 3 nominations au total
- Didont
- (as Albert Remy)
- General Von Lubitz
- (as Richard Munch)
- Sergeant Schwartz
- (as Donal O'Brien)
- Pilzer
- (as Art Brauss)
- Major
- (as Jean-Claude Berco)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBurt Lancaster performed all his own stunts in this movie. Albert Rémy also got into the act by performing the stunt of uncoupling the engine from the paintings train on a real moving train.
- GaffesWhen the German officer in the train thinks they've arrived in Germany, he takes a look at his map and we see Strasbourg (Alsace, France), the France-Germany border and Baaden-Baaden (Germany). During German occupation of France, Alsace and Strasbourg were annexed to the German Reich, i.e. this German military map should have shown a different border (100 km West) and Strasbourg should have been in Germany.
- Citations
Colonel von Waldheim: Labiche! Here's your prize, Labiche. Some of the greatest paintings in the world. Does it please you, Labiche? Give you a sense of excitement in just being near them? A painting means as much to you as a string of pearls to an ape. You won by sheer luck: you stopped me without knowing what you were doing, or why. You are nothing, Labiche -- a lump of flesh. The paintings are mine; they always will be; beauty belongs to the man who can appreciate it! They will always belong to me or to a man like me. Now, this minute, you couldn't tell me why you did what you did.
- Générique farfeluOpening credits prologue: PARIS August 2-1944 1511th day of German occupation
- Autres versionsWhilst the official run time is 133 minutes, the BBFC website has two separate entries, one with a theatrical 'U' rated certificate in 1964 running at 141 minutes 31 seconds and the other entry with a theatrical 'A' rated certificate in 1959 running at 90 minutes 37 seconds. Though the second entry seems incorrect due to the erroneous date of certification being 21 October 1959 (the film was being made in 1963 and is copyrighted in 1964) and a much shorter run time, the BBFC reference numbering is in sequence with the later video rated entries so it is unknown if this 1959 entry is a much shorter cut of this film or this is an error in the BBFC records. It is also not known if the 142 minute entry is a longer cut of the film that has simply not been since it's UK theatrical release in 1964.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Film Review: Burt Lancaster (1968)
The film begins in Paris, August 2, 1944
It's 1511th day of German occupation The liberation of Paris seems very close
Nazi Colonel Von Waldheim (Paul Scofield) decides suddenly to remove by train to Germany the best of Impressionist masterpieces His objective is clear: "Money is a weapon. The contents are as negotiable as gold and more valuable."
Mademoiselle Villard (Suzanne Flon) informs the Resistance of the shipment The Resistance reaction is to stop the train without damaging the national heritage "They are part of France." But stopping the train is not a simple task You can get killed especially if you are French and the train is German
Labiche (Burt Lancaster), the Chief Inspector of the French Railway System, is not impressed However, he never communicates his political, ideological, or nationalistic convictions, "For certain things, we take the risk," he said; "but I won't waste lives on paintings."
When an aged engineer, Papa Boule (Michel Simon), is accused of sabotage in spite of saving the train through the Allied's bombs at the risk of his own life, Labiche is forced into combat
It begins with a long sequence where an armament train and the art train are both trying to leave the yard in the morning As they are being moved back and forth across the tracks, the viewer knows that British planes will hit the yard in that moment at exactly 10:00 o'clock
New complications are introduced, but the central conflict always returns to an obsessive art lover against a man with no appreciation for art Labiche's only concerns is to slow down the Nazis keeping himself and his compatriots alive
Now, two forces control the film The first is Frankenheimer's cleverness to choreograph the real trains Frankenheimer and his cinematographers capture the heat of the engines, the noise and sound of the cars in motion, the fault in the oil line, the crushing strength implicated when the machines come into collision and the derailment The second force is Lancaster, the "headache" of the fanatical obsessed Colonel whose desire is to see the priceless paintings in Nazi Germany...
- Nazi_Fighter_David
- 29 mars 2008
- Lien permanent
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- How long is The Train?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Train
- Lieux de tournage
- Acquigny, Eure, France(trains pile-up, 49°10'22.73"N, 1°10'44.84"E)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 6 700 000 $ US (estimation)
- Durée2 heures 13 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1