A train disaster is told as four short stories to give character studies of the people involved, how it will affect them, and how they deal with it.A train disaster is told as four short stories to give character studies of the people involved, how it will affect them, and how they deal with it.A train disaster is told as four short stories to give character studies of the people involved, how it will affect them, and how they deal with it.
Patric Doonan
- Ron Stacey (segment "The Engine Driver")
- (as Patrick Doonan/Patric Doonan)
Featured reviews
A novel piece of early post war British film noir with four concurrent plots - some better than others. A very young Leslie Phillips in a non comedy role and other strong actors including Peter Finch and Jack Warner. Fascinating for railway enthusiasts and a reminder of how dirty and run down the environment was in those days. Well shot and the special effects can be excused!
Compenium films such as these were very popular in the late forties.Naturally their success rides and falls on the quality of the story.Alas in this case only one of the stories is worth telling.The Valerie Hobson/John Clements story is truly awful.Jack Warners domestic problems seem more like an episode of the Huggetts.The ex German POW story has some promise but becomes repetitive.The Peter Finch/Mary Morris story is quite good but is undermined by the somewhat ridiculous proposition that a murderer would cart the dead body of his wife around in a theatrical basket.The fact that there is a good cast,and a strong band of writers and directors make it all the more disappointing.The most interesting aspect of the film is the considerable location work,which includes a view of the late lamented Euston arch.
Ealing Studios portmanteau drama that starts with a train crash, then follows four separate stories, showing the backstories of some of the passengers, the events that led to them being on the train, and the aftermath of the crash. Some big names of the day (Jack Warner, Susan Shaw, Miles Malleson, John Gregson, Valerie Hobson, Michael Hordern, and 'introducing' a very young Peter Finch). Several directors and writers involved, including Basil Dearden (who had a hand in both). Made over 70 years ago, but it stands up well. 7/10.
The second and last of Ealing Studios' multi-narrative films, owing a fairly evident debt to Thornton Wilder's 'The Bridge of San Luis Rey'.
Inevitably failing to match up to 'Dead of Night', 'The Composer' benefits from being played for laughs; while the most memorable episode is probably 'The Actor', depicting (SPOILER COMING:) a young Peter Finch in the throws of amour fou for unfaithful wife Mary Morris.
Inevitably failing to match up to 'Dead of Night', 'The Composer' benefits from being played for laughs; while the most memorable episode is probably 'The Actor', depicting (SPOILER COMING:) a young Peter Finch in the throws of amour fou for unfaithful wife Mary Morris.
'Train of Events' was a critical and commercial failure in its time but if you like these British films as much as I do I think you'll find plenty to enjoy here.
'Compendium' films were popular in the late Forties, several were made from the short stories of Somerset Maugham and then there was the greatest of them all 'Dead of Night'. 'Train of Events ', hardly in that class, contains four stories which all culminate on a train which we saw crashing in the opening scenes. So, like 'Friday the Thirteenth' ( a great portmanteau movie made in 1933) the climax is a matter of virtue rewarded and villainy punished as not everyone survives.
Interestingly television is quite strongly featured for the time (1949), a wind-up gramophone looks much more appropriate!
Valerie Hobson is first actor credited though her role is no larger than several others, she plays the forgiving wife of a philandering husband. In real life Hobson was married to British cabinet minister John Profumo whose relationship with Christine Keeler brought down a government in the sixties. Once again Life Imitates Art. In another story Peter Finch murders his faithless wife. He spouts chunks of Shakespeare, looked gaunt and middle-aged to me.
The model-work at the climax is satisfyingly convincing, I recommend 'Train of Events'
'Compendium' films were popular in the late Forties, several were made from the short stories of Somerset Maugham and then there was the greatest of them all 'Dead of Night'. 'Train of Events ', hardly in that class, contains four stories which all culminate on a train which we saw crashing in the opening scenes. So, like 'Friday the Thirteenth' ( a great portmanteau movie made in 1933) the climax is a matter of virtue rewarded and villainy punished as not everyone survives.
Interestingly television is quite strongly featured for the time (1949), a wind-up gramophone looks much more appropriate!
Valerie Hobson is first actor credited though her role is no larger than several others, she plays the forgiving wife of a philandering husband. In real life Hobson was married to British cabinet minister John Profumo whose relationship with Christine Keeler brought down a government in the sixties. Once again Life Imitates Art. In another story Peter Finch murders his faithless wife. He spouts chunks of Shakespeare, looked gaunt and middle-aged to me.
The model-work at the climax is satisfyingly convincing, I recommend 'Train of Events'
Did you know
- TriviaPeter Finch and Laurence Payne received "and introducing" credits.
- GoofsWithin the first minute and a half of the film the locomotive pulling the Euston to Liverpool express varies several times in cut shots from the largest 4-6-2 "Duchess" express locomotive to a variety of different, smaller 4-6-0 locomotives, variously with or without smoke deflectors, with single or double chimneys, with tapered or parallel boilers and with different numbers and tender insignias ("British Railways" or "LMS"). At one point a "Duchess" is seen again. Locomotive classes seen pulling the same train without it stopping thus include "Duchess", "Jubilee", "Patriot" and "Royal Scot".
- Quotes
Doris Hardcastle (segment "The Engine Driver"): Oh, it's you...
Ron Stacey (segment "The Engine Driver"): Well, don't overwhelm me ducks. I dunno as my poor old ticker'll stand it.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Remembering John Gregson (2019)
- SoundtracksThese Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)
(uncredited)
Music by Jack Strachey and Harry Link
Lyrics by Eric Maschwitz
Sung by Leslie Hutchinson
Played in Philip's apartment
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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