IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,5/10
13.780
IHRE BEWERTUNG
1906 entdeckt ein britischer Anthropologe in China eine gefrorene prähistorische Kreatur und muss sie mit dem Zug nach Europa transportieren.1906 entdeckt ein britischer Anthropologe in China eine gefrorene prähistorische Kreatur und muss sie mit dem Zug nach Europa transportieren.1906 entdeckt ein britischer Anthropologe in China eine gefrorene prähistorische Kreatur und muss sie mit dem Zug nach Europa transportieren.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Gewinn & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Christopher Lee
- Prof. Sir Alexander Saxton
- (as Cristopher Lee)
Ángel del Pozo
- Yevtuchenko
- (as Angel del Pozo)
Víctor Israel
- Maletero - Baggage Man
- (as Victor Israel)
Helga Liné
- Natasha
- (as Helga Line)
José Jaspe
- Konev - Conductor
- (as Jose Jaspe)
Juan Olaguivel
- Creature
- (as Juan Olaguibel)
José Canalejas
- Russian Guard
- (as Jose Canalejas)
José Marco
- Vorkin
- (as Jose Marco)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
HORROR EXPRESS stars Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee as rival scientists, Dr. Wells and Sir Alexander Saxton, respectively. When Saxton uncovers a frozen specimen in China, he must transport it back to England via train. Unfortunately, said specimen is far more than just some fossil! Apparent supernatural mayhem and death ensue.
Cushing and Lee are at their best, playing off each other like the twin horror icons they are! The story line is intriguing and quite original, providing an atmosphere of creeping dread to go along with its beastie!
EXTRA POINTS: For the Rasputin-like Father Pujardov (Alberto del Mendoza), who adds a heavy dose of hyper-religious blather and outright madness to the proceedings. Also, Telly Savalas makes a perfectly intimidating Cossack!
A unique and very influential horror film...
Cushing and Lee are at their best, playing off each other like the twin horror icons they are! The story line is intriguing and quite original, providing an atmosphere of creeping dread to go along with its beastie!
EXTRA POINTS: For the Rasputin-like Father Pujardov (Alberto del Mendoza), who adds a heavy dose of hyper-religious blather and outright madness to the proceedings. Also, Telly Savalas makes a perfectly intimidating Cossack!
A unique and very influential horror film...
Picture a frozen ape man discovered by a British archeologist and scientist at the turn of the century, and being placed aboard a Trans-Siberian railway from China to Russia..and you have the beginning of Horror Express. Christopher Lee plays the man who finds this fossil, as he calls it, which turns out to be so much more. The film itself is beautiful as we see this elegant train traveling across snow-covered terrain(actually filmed in Spain). The cast of characters aboard are of equal interest. Peter Cushing plays a scientist named Dr. Wells. For Cushing, this is a fine performance of a scientist less hypnotized by the ethic of science and more worldly. He bribes officials to get train tickets, has a baggage man drill holes in Professor Saxton's(Lee's) discovery, flirts with both his manly lady assistant and a beautiful stow-a-way, and in general seems less serious than many of his former roles. Nice to see him occasionally smile. Lee's professor is quite typical of Lee, burly, officious, obnoxious, and willful. Both Cushing and Lee are extraordinary and sights to behold as they waltz through the script of finding the creature which is wiping the minds of various peoples. The rest of the cast is also very good with a Rasputin-like monk stealing scene after scene. Horror Express is fast-paced action, inventive science fiction, gory thrills, and chilling horror. Indeed it is worth a look!
