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Runaway Train

  • 1985
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
35K
YOUR RATING
Runaway Train (1985)
Theatrical Trailer from MGM/UA
Play trailer2:37
1 Video
99+ Photos
B-ActionDisasterPsychological DramaSurvivalActionAdventureDramaThriller

Two escaped convicts and a female railway worker find themselves trapped on a speeding train with no brakes and nobody driving.Two escaped convicts and a female railway worker find themselves trapped on a speeding train with no brakes and nobody driving.Two escaped convicts and a female railway worker find themselves trapped on a speeding train with no brakes and nobody driving.

  • Director
    • Andrei Konchalovsky
  • Writers
    • Akira Kurosawa
    • Djordje Milicevic
    • Paul Zindel
  • Stars
    • Jon Voight
    • Eric Roberts
    • Rebecca De Mornay
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    35K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Andrei Konchalovsky
    • Writers
      • Akira Kurosawa
      • Djordje Milicevic
      • Paul Zindel
    • Stars
      • Jon Voight
      • Eric Roberts
      • Rebecca De Mornay
    • 244User reviews
    • 62Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 3 Oscars
      • 2 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos1

    Runaway Train
    Trailer 2:37
    Runaway Train

    Photos157

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Jon Voight
    Jon Voight
    • Manny
    Eric Roberts
    Eric Roberts
    • Buck
    Rebecca De Mornay
    Rebecca De Mornay
    • Sara
    Kyle T. Heffner
    Kyle T. Heffner
    • Frank Barstow
    John P. Ryan
    John P. Ryan
    • Ranken
    T.K. Carter
    T.K. Carter
    • Dave Prince
    Kenneth McMillan
    Kenneth McMillan
    • Eddie MacDonald
    Stacey Pickren
    • Ruby
    Walter Wyatt
    • Conlan
    Edward Bunker
    Edward Bunker
    • Jonah
    Reid Cruickshanks
    Reid Cruickshanks
    • Al Turner
    • (as Reid Cruikshanks)
    Dan Wray
    • Fat Con
    Michael Lee Gogin
    • Short Con
    John Bloom
    John Bloom
    • Tall Con
    Hank Worden
    Hank Worden
    • Old Con
    • (as Norton E. 'Hank' Warden)
    John Otrin
    John Otrin
    • Cat Con
    Norman Alexander Gibbs
    • Queen Con
    Dennis Ott
    • Guard
    • Director
      • Andrei Konchalovsky
    • Writers
      • Akira Kurosawa
      • Djordje Milicevic
      • Paul Zindel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews244

    7.235.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8hitchcockthelegend

    Win, lose, what's the difference?

    Based around a screenplay written by the legendary Akira Kurosawa, Runaway Train simultaneously follows three threads. The escape of two prisoners, Manny & Buck, who jump on a train only to find that the driver has a heart attack, thus it speeds out of control. Then there is the efforts of the train dispatching office to try and safely stop the out-of-control train. And also there's the hunt by the sadistic prison warden who is hellbent on recapturing the fleeing convicts.

    Relentless and engrossing action film from start to finish, Runaway Train boasts two Oscar nominated performances from John Voight {Manny} and Eric Roberts {Buck} and no little intelligence with its well scripted characters. The opening quarter is pretty stock routine prison fare, these guys are tough, the warden is a bastard and we just know they are going to escape. But once the guys board the train the whole film shifts in gear and tone. The dynamic that exists between Manny & Buck, partners but very different in life approach, is riveting stuff courtesy of the nifty dialogue exchanges. Things are further enhanced by the appearance of Rebecca DeMornay's also stranded railway worker, Sara, who far from being a shoe-horned token female character, is the crucial piece of the emotional jigsaw. He presence gives the guys room to exorcise their demons and pour out their feelings of anger, bravado and mistrust.

    The action scenes are very well handled by director Andrei Konchalovsky and his crew. As the train hurtles thru the snowy Alaskan wilderness we are treated to a number of crash bang wallops involving the train itself; derring-do from our boys on the icy outside of the locomotive, and a helicopter pursuit chartered by the obsessed John P. Ryan as Warden Ranken particularly stand out. Bona fide action sequences that are executed skilfully. Then we get to the finale, a finale pumped up for emotional impact, both visually and orally it closes the film justly. We even get time for a bit of Will Shakespeare as we go about reflecting on what we have just witnessed. A fine movie it be. 7.5/10
    9fertilecelluloid

    A modest masterpiece

    The stock title promises action and suspense, and we get that, but with a story by Akira Kurosawa, expert direction by Russian émigré Andrei Konchalovsky and superior lensing by Alan Hume, we get a study of what defines a man.

