Terror
Train
(1980)
directed
by Roger Spottiswoode
reviewed by Jonathan Rocks
04.10.2008
After the success of John Carpenter's “Halloween”,
the horror film industry began looking for ways to capitalize on the slasher genre. While some of the products of this era are
pure schlock, there are a few that ended up being decent films in their own
right. One such film is 1980's “Terror
Train”. It may not stand the test of time quite as good as those that
inspired it, but it still yields enough creepy imagery to warrant a viewing,
especially for those of us who consider ourselves fans of the genre.
The story is about a group of fraternity brothers who, as freshman, played a
horrible prank on a fellow pledge that not only drove him out of school, but
put him right into a mental institution. Now, four years later, those same frat
guys have chartered a party train to celebrate their upcoming graduation with a
costume party (despite the fact that the film takes place in January.) When an
uninvited guest starts to kill off the members of the frat one by one, there
seems to be only one person with reason to do so-- or is there?
The film was not quite as cheesy as it sounds. Sure, it's a complete product of
it's time-- complete with a disco soundtrack and a co-starring role for
then-newcomer David Copperfield. But the
film does have an upside. First off, the idea of the killer
using the costumes of each victim in order to get around the train worked
beautifully. In fact, some of the costumes were quite creepy when used
as the mask of a killer (Groucho Marx never looked so
scary.) Also, the cinematography was very impressive, thanks to frequent
Stanley Kubrick collaborator John Alcott. And
of course seventies scream queen Jamie Lee Curtis is the
heroine-- as she is seemingly in every horror film of the decade.
The film was pretty tame by today's standards-- actually it was tame even by
seventies standards. Most of the more brutal scenes take place off camera, and
there is not much blood in the film at all. But still had its fair amount of
scary moments, and it will keep you guessing about the killer's true identity
right up to the end. So, If you can look past the seventies score, and campy
plot, I think you'll find it's something of a forgotten classic of the genre.
Score: 3 out of 5
Purchase this DVD at Amazon.com: TERROR
TRAIN