Spanish-British co-production that is one of the most representative exponents of Spanish horror cinema, gaining great popularity in the early seventies. The film contains an atmospheric mix of hair-raising thrills and surprising chills, combined with a fantastic ending, though most of the action revolves around the attempts to chase and kill this strange creature.1906, in the remote Manchuria, professor Alexander encounters a long frozen corpse. When he smuggles it aboard the Transiberian train, then the monster is awakened and coming to life, breaking out, running rampant around the train and making a killing rampage. Meanwhile, archaeologist Alexander Saxton (Christopher Lee) meets professor Welles(Peter Cushing). Both join forces against the weirdo creature. The movie depicts the havoc and killing that begin when the monster escapes, lurks and terrorizes. The bulk of action surrounds their attempts to chase and intent on killing this bizarre creature. Meantime, the passengers and crew run afoul, they're forced to fight their lives and pursued by the killer beast which is making a brutal slaughter.
The film was a surprise at its premiere, getting a large international cast, starring the two most representative actors of Hammer Films and obtaining great success at the global box office, dealing with a ferocious prehistoric monster that is transported on the Trans-Siberian train, when the monster awakens and comes to life, subsequently running rampant around the train and causing an astonishing carnage. Well directed by Eugenio Martin, specialized in this type of genre productions, he makes an impressive film, knowing how to use very well the train where the action takes place, the models, the characterizations of the actors, as well as the special effects with lots of guts and gore. The film not only has nothing to envy, but also resembles the Hammer productions at the time. It displays lots of guts and blood but it seems pretty mild compared to today's gore feasts. It's an unrelenting shock-feast laced with nice acting by the two Hammer genre's stars that deserves its cult status. Furthermore, magnificent Telly Savalas , before Kojak, as a crazed Cossack commander and Alberto De Menzoza as a Rasputin-style monk. Lively secondary cast is frankly cool, so the supporting cast is downright great, made up of well-known Spanish actors, such as: Alberto De Mendoza, Silvia Tortosa, Angel Del Pozo, Víctor Israel, Helga Liné, José Jaspe, José Canalejas, José Marco, Barta Barri, Jorge Rigaud, among others.
This unfolds a bone-chilling and suspenseful musical score by John Cavacas. Next to a lush photograph with juicy atmosphere by Alejandro Ulloa, but unfortunately it becomes too murky in some edited prints. Good work by makeup supervisor Julián Ruiz and evocative sets by Ramiro Gómez. The film was well and competently directed by Eugenio Martin or Gene Martin. He was an expert in horror films (Hypnosis, A Candle for the Devil, The Fourth Mrs. Anderson) and Spaghetti Westerns (Pancho Villa, Bounty Hunter, The Bad River Man). Rating: 7/10. Above average. It is a relentless feast of shocks with enjoyable performances by the two stars of the Hammer genre, well worth seeing. A very decent horror film that seems pretty tame compared to today's gore feasts.
The film was a surprise at its premiere, getting a large international cast, starring the two most representative actors of Hammer Films and obtaining great success at the global box office, dealing with a ferocious prehistoric monster that is transported on the Trans-Siberian train, when the monster awakens and comes to life, subsequently running rampant around the train and causing an astonishing carnage. Well directed by Eugenio Martin, specialized in this type of genre productions, he makes an impressive film, knowing how to use very well the train where the action takes place, the models, the characterizations of the actors, as well as the special effects with lots of guts and gore. The film not only has nothing to envy, but also resembles the Hammer productions at the time. It displays lots of guts and blood but it seems pretty mild compared to today's gore feasts. It's an unrelenting shock-feast laced with nice acting by the two Hammer genre's stars that deserves its cult status. Furthermore, magnificent Telly Savalas , before Kojak, as a crazed Cossack commander and Alberto De Menzoza as a Rasputin-style monk. Lively secondary cast is frankly cool, so the supporting cast is downright great, made up of well-known Spanish actors, such as: Alberto De Mendoza, Silvia Tortosa, Angel Del Pozo, Víctor Israel, Helga Liné, José Jaspe, José Canalejas, José Marco, Barta Barri, Jorge Rigaud, among others.
