Terror Train backdrop
Terror Train poster

TERROR TRAIN

1980 CA HMDB
October 3, 1980

A masked killer targets six college kids responsible for a prank gone wrong three years earlier and who are currently throwing a large New Year's Eve costume party aboard a moving train.

Cast

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Crew

Production: Lamar Card (Executive Producer)Harold Greenberg (Producer)Daniel Grodnik (Executive Producer)
Screenplay: T.Y. Drake (Writer)
Music: John Mills-Cockell (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: John Alcott (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
A student, forced by his older peers to endure a terrible prank, goes mad and organizes a monstrous revenge. A few years later, during a train trip organized by the same jokers, he commits a massacre. Who would ever dare to combine David Copperfield and Jamie Lee Curtis in a horror film? The unknown Canadian director Spottiswoode tried and, as expected, the result was disastrous. Non-existent screenplay and, the worst flaw for a horror film, unintentional comedy. The only scary thing about the film is seeing how the director managed to even overshadow the talent of the beautiful Jamie Lee! Avoid.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

Wuchak

Wuchak

5 /10

“Halloween” on a train

Pre-med students in the Northeast celebrate New Year’s Eve by having a masquerade party on a train, but the festivities are hampered by a mysterious killer on board. Ben Johnson plays the conductor while David Copperfield is on hand as a (what else?) magician.

“Terror Train” (1980) came in the wake of the success of “Halloween” (1978) so you have Jamie Lee Curtis in a similar situation, except on a train. Daniel Grodnik came up with the idea after having a dream that mixed elements of “Halloween” and “Silver Streak” (1976).

Everything is here for an effective traditional slasher. The confined setting of the train is great. Unfortunately, the filmmakers fumble the ball on the writing front. The story’s just not very absorbing; although, thankfully, the last act is relatively compelling, particularly the big reveal.

Copperfield did his own magic tricks, but who cares when it’s a movie where magic can be done via special effects? In other words, magic tricks only work in the live forum. Still, it’s a welcome addition.

Sandee Currie and Joy Boushel are highlights in the feminine department; Vanity’s also on board. But the filmmakers evidently don’t know how to shoot women, no pun intended.

For better examples of horror on a train, see “Horror Express” (1972) and “Train” (2008). The former is a creature feature while the latter is more realistic.

The film runs 1 hour, 37 minutes, and was shot in a warehouse at night in Montreal, except for a certain person’s death scene at the end, which was done in Claremont, New Hampshire, a 3-hour drive southeast from Montreal.

GRADE: C+

Reviews provided by TMDB