    John Voight and the vastly underrated Eric Roberts play two cons who escape from a hellish gulag and board a train with no driver. Their struggle to stop the train and battle their own inner demons is the movie.

    Konchalovsky creates a cold, alien, ethereal world inside the train that, in the oddest way, provides a haven for self-examination for the two leads. Rebecca de Mournay is layered into the mix, as is the indefatigable John P. Ryan as a prison warden who risks death to return his charges to custody, but the movie belongs to Voight and Roberts who both bring tremendous humanity to their finely sketched characters.

    The final image is as powerful as cinema gets and marks RUNAWAY TRAIN as a modest masterpiece.

    Though often criticized for producing cheap rubbish, the Cannon Group, in fact, also produced many fine films including this, 52 PICK-UP and MARIA'S LOVERS (also Konchalovsky).
    Jaime N. Christley

    a knock-out!

    Everything about this film has a surreal, visceral, in-your-face quality; the anguished, violent intensity of the prison scenes, the frozen wastelands of the lands outside the prison (gee, a metaphor?), the train -- not just a lifeless machine but a huge, juggernaut-like beast -- that the title refers to, the fierce, animalistic performance by Jon Voight, who plays the character of Manny with such raw emotion and conviction that at no moment do we doubt that he is anything other than what he appears to be on screen.

    It's based on a screenplay by the legendary Akira Kurosawa -- knowing this makes a lot of the elements a bit more familiar; the snow, the hopelessness, the apocalyptic atmosphere -- and it's directed by Russian Andrei Konchalovsky, who after this film directed two Hollywood embarrassments called "Homer & Eddie" and "Tango & Cash" (apparently trying to corner the market on ampersands), and most recently helmed the acclaimed Armand Assante mini-series "The Odyssey" for television. "Runaway Train" is not a perfect film, some of the minor supporting performances are really awful and some viewers may find Eric Roberts to be irritating, but the sheer kineticism, among the other stronger elements, makes it worthwhile. Often called an intellectual action picture, it's more of an existential one, i.e. man versus a indifferent/hostile universe, etc. Everything in the film has a greater, more universal meaning, and it's not rocket science to figure out what stands for what. The simplicity of its metaphors doesn't dull the impact of "Runaway Train" as a sensory experience, though, because it's still pretty potent stuff. Provided you're not completely close-minded, this is one you'll remember for a long, long time.
    tedg

    Movement

    Having seen "Unstoppable," I had to see this.

    It is hard to know what influence Kurosawa had on this, but one can guess. He had been through his rejection in Japan, suicide attempt and film made and financed by the Soviets. He subsequently arranged scant funding for this, started and was foiled. What we have now is supposedly completely reworked. But what we see is Soviet iconography in the trains and snow, and Shakespearean motion toward tragedy. (Kurosawa would do the Shakespearean "Ran" instead of this, and we are lucky for that.)

    So this comment will not be on the acting, though Voight is not only superb, but inhabits the character as we fear we would. It is about the icons and the camera. I think we have inherited this from Akira.

    The trains have been painted to be big flat black hulks, reshaped with plywood to resemble Soviet machines. We have a Soviet director. Early in the film, we have that train (four locomotives) hit the end of another, demolishing it. In the process, the front of our beast is turned into a ragged tear of heavy metal, racing madly through heavy snow, angry at the weather.

    "Unstoppable" takes a few scenes from this: the hitting of the end of another train; the bridge that has the fatal speed limit; the "soldier" lowered from a chopper then pummeled. But it is an altogether different film. Scott is all about energy in the camera. Every scene moves in a dance that is composed. The rhythm and energy is in our eye. He works to give is narrative stances for that eye: TeeVee cameras, characters that are observers and others that comment on observation.

    The train is only a prop, the characters only something to carry the narrative thrust. The art is in the eye, on our side of the wall.

    This film has three animals: Voight's character, a convict driven to heroic madness, the opposing warden who is every bit as demented and colorful. Both of these are runaway trains, bested by the train itself which has agency of its own. It seems to have killed and ejected the engineer, enticed two convicts aboard, then gone mad, attracting the warden as well. It is "imprisoned" in a braid of rails, designed here to relate to the train as the remarkable prison building is to the humans.

    All the cameras are static except the ones following the train, some of which race through the woods the same way we saw in "Rashoman."

    It seems that like with "Star Wars," Kurosawa can bless a film by merely breathing on it.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
    Infofreak

    Strong contender for the best action movie of all time!

