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Transamerica Express

Original title: Silver Streak
  • 1976
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
23K
YOUR RATING
Gene Wilder in Transamerica Express (1976)
Trailer for this off the rails comedy starring Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor
Play trailer3:08
1 Video
59 Photos
Buddy ComedyActionComedyCrimeRomanceThriller

On a long-distance train trip, a man finds romance--but also finds himself in danger of being killed, or at least pushed off the train.On a long-distance train trip, a man finds romance--but also finds himself in danger of being killed, or at least pushed off the train.On a long-distance train trip, a man finds romance--but also finds himself in danger of being killed, or at least pushed off the train.

  • Director
    • Arthur Hiller
  • Writer
    • Colin Higgins
  • Stars
    • Gene Wilder
    • Richard Pryor
    • Jill Clayburgh
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    23K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Arthur Hiller
    • Writer
      • Colin Higgins
    • Stars
      • Gene Wilder
      • Richard Pryor
      • Jill Clayburgh
    • 146User reviews
    • 52Critic reviews
    • 41Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Silver Streak
    Trailer 3:08
    Silver Streak

    Photos58

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Gene Wilder
    Gene Wilder
    • George
    Richard Pryor
    Richard Pryor
    • Grover
    Jill Clayburgh
    Jill Clayburgh
    • Hilly
    Patrick McGoohan
    Patrick McGoohan
    • Devereau
    Ned Beatty
    Ned Beatty
    • Sweet
    Clifton James
    Clifton James
    • Sheriff Chauncey
    Ray Walston
    Ray Walston
    • Mr. Whiney
    Stefan Gierasch
    Stefan Gierasch
    • Professor Schreiner & Johnson
    Len Birman
    Len Birman
    • Chief
    Valerie Curtin
    Valerie Curtin
    • Plain Jane
    Lucille Benson
    Lucille Benson
    • Rita Babtree
    Scatman Crothers
    Scatman Crothers
    • Ralston
    Richard Kiel
    Richard Kiel
    • Reace
    Fred Willard
    Fred Willard
    • Jerry Jarvis
    Delos V. Smith Jr.
    • Burt
    • (as Delos V. Smith)
    Mathilda Calnan
    • Blue-Haired Lady
    • (as Matilda Calnan)
    Nick Stewart
    • Shoeshiner
    Margarita García
    • Mexican Mama-San
    • (as Margarita Garcia)
    • Director
      • Arthur Hiller
    • Writer
      • Colin Higgins
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews146

    6.922.8K
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    Featured reviews

    mcfly-31

    fast track to fun

    If you can get through the meandering first 15 minutes, you should enjoy the rest of this adventure comedy. Wilder is heading from LA to Chicago by train when he falls into a fling with Clayburgh. During foreplay he sees her boss outside the window, falling off the train. She doesn't believe him, and when he tries to look into it further, he's chucked off the train as well...but alive. He finds his way back to the train with the help of crack-up wacko farm lady Benson. More problems ensue when he catches up with Clayburgh as the killers reveal themselves. Pryor is later thrown into the mix as a good-hearted thief who helps Wilder in his quest. For 1976, this was pretty well advanced in terms of racey dialogue and stunts, and still holds up nicely today. The most memorable thing is Wilder's classic line when falling off the train. Sadly, you're reminded of the age of the film because of so many of the cast members that have died, and how it makes you think that others probably aren't far off. But it also makes you think of how great they all were as an ensemble that provided a good amount of laughs and suspense.
    7blanche-2

    Funny film with references to some classics

    Gene Wilder is the ordinary man caught up in murder and mayhem on the train "Silver Streak" in this 1976 comedy starring Richard Pryor, Jill Clayburgh, Ned Beatty, Ray Walston, and Patrick McGoohan. In a quasi-homage to Hitchcock, Wilder plays George Caldwell, who falls for the lovely Hilly (Jill Clayburgh) and finds himself mixed up in art fraud, missing letters of Rembrandt, and murder. Not only that, he keeps getting thrown off of the train. One of those times, he meets up with a criminal, Grover Muldoon (Pryor) who happens to be in the police car he steals. In the funniest scene in the film, Grover has George buy the cap, shoe polish, sunglasses and radio from a shoe polisher at the train station and makes George a black jiver so he can get by the feds.

    There are lots of funny scenes in this film, but the best part of it is the chemistry between Wilder and Pryor, who became a successful screen team. This, however, is their best teaming. The bad guys are great. McGoohan and Walston act as if they're in a heavy duty suspense film, which makes them real and threatening. It works perfectly against the comic aspects of the film.

    Hitchcock fans will see this as a mild takeoff on "North by Northwest." It is, but it stands on its own as well.
    7SmileysWorld

    Best teaming of Wilder and Pryor.

    I see Silver Streak as a mild Hitchcock parody that is a nice little blend of comedy and mystery.Gene Wilder,while not at his absolute best,impresses nonetheless here.Jill Clayburgh is credible as the love interest.Yes it is the first film in which Wilder teamed with Richard Pryor,yet Wilder and Pryor are only together for a small percentage of the overall film.The film,though,has a strong enough foundation in terms of story and performances to where Pryor and Wilder do not really need to be together throughout.In fact,this is their best teaming ever despite that fact.To top it all off,the ending is a rather exciting one.A definite worthwhile watch.
    7planktonrules

    A bit like "North By Northwest"...and not the comedy I expected it to be.

