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Horror Express (1973)
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Overview
Writers (WGA):
Arnaud d'Usseau (screenplay) andJulian Zimet (screenplay) (originally as Julian Halevy)
Release Date:
January 1974 (USA) moreTagline:
Can it be stopped? morePlot:
An English anthropologist (Christopher Lee) has discovered a frozen monster in the frozen wastes of... more | add synopsisAwards:
1 win moreUser Comments:
Outstanding! moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Christopher Lee | ... | Sir Alexander Saxton | |
| Peter Cushing | ... | Dr. Wells | |
| Alberto de Mendoza | ... | Father Pujardov | |
| Silvia Tortosa | ... | Countess Irina Petrovska | |
| Julio Peña | ... | Inspector Mirov | |
| Ángel del Pozo | ... | Yevtushenko (as Angel del Pozo) | |
| Helga Liné | ... | Natasha | |
| Alice Reinheart | ... | Miss Jones | |
| José Jaspe | ... | Conductor Koniev | |
| George Rigaud | ... | Count Maryan Petrovski (as Jorge Rigaud) | |
| Víctor Israel | ... | Luggage Worker | |
| Faith Clift | ... | American Passenger | |
| Juan Olaguivel | ... | Creature (as Juan Olaguibel) | |
| Barta Barri | ... | First Telegraphist | |
| Peter Beckman |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Pánico en el Transiberiano (Spain)Panic in the Trans-Siberian Train (International: English title)
Dödsexpressen (Sweden) [sv]
Expresso do Horror (Brazil) (DVD title) [pt]
Kauhun pikajuna (Finland) (video title) [fi]
Terreur dans le Shanghaï-Express (France) [fr]
more
Parents Guide:
View content advisory for parentsRuntime:
USA:90 min | USA:88 min | Spain:84 minLanguage:
EnglishColor:
Color (Technicolor)Aspect Ratio:
1.66 : 1 moreSound Mix:
MonoCertification:
Finland:K-16 (1990) | Australia:M | Norway:15 | Spain:13 | UK:15 (video rating) (1994) | UK:X (original rating) | USA:R | Germany:16MOVIEmeter: 
No change since last week
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Fun Stuff
Trivia:
The train interior sets and the train model used for the exterior shots were the same sets that the producer/director had just used for their collaboration Pancho Villa (1972), which had just finished production and which also featured Telly Savalas. moreGoofs:
Miscellaneous: In the opening credits of the English-language VHS version, Christopher Lee's name is misspelled as "Cristopher". moreQuotes:
Yevtushenko: I'm an engineer. A scientist. And this is ordinary chalk. How do you explain it not writing on that crate?Professor Saxton: [defensive] Hypnosis! Yoga! These mystics can be terribly convincing. They can even hypnotise themselves.
more
Movie Connections:
Featured in Nightmare Theatre's Late Night Chill-o-Rama Horror Show Vol. 1 (1996) (V) moreFAQ
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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!