Terror Train Blu-ray Movie

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Terror Train Blu-ray Movie United States

Collector's Edition / Blu-ray + DVD
Shout Factory | 1980 | 97 min | Rated R | Oct 16, 2012

Terror Train (Blu-ray Movie)

Price

List price: $59.99
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Buy Terror Train on Blu-ray Movie

Movie rating

6.4
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users3.8 of 53.8
Reviewer3.5 of 53.5
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Overview

Terror Train (1980)

A fraternity masquerade party aboard a chartered train turns deadly when a psychotic classmate sets out for murderous revenge.

Starring: Ben Johnson, Jamie Lee Curtis, Hart Bochner, David Copperfield, Derek McKinnon
Director: Roger Spottiswoode

HorrorUncertain
ThrillerUncertain

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
    Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 (48kHz, 24-bit)

  • Subtitles

    English

  • Discs

    50GB Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
    DVD copy

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region A (locked)

Review

Rating summary

Movie3.5 of 53.5
Video3.5 of 53.5
Audio3.5 of 53.5
Extras2.5 of 52.5
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Terror Train Blu-ray Movie Review

Railway to murder.

Reviewed by Martin Liebman October 14, 2012

All aboard!

How unusual is the world of Horror cinema when a movie breaks from the norm because it stays the course? That's the novelty and, in many ways, the charm and even the brilliance of Terror Train, Director Roger Spottiswoode's (The 6th Day) debut film starring "Scream Queen" Jamie Lee Curtis fresh off her success in Halloween. Terror Train is at first -- and most every -- glance a conventional Slasher in which a teenager is killed off every ten or fifteen minutes by a masked murderer. It's also sufficiently moody and nicely atmospheric. But the movie offers something others of its kind do not, and that's a refreshingly straightforward approach to its storytelling. It rumbles ahead just like the title vehicle and never flinches as it heads not for the genre inevitable but rather a welcome and unexpected finale, unexpected because, well, it actually is expected. It's a little difficult to praise without giving it away, but suffice it to say the movie's success stems from a very linear approach that defies convention and tells its story in a way that heightens the terror and lends to it a sense of credibility and realism that twisty-turny Horror can never quite achieve.

The terror train.


It's a New Year but it's not the same old college pranks. A group of medical students celebrate by luring one of their own into a darkened room with the promise of sex. Kenny (Derek MacKinnon) has a crush on Alana (Curtis) and he jumps at the opportunity to sleep with the girl of his dreams. Alana whispers to him from behind the sheets, but she's not in bed. Kenny instead finds a dismembered corpse in the bed and falls into a panic from which he never recovers. Several years pass. Kenny's still institutionalized but the rest of his class is celebrating with an elaborate costume party on board a train. It's all fun and games and even some impressive magic courtesy of Ken the Magician (David Copperfield) and his assistant. Before the revelers know what's hit them, several of their classmates are dead, the killer's on the loose somewhere in the train, it's certain that Alana is his or her target.

On the way towards that climax that proves both to be both expected and unexpected is a solid little Slasher film with a couple of cool magic shows (starring David Copperfield of all people) to break up the unavoidable monotony of the teenager Slasher in which sex and drinking usually only fill in the gaps between kills. The movie captures a fantastic atmosphere at its open New Years Eve party, with slowly blinking Christmas lights illuminating an otherwise darkened set and portending the awful reveal to come that sets in motion the rest of the movie. Even as the picture fast-forwards a few years, it doesn't loose its mood, remaining chillingly dark and atmospherically effective on board the low-light confines of the speeding train. The movie makes only fair use of its environment and, if it stumbles anywhere, it's in its failure to really create a genuinely cramped and claustrophobic environment which might have upped the sense of panic, inescapability, and inevitability of murder on a train.

Otherwise, Terror Train enjoys a solid premise of simple revenge that always seems to make for the best Horror movies. The mystery pays off nicely and circles back to that whole "expected/unexpected" angle that beautifully shapes the film and defines it as one of the better of its kind. The picture enjoys a well-balanced buildup, taking its time to establish motives and connections to characters and ideas, but it does so without going overboard, without taking too much time and needlessly extending the film. Character development is fine for a movie of this sort, and most of the victims are never built up much beyond what is necessary to make their inevitable deaths mean something in context beyond "body A" and "body B" and so on. Jamie Lee Curtis' performance satisfies, even though her character is nowhere near as memorable as Laurie Strode. The supporting cast does well in getting killed, showing their breasts, or whatever it is that is asked of them. Production design is good, music is efficient, and the direction is solid if not slightly disappointing considering the film's lackluster use of location.


Terror Train Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  3.5 of 5

Terror Train pulls onto Blu-ray with a proficient 1080p transfer. Scream Factory's image is naturally filmic and pleasing to the eye, generally. A steady grain overlay benefits the image's finer details, leaving them intact rather than scrubbed away. Facial and clothing textures are suitably complex, but the film is so dark in nearly every scene that there's nothing that's truly visually extraordinary to see. The transfer's biggest benefit is its stability on larger screens and the Blu-ray resolution more so than tiny details. Colors, likewise, aren't vibrant by the film's nature but rather steady and accurate under the unforgiving lighting conditions. Black levels are fine, and flesh tones present no problems. The opening minutes are a mess of scratches and pops, both of which die down considerably once the action shifts to the train. A few soft shots are scattered throughout, notably during the first magic act. On the whole, this is a good transfer that should please fans and newcomers alike.


Terror Train Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  3.5 of 5

Terror Train's DTS-HD MA 5.1 lossless soundtrack serves the movie well, but it's not a track without flaws. It's never quite seamlessly spaced, huddled around the front-middle with only sparse elements drifting to the sides and into the surrounds. Music is suitably hefty and there's a fair din at the opening bonfire, but not enough to really pull the listening audience into the moment. The train's departure is meant with a good, sturdy rumble and pleasing directional effects. The faster rattle in full speed motion also satisfies. There's not much of an ambience on board the train. However, dialogue and various sound effects are efficiently presented, enjoying suitable clarity and accuracy.


Terror Train Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  2.5 of 5

Terror Train contains four interviews, a TV spot and trailer, and a still gallery.

  • Destination Death (1080p, 12:08): An Interview with Producer Daniel Grodnik.
  • Riding the Rails (1080p, 13:26): An Interview with Production Executive Don Carmody.
  • All Aboard! (1080p, 11:00): An Interview with Production Designer Glenn Bydwell.
  • Music for Murder (1080p, 8:10): An Interview with Composer John Mills-Cockell.
  • TV Spot (480p, DTS-HD MA 2.0, 0:30).
  • Still Gallery (1080p, 4:40): Poster images and photographs from the shoot.
  • Terror Train Trailer (1080p, DTS-HD MA 2.0, 2:28): Say that five times fast.
  • Reversible Cover Art.
  • DVD Copy.


Terror Train Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  3.5 of 5

Terror Train's "unexpected" ending remains one of the better in Slasher film history, if only because it's honest and true to life, not some convoluted and contrived finale, a twisty end only for the sake of a twisty end. That sincerity goes a long way in making a routine film something special and memorable, a difficult but admirable achievement in a world filled with cookie cutter, mindless Horror entertainment. Scream Factory's Blu-ray release of Terror Train features good video, adequate audio, and a fair collection of extras. Recommended.


Other editions

Terror Train: Other Editions