    When I began watching "Silver Streak", I assumed it was a zany comedy. After all, it re-teams Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor. So, imagine my surprise when I found that no comedy at all occurred until Pryor appeared in the film...and this wasn't until over an hour into the movie! Even then, it was still basically a drama with a few comedic scenes. This is NOT a complaint....just trying to adjust your expectations for the film.

    George (Wilder) is going cross country by train. Soon after the train leaves, he meets a nice lady, Hilly (Jill Clayburgh) and they REALLY hit it off well....so well they spend the night together in her compartment. But during the night, George thinks he sees a dead man being tossed off the train...but she convinces him he must have imagined it. The next day, it becomes obvious he DID see what he thought....and there's a gang aboard the train that likely will kill him if he keeps digging. At first, they just throw him off the train...and yet again and again George manages to make his way back aboard the train. Along the journey on and off the train, George meets Grover (Pryor) and together they try to solve the crime...a crime now that includes multiple murders!

    In many ways, the film plays like a reworking of the plot to "North By Northwest", as an ordinary man gets sucked into all sorts of crazy and life threatening criminal behavior. But as I said above, it's NOT a comedy...at least overall. There are some funny bits (such as the far from politically correct blackface scene...that is pretty funny)....but the film is much more drama than anything else. Overall, a nice and unique film that I do recommend even if it's NOT mostly comedy.
    8britishdominion

    A Hitchcockian Thriller Played For Laughs

    "Silver Streak" was released the very same year the Master of Suspense, Sir Alfred Hitchcock, released his black-comedy swan song, "Family Plot". Though Hitch was in the very twilight of his long, illustrious career, his playful style was alive and well, and well appropriated, in Hollywood. The Master didn't make this movie - Canadian Arthur ("Love Story") Hiller did - but the unmistakable fingerprints and shop-hewn template of Hitchcock's "North By Northwest" (amongst other classics) are in great display thanks to writer Colin ("Foul Play") Higgins in the cheery, breezy action comedy, "Silver Streak".

    "Silver Streak" is the first of four Gene Wilder & Richard Pryor match-ups and certainly in retrospect, one of the best. Wilder is an ordinary Joe taking the titular Amtrak train across country. In the midst of his journey, he befriends and beds fellow passenger Jill ("An Unmarried Woman") Clayburgh, ends up witnessing a murder then is wrongly accused of the crime, and is thrown off the train many, many times in his pursuit to clear his name, save the girl from a mysterious villain and get to the other side of the country.

    This is a very gentle but funny comedy that plays with the conventions of one of Hitch's favorite themes, the mistaken identity of everyday man in extraordinary circumstances. Wilder is wonderful, fitfully funny as usual and shines as both a romantic lead (!) and does his patented "crazy" guy when things start falling apart. Just watching Wilder's eyes as he exasperatedly tries to explain out the fantastic plot he's wrapped up in to unbelieving characters along the way is one of the film's funniest, simplest rewards.

    The film's masterstroke, however, is the addition of Richard Pryor as a part-time thief. Pryor was in the midst of a very hot career in 1976, and although this film seems to restrain some of the imagination and language of his stage presence and TV specials, (this is a PG-rated movie, after all), he still creates an indelible extended 'cameo' that fuses film with a hip, perfectly cool counterbalance to Wilder's mania and confusion. When Pryor is on screen he not only steals the film, but also elevates this old-fashioned adventure-comedy concept to something otherwise original... and you can't take your eyes off the guy.

    Filmed all across his native Canada (thanks IMDb for confirming this!), director Hiller pulls this fun little audience-pleasing gem along the rails to a bright and exciting climax. The supporting cast is loaded with wonderful character actors including Patrick MacGoohan, Ray (My Favorite Martian) Walston, Ned Beatty and Scatman Crothers amongst others. A very luxurious and memorable score by Henry Mancini is the capper to this sparkling comedy, perfect as a primer for, and a loving compendium of, many of the Hitchcock classics that wait for you to discover them on DVD, VHS or on the tube.

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    Related interests

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    Buddy Comedy
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    Action
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    Comedy
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally meant to be filmed in the United States. However, the National Rail Passenger Corporation (Amtrak) was fearful of adverse publicity, and refused to cooperate. As a result, the producers were forced to work with the Canadian Pacific Railway, using thinly disguised CPRail equipment and shooting exteriors along the CP Rail right-of-way.
    • Goofs
      As George and Grover arrive in "Kansas City," a long shot of the city clearly shows the Calgary Tower, a unique and unmistakable landmark with no equivalent in Kansas City.
    • Quotes

      George Caldwell: You stupid, ignorant son of a bitch, dumb bastard. Jesus Christ. I've met some dumb bastards in my time but you outdo them all.

    • Alternate versions
      When Silver Streak was first shown on TV, it had scenes that were not in the home video version, such as:
      • There's an extra scene of George and Rita talking. She inquires as to if he was riding hobo on the train.
      • A longer scene of Rita and George taking off in the airplane.
      • At the beginning when George arrives at the train station, the taxi driver comments that since George is going from Los Angeles to Chicago and a train that he must be a sucker for boredom.
      • A scene where the Silver Streak is pulling into the Kansas City station, which takes place right before Grover and George rush in.
    • Connections
      Edited into L'homme qui tombe à pic (1981)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Silver Streak?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 24, 1977 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El expreso de Chicago
    • Filming locations
      • Calgary, Alberta, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Frank Yablans Presentations
      • Miller-Milkis Productions
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $6,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $51,079,064
    • Gross worldwide
      • $51,079,075
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 54m(114 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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