    'Runaway Train' is a rare thing, an intelligent action movie, full of both exciting sequences and strong character development. This combination makes it all that much more suspenseful and powerful. For me it could well be the best action movie of all time. Interestingly enough it's based on a screenplay by Kurosawa, but criminal turned novelist Edward Bunker (who plays Jonah here but is best known to most people as Mr. Blue in 'Reservoir Dogs') gets the main writing credit. Jon Voight gives one of his very best performances as Manny, but Eric Roberts is also just great. Roberts is overlooked these days, making too many b-grade and straight-to-video movies to be taken seriously, but boy, back in the day this guy was GOOD! Check him out here, and in 'Star 80', and especially 'The Pope Of Greenwich Village' with Mickey Rourke. Roberts actually scored an Oscar nomination for 'Runaway Train'. Just why his career subsequently went in the direction it did is one of the great mysteries of Hollywood. Voight and Roberts are supported by Rebecca De Mornay, super tough guy John P. Ryan ('It's Alive') and well loved character actor Kenneth McMillan. Also keep an eye out for Danny Trejo in the boxing sequence towards the very beginning of the film. 'Runaway Train' is a movie I never tire of watching. The interplay between Voight and Roberts is wonderful to watch, the action sequences are breathtaking, and the ending is one of the all time greats!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Danny Trejo was visiting a friend who was working as a production assistant on the set when he was offered a job as an extra. Edward Bunker recognized Trejo because they served time in San Quentin State Prison together. Bunker helped Trejo get hired as Eric Roberts' boxing coach. Director Andrei Konchalovsky was so impressed with Trejo that he gave him a small role. Trejo later stated that he was staggered to find out that the coaching job earned him $320 per day, which was more than he had ever gotten from a robbery.
    • Goofs
      Some have pointed out that the dead man's switch, a device intended for this exact situation, should have put on the brakes and stopped the train. Indeed it should have - however, it is explained in the film that the dead man's switch malfunctioned. Furthermore it has been pointed out that in a real situation the emergency brake application by the engineer would have switched the throttle to idle bringing the train to a stop. Although true, this shouldn't be considered a goof as factual accuracy would not allow further evolving of events.
    • Quotes

      Manny: [after listening to Buck's dream] That's bullshit. You're not gonna do nothin' like that. I'll tell you what you gonna do. You gonna get a job. That's what you gonna do. You're gonna get a little job. Some job a convict can get, like scraping off trays in a cafeteria. Or cleaning out toilets. And you're gonna hold onto that job like gold. Because it is gold. Let me tell you, Jack, that is gold. You listenin' to me? And when that man walks in at the end of the day. And he comes to see how you done, you ain't gonna look in his eyes. You gonna look at the floor. Because you don't want to see that fear in his eyes when you jump up & grab his face, and slam him to the floor, and make him scream & cry for his life. So you look right at the floor, Jack. Pay attention to what I'm sayin', motherfucker! And then he's gonna look around the room - see how you done. And he's gonna say "Oh, you missed a little spot over there. Jeez, you didn't get this one here. What about this little bitty spot?" And you're gonna suck all that pain inside you, and you're gonna clean that spot. And you're gonna clean that spot. Until you get that shiny clean. And on Friday, you pick up your paycheck. And if you could do that, if you could do that, you could be president of Chase Manhattan... corporations! If you could do that.

      Buck: Not me, man! I wouldn't do that kind of shit. I'd rather be in fuckin' jail.

      Manny: More's the pity, youngster. More's the pity.

      Buck: Could you do that kind of shit?

      Manny: I wish I could.

    • Crazy credits
      "No beast so fierce but knows some touch of pity." "But I know none, and therefore am no beast." Richard III - William Shakespeare
    • Alternate versions
      The DVD mysteriously edits out the shot of the first helicopter policeman being run over by the wheels of the train. You see him crash into the train windshield and see him fall off, but then you see just a plain shot of the wheels. In all other versions of the film on video and laserdisc have a shot of this man's face coming right at the camera as his body is run over by the wheels of the train. Even the US TV version has a brief shot of this. This shot is present in the UK Arrow Films DVD release.
    • Connections
      Edited into Terreur en Alaska (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Gloria in D Major
      by Antonio Vivaldi (as Vivaldi)

      Performed by The USSR Academic Russian Chorus and the Moscow Conservatoire Students Orchestra

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    • Why did Manny and Buck cover their skin with grease and plastic wrap during their escape?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 21, 1986 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Runaway Train, à bout de course
    • Filming locations
      • Old Montana Prison - 1106 Main Street, Deer Lodge, Montana, USA
    • Production companies
      • Golan-Globus Productions
      • Northbrook Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $9,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $7,683,620
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,683,620
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 51 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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