You don't seem to have any of the "express" films:
Shanghai Express
Rome Express (1936)
Peking Express (1951, which is a remake of Shanghai Express)
Paris Express (1952, a version of Simenon's The Man Who
Watched Trains Go By).
Trans Europ Express
Abel Gance's La Roue takes place almost entirely alongside the
train tracks and on locomotives.
Twentieth Century
La Bęte humaine
Lady On a Train
The Great Locomotive Chase
The Train
Compartment Tueurs (aka Sleeping Car Murders)
Closely Watched Trains
Color of a Brisk and Leaping Day
Bullet Train (Japanese)
--Robert Keser
Ali Vatansever wrote:
> I am working on an article about cinematic usages of trains where I will
> quote the films below. Thanks for others you have mentioned.
>
> great train robbery
> anna karennina
> strangers on a train
> apu trilogy (ray)
> yol+suru (yilmaz guney)
> back to the future
> europa (trier)
> north by northwest
> the man who would be king
> train de vie
> lady vanishes
> wallace & gromit wrong trousers
> peacemaker
> life is beautiful
> human condition I (kobayashi)
> the general (keaton)
> schindlers list
> the bridge on the river kwai
> east of eden
> charade
> casablanca
> before sunrise
> termini station
> dead man
> nowhere in africa
> fried green tomatoes
> ghost train
> wild wild west
> cassandra crossing
> murder in orient express
> nightmare before christmas
> unbreakable
>
> --
> Ali Vatansever
> [log in to unmask]
>
> --
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