Information about Runaway Train (film)

Runaway Train

Promotional movie poster for the film
Directed byAndrei Konchalovsky
Produced byRichard Garcia
Yoram Globus
Menahem Golan
Robert A. Goldston
Mati Raz
Henry T. Weinstein
Robert Whitmore
Written byRyuzo Kikushima (story)
Hideo Oguni (story)
Djordje Milicevic (screenplay)
Edward Bunker (screenplay)
Paul Zindel (screenplay)
based on a screenplay by
Akira Kurosawa
StarringJon Voight
Eric Roberts
Rebecca De Mornay
Kyle T. Heffner
Music byTrevor Jones
Alan Howarth (uncredited)
CinematographyAlan Hume
Editing byHenry Richardson
Distributed byThe Cannon Group Inc.
Release date(s)6 December 1985 (limited) 17 January 1986 (wide)
CountryUSA/Israel
LanguageEnglish
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile


Runaway Train is a 1985, Oscar-nominated film which tells the story of two escaped convicts and a female train worker who are stuck on a runaway train as it barrels through snowy desolate Alaska. The movie has a gritty, uninviting atmosphere. It stars Jon Voight as Oscar "Manny" Manheim, Eric Roberts as Buck, John P. Ryan as Associate Warden Ranken and Rebecca De Mornay as Sara.

The movie was written by Edward Bunker, Ryuzo Kikushima, Akira Kurosawa, Djordje Milicevic, Hideo Oguni and Paul Zindel. It was directed by Andrei Konchalovsky.

It was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Actor (Jon Voight), Best Supporting Actor (Eric Roberts) and Editing.

Production

The Alaska Railroad Corporation (ARRC) decided that their name and logo would not be shown. The filming took place near Portage Glacier, Whittier and Grandview.

The prison scenes at the beginning of the movie were filmed in Deer Lodge, Montana, and some railroad yard scenes were filmed in Anaconda, Montana.

Plot

The film follows the escape of two prisoners, the efforts of a train dispatching office to safely stop the out of control train they are on and the efforts of their warden to capture them.

Jon Voight plays Oscar Manheim, aka Manny, a convict in an Alaska prison who was considered so dangerous that the doors to his cell were welded shut. After a court order compels Manny's nemesis, the vindictive Associate Warden Ranken (played by John P. Ryan), to release him back into the general prison population, he plans his escape. Buck (played by Eric Roberts) is another convict who works in the prison's laundry room and conspires to smuggle Manny out. Buck decides to escape with Manny (who reluctantly allows Buck to join him) and the two hop on board a freight train at a remote Alaska railyard just as the engineer suffers a heart attack and collapses. Neither the two convicts nor the railroad dispatchers are aware that the train is now a runaway. The only railroad worker left on the train is Sara, played by Rebecca De Mornay.

The train barrels through the remote, snowy Alaska wilderness at high speed. Once the dispatchers discover it is a runaway and that they cannot stop it as the automated brakes are not working, they attempt to keep the tracks clear for the runaway and plan on derailing it, assuming nobody is left on the train. The dispatchers soon learn that the train is not unmanned when a railroad worker who they have just instructed to switch the train to a dead-end reports that someone on the train (Sara) is blowing the whistle. Warden Ranken believes his two escaped convicts are aboard the train after the state police discover prison clothes at the railyard Manny and Buck departed from. Meanwhile, the two fugitives have discovered that Sara is also on board and the three attempt to stop the train. They slow the train by disabling two of the four locomotives, but they can not stop the train without reaching the front engine which they can not reach because there is no walkway connecting the first and second engines.

Eventually the dispatchers discover that the train is approaching a curve in the track which would derail the train because it is travelling too rapidly. The curve is adjacent to a chemical plant and the dispatchers decide they must switch the runaway onto a dead-end siding and send the three people on the train to almost certain death rather than risk a catastrophic chemical spill.

Manny shows a violent streak throughout the film and repeatedly asserts his dominance over Buck, while Buck is portrayed more as a victim of circumstances and not very intelligent. Manny is resolved not to return to prison, even if it means his own death; this leads to the film's conclusion as Manny makes a perilous leap to the lead engine, handcuffs Warden Ranken (who successfully boards the first train engine by helicopter), disconnects the first train engine from the rest of the units (with Buck and Sara on board), and doesn't shut off the train; which takes Manny and Ranken down a dead-end siding, presumably to crash to their death.

Theme

The primary theme of the film is that no individual or society can understand and control everything. The powerlessness that the train dispatchers experience in their attempts to bring the train to a controlled stop is the same powerlessness that Manny feels about his own inability to become a normal member of society.

This theme is brought into sharp focus in an intense speech in which Manny tells Buck that he should get a job and earn a paycheck after his escape instead of pursuing a life of crime. Buck replies that he would rather be in prison than do menial labor, and when he asks Manny if he would do that kind of work for a living, Manny replies quietly, "I wish I could."

