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IMDbPro

Sleeping Car to Trieste

  • 1948
  • Approved
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
812
YOUR RATING
Jean Kent and Albert Lieven in Sleeping Car to Trieste (1948)
SpyCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Spies pursue a stolen diary aboard the Orient Express.Spies pursue a stolen diary aboard the Orient Express.Spies pursue a stolen diary aboard the Orient Express.

  • Director
    • John Paddy Carstairs
  • Writers
    • Allan MacKinnon
    • Clifford Grey
    • William Douglas-Home
  • Stars
    • Jean Kent
    • Albert Lieven
    • Derrick De Marney
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    812
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Paddy Carstairs
    • Writers
      • Allan MacKinnon
      • Clifford Grey
      • William Douglas-Home
    • Stars
      • Jean Kent
      • Albert Lieven
      • Derrick De Marney
    • 25User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast59

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    Jean Kent
    Jean Kent
    • Valya
    Albert Lieven
    Albert Lieven
    • Zurta
    Derrick De Marney
    Derrick De Marney
    • George Grant
    Paul Dupuis
    Paul Dupuis
    • Detective Inspector Jolif
    Rona Anderson
    Rona Anderson
    • Joan Maxted
    David Tomlinson
    David Tomlinson
    • Tom Bishop
    Bonar Colleano
    Bonar Colleano
    • Sergeant West
    Finlay Currie
    Finlay Currie
    • Alastair MacBain
    Grégoire Aslan
    Grégoire Aslan
    • Poirier, the chef
    • (as Coco Aslan)
    Alan Wheatley
    Alan Wheatley
    • Karl…
    Hugh Burden
    Hugh Burden
    • Mills
    David Hutcheson
    • Denning
    Claude Larue
    • Andrée
    Zena Marshall
    Zena Marshall
    • Suzanne
    Leslie Weston
    • Randall
    Michael Ward
    • Elvin
    Eugene Deckers
    Eugene Deckers
    • Jules
    Dino Galvani
    Dino Galvani
    • Pierre
    • Director
      • John Paddy Carstairs
    • Writers
      • Allan MacKinnon
      • Clifford Grey
      • William Douglas-Home
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    6.6812
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    Featured reviews

    9CatherineYronwode

    You may need a map

    This a delightful detective thriller, made in the inimitable British post-war manner. The cast is comprised of more than a dozen unusual characters who have taken the Orient Express to Trieste. A few of them are innocent and charming, but most of them are law-breakers on one level or another, their crimes ranging from evading customs duties to adultery, theft, assault, and murder.

    The plot concerns a stolen diary, but the real action is trying to figure out who is in whose compartment at any given time, because as the police move in on the murderer, the matter of timing and alibis becomes of paramount importance.

    The documentary shots of the train itself are exemplary. If you are a train buff, you will greatly enjoy this crude, lumbering, noisy hunk of iron, a giant boiler on wheels, barreling down the tracks as the people inside change compartments, eat, drink, and plot their petty and grand crimes.
    lucyrfisher

    Not as good as the original

    This is a remake of 1932's Rome Express, which is a far better film and stars the seedy and sinister Mr Dane Calthrop. This version is slow and plodding, and the humour is mainly heavy handed. There is an unnecessary subplot about an Englishman trying to explain English cookery to a French chef (I'm not going back to the Good Old Days - I remember that food).

    Best things about this version are David Tomlinson as the old schoolfriend who turns up inappositely, and Hugh Burden as the put-upon secretary. The McGuffin is a diary containing secrets that might start a war with an unspecified country, rather than a stolen painting. The adulterous couple are sexless as only the English can be.

    Jean Kent is always worth watching, but whoever designed her frumpy wardrobe should be condemned to selling long underwear in British Home Stores. That hat with the two horns - or are they ice cream cones? There is a subplot about two French girls who are smuggling model hats, and they are rather good, as is Bonar Colleano as a wisecracking American soldier. His wisecracks really are funny. His mate the birdwatcher is good, too.

    But overall - it's as stodgy as an English suet pudding.
    9paxveritas

    For once the remake surpasses the original

    Sleeping Car is a remake of the very good 1932 Rome Express with Conrad Veidt providing a much more sinister and intense Zurta in that one than Albert Lieven does in this remake - to his credit, though, Lieven does exude a debonair, charming sliminess, and I like both actors' widely different takes on the role.

    Lieven is actually better suited to the role of Zurta than Veidt would have been, since the tone of Sleeping Car is lighter, despite the biting satire overall. Rome Express, while absorbing, is by comparison somewhat flat and humorless. The action and dialogue in both are crisp, fast-paced without being frenzied; the subplots in Sleeping Car are more entertaining.