This unfolds a bone-chilling and suspenseful musical score by John Cavacas. Next to a lush photograph with juicy atmosphere by Alejandro Ulloa, but unfortunately it becomes too murky in some edited prints. Good work by makeup supervisor Julián Ruiz and evocative sets by Ramiro Gómez. The film was well and competently directed by Eugenio Martin or Gene Martin. He was an expert in horror films (Hypnosis, A Candle for the Devil, The Fourth Mrs. Anderson) and Spaghetti Westerns (Pancho Villa, Bounty Hunter, The Bad River Man). Rating: 7/10. Above average. It is a relentless feast of shocks with enjoyable performances by the two stars of the Hammer genre, well worth seeing. A very decent horror film that seems pretty tame compared to today's gore feasts.
An intriguing idea of a "spirit" of pure evil with the ability to jump from body to body aboard a trans-siberian train. Well done considering budget constraints, and claustrophobic. Lee and Cushing are fine, but it's Telly Savales who chews the scenery to good effect. He is an unexpected treat as a bullying cossack officer and good counterpoint to Lee and Cushing as civilized gentlemen. Don't expect a slick Hollywood production and you won't be disappointed. I watched this on late night TV spookfests everytime it was on during the late 70s and saw something new each time. It's something like a cross between Hammer and Argento, and a little bit of Corman, too.
When you get two grandmasters of horror, Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee together in a film, you know you're in for a good ride, and that on the Trans-Siberian Express with a monster on the loose.
In 1906, Professor Sir Alexander Saxton( Christopher Lee, a renowned British anthropologist, is returning to Europe by the Trans-Siberian Express from Shanghai to Moscow. With him is a crate containing the frozen remains of a primitive humanoid creature that he discovered in a cave in Manchuria. Along for the ride is Doctor Wells, who doesn't get along with Saxton, but when the creature escapes from the box, and with the bodies piling up with their eyes turned white they have to act fast to stop it - but already the creature has found a new host ...
Not your typical monster on the spree romp, Horror express is sprinkled with some intelligence. The monster is curious about the earth. A brisk direction and elevated tension keeps this film simmering, but it's Cushing and Lee that add high credentials to this chiller. Telly Savalas has a small cameo. Silvia Tortosa and Helga Line provide eye candy.
In 1906, Professor Sir Alexander Saxton( Christopher Lee, a renowned British anthropologist, is returning to Europe by the Trans-Siberian Express from Shanghai to Moscow. With him is a crate containing the frozen remains of a primitive humanoid creature that he discovered in a cave in Manchuria. Along for the ride is Doctor Wells, who doesn't get along with Saxton, but when the creature escapes from the box, and with the bodies piling up with their eyes turned white they have to act fast to stop it - but already the creature has found a new host ...
Not your typical monster on the spree romp, Horror express is sprinkled with some intelligence. The monster is curious about the earth. A brisk direction and elevated tension keeps this film simmering, but it's Cushing and Lee that add high credentials to this chiller. Telly Savalas has a small cameo. Silvia Tortosa and Helga Line provide eye candy.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesPeter Cushing arrived in Spain for filming and immediately told producer Bernard Gordon that he could not do the picture, as he felt it was too soon after his wife's death. Christopher Lee convinced Cushing to stay on by reminiscing with him about the previous movies they'd worked on together, much to the relief of Gordon.
- PatzerThe opening credits say the movie takes place in Peking, but all the railroad station sets have signs that say "Shanghai" in Chinese. The cast's dialogue also refers to their train trip starting in Shanghai.
- Zitate
Dr. Wells: [entering Saxon and Mirov's compartment with a shotgun] Thought this might come in handy.
Inspector Mirov: [sarcastic] Oh, good idea. Two of you together - that's fine. But what if one of you is the monster?
Dr. Wells: Monster? We're British, you know!
- Crazy CreditsIn the opening credits of the English-language VHS version, Christopher Lee's name is misspelled as "Cristopher".
- Alternative VersionenDVD by Image Entertainment is 88 minutes long, the original theatrical version. DVD by Simitar Video is 85 minutes long, the television version.
- VerbindungenEdited into Time Tracers (1997)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Pánico en el Transiberiano
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 300.000 $ (geschätzt)
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