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IMDbPro

Night Train to Terror

  • 1985
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
4.2/10
3K
YOUR RATING
Night Train to Terror (1985)
Monster HorrorSupernatural HorrorDramaFantasyHorrorMysteryThriller

"Night Train to Terror" is a 1985 horror anthology movie where God and Satan are on a train discussing the fate of three individuals."Night Train to Terror" is a 1985 horror anthology movie where God and Satan are on a train discussing the fate of three individuals."Night Train to Terror" is a 1985 horror anthology movie where God and Satan are on a train discussing the fate of three individuals.

  • Directors
    • John Carr
    • Phillip Marshak
    • Tom McGowan
  • Writer
    • Philip Yordan
  • Stars
    • Barbara Wyler
    • Jamie Scoggin
    • Stacey Lyons
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.2/10
    3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • John Carr
      • Phillip Marshak
      • Tom McGowan
    • Writer
      • Philip Yordan
    • Stars
      • Barbara Wyler
      • Jamie Scoggin
      • Stacey Lyons
    • 75User reviews
    • 56Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:39
    Trailer

    Photos64

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Barbara Wyler
    • Woman at Window (segment "The Night Train")
    Jamie Scoggin
    • Man at Window (segment "The Night Train")
    Stacey Lyons
    • Dancer (segment "The Night Train")
    Linda Maderas
    • Dancer (segment "The Night Train")
    Melanie Montilla
    • Dancer (segment "The Night Train")
    Chantel Morogeus
    • Dancer (segment "The Night Train")
    Byron Yordan
    • Rock Singer…
    Richard Sanford
    • Bass (segment "The Night Train")
    Lori Bell
    • Drums (segment "The Night Train")
    Marlie Clark
    • Guitar (segment "The Night Train")
    Rick Arbuckle
    • Sax (segment "The Night Train")
    Angela Nicoletti
    • Singing Girl (segment "The Night Train")
    Dina Lee Russo
    • Singing Girl (segment "The Night Train")
    Earl Washington
    • Night Porter (segment "The Night Train")
    Gabriel Whitehouse
    Gabriel Whitehouse
    • Conductor (segment "The Night Train")
    Tony Giorgio
    Tony Giorgio
    • Satan (segment "The Night Train")
    • (as Lu Sifer)
    Ferdy Mayne
    Ferdy Mayne
    • God (segment "The Night Train")
    • (as God)
    John Phillip Law
    John Phillip Law
    • Harry Billings (segment "The Case of Harry Billings")
    • Directors
      • John Carr
      • Phillip Marshak
      • Tom McGowan
    • Writer
      • Philip Yordan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews75

    4.23K
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    Featured reviews

    EyeAskance

    Hot mess...looks like it was cobbled by a hopeless methamphetemine addict.

    As stated in other comments, this pandemonious cinematic nose-dive is a careless tangle of three of the director's previously released masterworks in condensed form. The admixture is then kneaded into what was presumably intended to pass off as an anthology film, naturally inclusive of a ridiculous wraparound story filmed specifically to make this fish-out-of-water gel somewhat. Unfortunately, what this slapdash recipe yields is an asymmetrical, crudely doctored Frankenstein monster. Truth is, NIGHT TRAIN TO TERROR is possibly the most disorienting cinematic achievement since PSYCHED BY THE 4-D WITCH...a feat, to be sure. I've been exposed to two of these stories in their original formats...DEATH WISH CLUB and CATACLYSM, both of which are somewhat interesting B minus trash flicks. The segment featuring 70s superstud John Phillip Law, however, I have yet to track down(something called SCREAM YOUR HEAD OFF/MARILYN ALIVE AND BEHIND BARS, which looks to be a right inviting little crock-o-schlock).

    Some heinous early MTV rock video styled nonsense is mashed up in the "new" portion of this palimpsest, guilty of some of the worst fashion bummers ever committed to film. NIGHT TRAIN TO TERROR is such an all-wrong royal faux-pa that to be unmoved by gleeful schadenfreude at its expense would seem next to impossible.

    4/10
    one4now4

    Talk about stimuli!

