May 24, 2012

Films

The Ghost Train – 1927 | 74 mins | Comedy, Thriller | B&W

Plot Synopsis

The Ghost Train

This earliest film version of Arnold Ridley’s popular theatrical play The Ghost Train was filmed at Germanys UFA Studios by a British cast and crew. Guy Newall stars as Teddy Deakin, one of several railroad passengers stranded on a winter’s night in a remote Cornish train station. Adding to the passengers discomfort is the legend that a ‘ghost train’ has haunted the station for 20 years ever since a train went off a nearby bridge into the river. Locals say the phantom train runs along an abandoned rail line, bringing sudden death in its wake. It turns out that the ghost train is a hoax, perpetrated by a gang of gunrunners to cover up their activities. But the seemingly ineffectual Teddy Deakin offers a few surprises of his own before the villains are thwarted.

Playwright Arnold Ridley is perhaps best remembered today as the kindly Private Godfrey in BBC television’s long-running Dad’s Army series. He wrote the play whilst enduring a four-hour delay during a train journey from the Midlands, Ridley found himself on the deserted Mangotsfield Station platform and quietly conceived the idea.

Production Team

Géza von Bolváry: Director
Oscar Werndorff: Art Direction
Michael Balcon: Producer
Hermann Fellner: Producer
Benno Vigny: Script
Adolf Lantz: Script

Cast

John Manners: Charles Murdock
Guy Newall: Teddy Deakin
Louis Ralph: Soul Hodgkin



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