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Train of Events

Film still

Train of Events - 1949 | 88 mins | Drama | B&W

The Production Team

Director: Sidney Cole, Charles Crichton and Basil Dearden.
Producer: Michael Balcon.
Associate Producer: Michael Relph.
Script: Basil Dearden, T.E.B. Clarke, Ronald Millar and Angus MacPhail.
Cinematography: Lionel Banes and Gordon Dines.
Art Direction: Malcolm Baker-Smith and Jim Morahan.
Editing: Bernard Gribble.
Music: Leslie Bridgewater.

The Cast

The Engine Driver: Directed by Sidney Cole.
Jack Warner - Jim Hardcastle
Gladys Henson - Mrs Hardcastle
Susan Shaw - Doris Hardcastle
Patric Doonan - Ron Stacey
Miles Malleson - Timekeeper
Leslie Phillips - Stacey's Fireman
Prisoner of War: Directed by Basil Dearden.
Joan Dowling - Ella
Laurence Payne - Richard
Olga Lindo - Mrs Bailey
The Composer: Directed by Charles Crichton.
Valerie Hobson - Stella
John Clements - Raymond Hillary
Irina Baronova - Irina
John Gregson - Malcolm
Gwen Cherrell - Charmian
Jacqueline Byrne - TV announcer
The Actor: Directed by Basil Dearden.
Peter Finch - Philip
Mary Morris - Louise
Laurence Naismith - Joe Hunt
Doris Yorke - Mrs Hunt
Michael Hordern - Plain-clothes Man
Charles Morgan - Plain-clothes Man
Guy Verney - Producer
Mark Dignam - Bolingbroke

Plot Synopsis

Train of Events, was an unsuccessful attempt to harness several members of the team in a portmanteau film, a formula that had earlier worked superbly with Dead of Night. The plot followed the stories of three sets of people travelling on a night train from Euston to Liverpool, plus the engine driver (Jack Warner, inevitably saying farewell to Gladys Henson as his wife). The mood of each segment was deliberately contrasted, and the reasons for the presence of the passengers were revealed in flashbacks. An actor has murdered unfaithful wife, an orphan girl is in love with a fugitive German prisoner-of-war, and a famous conductor cannot choose between his wife and a glamorous pianist.

The first two of these three sequences are melodramatic, and directed by Basil Dearden, the third is an unsuccessful attempt at sophisticated comedy by Charles Crichton. The engine driver sequences were directed by Sidney Cole. The problems of characters are solved by the finality of death - the train is doomed to crash, a fact revealed near the beginning, leaving the audience to speculate on who will survive.
Extract© George Perry: Forever Ealing.