    This is a grab bag of a movie, with all sorts of things to offer as long as you don't expect to see a conventional film in any way, shape, or form. It has gore, nudity, bondage, humor, stupid stuff, smart stuff, and everything in between, AND MORE! I had to cut loose with this one, it's so much weird fun. I have to wonder what it would be like to watch this one on any kind of drugs. What we have is a train carrying a kitschy 1980s new wave band doing some hilariously dated vintage-MTV-style routines. Also on board are God and "Mr. Satan", who are engaged in competition for souls of some other people supposedly on the same train. (Of note also is the small role of the conductor, who has some cool, darkly humorous dialogue.) We get to see the cases of the people whose souls for which God and Satan are vying for, which, in actuality, are three different movies (the unfinished movie "Scream Your Head Off", "Death Wish Club", and "Cataclysm") cut down to size for your warped, brain-numbing enjoyment. Two of these entries feature Charles (a.k.a. Richard, or "Bull" from "Night Court") Moll! My favorite of all the stories is definitely the one that was culled from "Scream Your Head Off", which would've been a cool movie if they would have been able to complete it. What a shame! I swear Richard Moll makes for one memorable psycho in that one. Another thing I love is what God has to say about rock n' roll music! I tell you, if God were this cool, I'd be in church everyday! I dig this whole paste-up movie, as you can tell. It's this wild overload of stimuli, like they were just taking everything weird and off-the-wall they could think of and tossing it into one big, freaky mixing bowl. I admit the "Cataclysm" entry is more sluggish, but it's interesting in a lot of its own ways. (I love the on-air speech Moll gives: "What I'm about to say will cause you pain...") I am glad I was able to find this forgotten extravaganza of stylishly bad cinema for only two dollars, because it is loads of wacky fun.
    6Chase_Witherspoon

    Something a little bit special

    So Byron Yordan says to his uncle Philip one day "uncle Philip, me and some friends would like to do an MTV video but we have no talent and no idea, how can we make an MTV video uncle Philip?" Or groveling to that effect. To which Oscar winning script writer uncle Philip Yordan replies "why I know just the antidote to cure your ails, we'll grab three movies on which I recently worked ("Cataclysm", "Death Wish Club" and "Scream Your Head Off" which we never finished) and get old mate John Carr to graft them together like an elephant trunk onto a mouse. Then we'll edit you and your friends into the story as musicians travelling aboard the "Night Train To Terror".

    And now you're up to date. Tony Giorgio and Ferdy Mayne play Satan and God respectively riding aboard the night train, on which said rock band mince about in Flashdance garb singing their signature tune ("Everybody's Got Something to Do, Everybody But You") while Giorgio and Mayne review a series of vignettes debating whether the characters should be acquitted to heaven or hell for their deeds. Essentially previews the three aforementioned movies, conjoining them for the absolute mothership of all horror anthologies. Lashings of sadism, nudity, an abattoir-sized load of body parts (no exaggeration) and nonsensical editing that you absolutely have to see before you depart this mortal coil.

    John Philip Law is the mind programmed maniac who lures women to an asylum where Richard Moll lies in wait, hacksaw at the ready in the unfinished "Scream Your Head Off" while in "Death Wish Club" a misguided porn star is born and then inducted along with her smitten boyfriend into death defying games that test the mettle of brave participants - this one is pretty surreal with head-crushing, brain-frying gore galore. The final vignette is extracted from "The Omen" inspired "Cataclysm" starring Cameron Mitchell, Marc Lawrence and Faith Clift as God's desperate rearguard against Satan and his claymation army. It's well photographed but comes off the worst of the trio due to the clumsy truncation. Overall this anthology's construction is as ghastly as the special effects it previews and needs to be witnessed to be fully appreciated.
    Michael_Elliott

    Poor Movie But An Interesting Back Story

    Night Train to Terror (1985)

    * 1/2 (out of 4)

    God and Satan are on board a train where a rock band is playing. The two talk about who is respected more and then we see three separate stories. The first story deals with a man who feels guilty over a drunk driving death that he caused. He finds himself involved in a strange experiment. The second story deals with a medical student who falls in love with a beautiful woman and gets drawn into a strange world of monsters. The final story has a detective (Cameron Mitchell) investigating a murder that leads to a Satanic playboy with special powers.

    NIGHT TRAIN TO TERROR is a really, really bizarre little movie with an even more bizarre behind-the-scenes story. The only new footage here are the scenes dealing with the rock band and God and Satan. Everything else is footage taken from three completely different movies. What's so strange is that all three of those movies are available to view in their complete form so it's kind of pointless watching them chopped up to fit 20-30 minute segments.