    Scottish actor Finlay Currie is in both. He's a fast-talking American show business promoter in Rome Express, and an overbearing author in the Trieste version. Urbane actor Paul Dupuis is more satisfying as the detective Jolif in Trieste. He has classier, funnier lines, and comes across as a three-dimensional sophisticate. In Rome Express, the role is a dull mish- mash attempted by Frank Vosper.

    Not to be missed is the fun performance by always-watchable Jean Kent, in full control of her role.

    Overall, Trieste corrects some of Rome's plot weaknesses, as well as adding life and humor, If you have a chance, watch both of them. They're both enjoyable.
    6planktonrules

    A decent remake of "Rome Express",...though why not just watch "Rome Express"?

    I am a person who rarely likes remakes...that is, unless there is something horrible about the original and the remake takes care to correct this. In the case of "Sleeping Car to Trieste", it's a remake of "Rome Express" though I prefer the original and think the remake, though good, is unnecessary.

    Three spies manage to steal a diary that might provoke a war (how exactly you never know). But one of the spies is greedy and disappears with the diary. He takes a ride on the Orient Express but doesn't realize that his angry partners are also aboard! Not surprisingly, the end result is pretty bloody.

    This film is good...and if you haven't seen the original it should be a satisfying movie. However, it's also a bit uneven and much of the early portion on the train drags a bit. Fortunately, it does pick up and WHAT AN EXCITING ENDING! Well worth seeing and not bad at all.
    6howardmorley

    Rattling Good Post-War Thriller

    This is a rattling good post-war thriller.It features customs duty evasion, adultery, espionage, murder, robbery in fact the screen writers attempted to include almost all the major crimes in their script (apart from sex crimes which were denied by the prevailing film code on film producers).The film is mainly played out on the romantic "Orient Express" with an international cast as it journeys from Paris-Simplon-Venice-Trieste across the Continent of Western Europe.Trains are a favourite location for thriller writers and several famous films were made with them as a backdrop: "The 39 Steps" (1935), "The Lady Vanishes" (1938), and "Night Train to Munich" (1940) all of which I can recommend to 1940s film buffs.

    I have quite a few films from the 1940s, my favourite era.If fans want to see the principal players from "Sleeping Car to Trieste" cast in leading roles, they should attempt to obtain the following films: Derrick de Marney - George Grant, a younger actor in Hitchcock's "Young & Innocent" (1937), Jean Kent - Valya, still playing rather sadistic roles in "The Browning Version" (1951), Albert Lieven - Zarta, more sympathetic as a portrait painter in "The Seventh Veil" (1945), Paul Depuis - Det.Insp. Jolif, a French Aristocrat in "Madness of the Heart" (1949) & "Passport to Pimlico" (1949), Bonar Colleano - Sgt. West, virtually playing the same role in "The Way to the Stars" (1945), Finalay Currie - Alistair MacBain, such a versatile actor, try the convict in "Great Expectations" (1946) with John Mills, David Tomlinson - Tom Bishop, his best role was as one of the "Three Men in a Boat" (1953).Finally, Alan Wheatley is indelibly imprinted on my memory as the dastardly Sheriff of Nottingham in the 1950s British TV series "The Adventures of Robin Hood" starring Richard Green.

    The plot without spoilers has already been indicated by other reviewers so I will restrict my comments on the acting.In the main it was very creditable and it has an interesting mix of international stars.The action never lets up but with the 1940s moral code in place, you know the guilty must eventually receive their comeuppance.In todays politically correct climate I am always fascinated by how often actors in these 1940s films light up and drink copious quantities of Scotch.It makes a refreshing change and reminds me of my youth when steam was the norm on railways.I rated it 6/10.P.S. I was born in 1946.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Finlay Currie had appeared in the earlier "Rome Express" as the brash American publicist of a movie star, a character not used in this film.
    • Goofs
      When the sergeant and the bird enthusiast are getting acquainted, the background seen through the train window includes two large signs, both mirror-reversed.
    • Quotes

      Poirier, the chef: ...cover with white wine, put it into the oven, and voilà, it's cooked.

      Denning: I say, that's very neat isn't it? But do you really think cod's worth all that trouble?

      Poirier, the chef: Trouble?

      Denning: Yes, you see at home we just lower the jolly old creature into the boiling water, let it boil, serve it up with greens and chips.

      Poirier, the chef: But you get no sauce...?

      Denning: Oh good Lord yes - there's always a bottle of sauce around somewhere.

    • Connections
      Remake of Rome Express (1932)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 30, 1949 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Spavaća kola do Trsta
    • Filming locations
      • D&P Studios, Denham, Uxbridge, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(studio: made at D&P Studios, studio: made at Denham Studios, England. also)
    • Production companies
      • Two Cities Films
      • George H. Brown Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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