    The biggest problem with this movie is that all three stories are completely confusing and they never make too much sense. THere are so many logical issues with each of the three stories and it's easy to see why because all of them are missing over a hours worth of footage. To say that this film was a complete hack job would be fair and it's also fair to say that the studio was just trying to make some cash out of the previous films that I'm guessing they already owed. Why not cut them down, add a wrap-around story and try to pass it off as something new?

    Whatever their reasons were, it's funny to think that NIGHT TRAIN TO TERROR has remained easy to find over the years while the three other complete films (MARILYN ALIVE AND BEHIND BARS, THE DARK SIDE TO LOVE and CATACLYSM) aren't as easy to track down, although THE DARK SIDE OF LOVE was released as a bonus feature for the Blu-ray release of NIGHT TRAIN TO TERROR.

    As it stands, this is a pretty hard film to judge simply because of the editing process. The end result is quite poor and it's hard to be entertained by NIGHT TRAIN TO TERROR simply because the stories are so bad as they are presented here. To really judge them you'd need to see the complete films. As it stands, NIGHT TRAIN TO TERROR is pretty bad but the backstory is much more interesting.
    lor_

    A lumpy ride

    My review was written in May 1985 after a Times Square screening.

    "Night Train to Terror" is a hodge-podge of at least three separate horror films, crudely edited together as an omnibus picture.

    Wraparound footage has God (Ferdy Mayne sporting an arresting white beard) and the Devil (Lu Sickler) quarreling on a train over which human souls they will get, giving rise to three case histories. (An inept rock group is also on the train with its souls up for grabs, and irritating musical numbers interrupt the action at random.)

    First two cases were filmed circa 1982 by director John Carr and play like excerpts from unfinished features, both presented here with the entire story carried by voiceover narration. John Phillip Law toplines in "Harry", sent to a sanitarium after his car crashes, where mad doctors and a crazed orderly (Charles Moll, of tv's "Night Court" series) use him to pick up pretty girls who are then killed, their organs sold to medical schools. Segment includes lots of nudity, gore and many shots filmed out-of-focus. Next, Meridith Haze portrays "Gretta", an aspiring pianist, duped into joining The Death Club, where jaded folks play fatal, sadistic games.

    Finale, apparently shot in 1979 as a feature title "Cataclysm" (which received an R rating in 1981 from the MPAA on its own), is a religious tract in which veteran screenwriter Philip Yordan gets on a soapbox. James Hansen (Charles Moll, again) is a Nobel prize winner who has written a book "God Is Dead" and goes on tv preaching his anti-religion party line. He gets his comeuppance from an ageless Nazi named Olivier who in fact is the devil's emissary. Cameron Mitchell appears as a cop hunting Olivier.

    Mishmash features stock footage, including widescreen shots hilariously "squeezed" in an attempt to match the other scenes, plus several stop motion animation monsters that comically battle tiny puppet versions of the cast members.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first part (or in some versions, the third part) of this anthology horror film, "Case of Harry Billings" starring Richard Moll, was edited from an unfinished, unreleased 1981 horror film titled, "Scream Your Head Off" (although copies of it are reported to be available). That film was written by Philip Yordan and directed by John Carr (both were also credited as the writer and director of this film).
    • Goofs
      It's an obvious toy train shown running off the train tracks at the end of the movie, followed by stock footage of an explosion and burning building.
    • Quotes

      Some guy: Like, I really wish our bus hadn't broken down, ya know?

      Dancer: No way! I think this train is coooool!

      Rock singer: From the top!

      [then the band starts playing again]

    • Crazy credits
      Satan is played by "Lu Cifer" and God by "Himself".
    • Alternate versions
      The old UK video version suffered 4 minutes 17 secs of heavy cuts which removed shots of a topless woman tied to a table, a graphic decapitation scene, shots of dismembered bodies and closeups of human organs during the operation scene.
    • Connections
      Edited from The Power (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Everybody But You
      Music and Lyrics by Charlene Brown

      Arrangement by Robert O'Connor

      Vocals by Joe Turano

      Additional vocals by Terry Wood and Beth Anderson

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 22, 1985 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Shiver
    • Filming locations
      • La Jolla, San Diego, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Visto International Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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