Later in the film, after giving the order to derail the train, the chief dispatcher asks himself, "How did this happen? Why couldn't we stop it...?" As the events of the film unfold, Manny has the power to stop the train, but chooses not to. By the end of the film his goal in reaching the lead engine is no longer to stop the train, but simply to be the one who decides whether or not the train stops. Since he knows that if he stops the train he will never be able to control his own life, he concludes that the last choice he can make about his own fate and the only way he can be free is to let the train continue on to its destruction.

The film also features lesser thematic threads, including cruelty (Ranken), innocence (Sara) and most notably redemption, as shown when Manny uncouples the lead engine from the rest of the train, saving the lives of Buck and Sara as his final act before climbing on top of the engine in the freezing cold with his arms stretched out like a crucifix, ready to meet his end.

Technical errors

The film has several technical errors or oversights:
  • When the engineer has the heart attack he puts the brakes of the train in emergency which in real life would stop it.
  • Most, if not all North American locomotives feature an alerter or dead man's switch. This would have caused a penalty brake application in real life, in the event the locomotive engineer becomes disabled.
  • The 2nd locomotive depicted in the film (an EMD F-unit) does indeed have an access door at the rear of the carbody.
  • When Voight's character uncouples the lead locomotive from the train, the severing of the brake hoses should have resulted in an emergency brake application of the train.
  • Most freight trains in the mid-1980s still had a minimum of four men in a crew per work rules.

External links

Andrey Sergeyevich Mikhalkov-Konchalovsky (Russian: Андре́й Серге́евич
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Full name Richard Garcia
Date of birth September 4 1981 (1981--) (age 26)
Place of birth
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Yoram Globus (born 1941 in Tiberias, Palestine (now Israel)) is a film producer and financier who, along with his cousin, Menahem Golan (born Menahem Globus) bought the Cannon Group production company in 1979 and ran it throughout the 1980s.
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Menahem Golan (Hebrew: מנחם גולן‎) (born Menahem Globus
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Henry T. Weinstein (born July 12, 1924, Brooklyn, New York City, USA, died September 17, 2000, Boca Raton, Florida, USA) was an American film producer.

Filmography as producer

  • Something's Got to Give (1962, unfinished)
  • Tender Is the Night

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Akira Kurosawa

Akira Kurosawa on the set of Kagemusha (1980).

Born March 23 1910(1910--)
Ota, Tokyo, Japan
Died September 6 1998 (aged 88)
Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan


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Motto
"In God We Trust"   (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum"   ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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Anthem
Hatikvah
The Hope


Capital
(and largest city) Jerusalem

Official languages Hebrew, Arabic
Demonym Israeli
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English}}} 
Writing system: Latin (English variant) 
Official status
Official language of: 53 countries
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: en
ISO 639-2: eng
ISO 639-3: eng  
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-1985- 1986 1987 1988  1989 .  1990 .  1991 .  1992  . 1993  . 1994  . 1995 
In home video: 1982 1983 1984 -1985- 1986 1987 1988     
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Academy Award

Awarded for Excellence in cinematic achievements
Presented by Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Country United States
First awarded May 16, 1929 to honor achievements of 1927/1928
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train is a series of rail vehicles that move along guides to transport freight or passengers from one place to another. The guideway (permanent way) usually consists of conventional rail tracks, but might also be monorail or maglev.
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Runaway Train may refer to:
  • Runaway Train (film)
  • Runaway Train (album), by Oleander
  • "Runaway Train" (song), by Soul Asylum
  • A song by Elton John and Eric Clapton, included on John's album The One and featured in the movie

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Alaska

Flag of Alaska Seal
Nickname(s): The Last Frontier
Motto(s): "North to the Future"

Official language(s) None[1]
Spoken language(s) English 85.7%,
Native North American 5.
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Jon Voight

Jon Voight in 2006.
Birth name Jonathan Vincent Voight
Born November 29 1938 (1938--) (age 70)
Yonkers, New York

Spouse(s)
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Eric Roberts

Birth name Eric Anthony Roberts
Born March 18 1956 (1956--) (age 51)
Biloxi, Mississippi

Spouse(s) Eliza Garrett (1992-)


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John P. Ryan

Born July 30 1936
New York City
Died March 20 2007

John P. Ryan (July 30 1936 – March 20 2007[1]) was an American film actor, perhaps best known for his role as "Warden Ranken" in the 1985 film
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Rebecca De Mornay

Birth name Rebecca J. Pearch
Born July 29 1959 (1959--) (age 48)
Santa Rosa, California, U.S.
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''For the founder of Bunkerville, Nevada, see Edward Bunker (Mormon).

Edward Bunker (Los Angeles, December 31, 1933 – July 19, 2005 in Burbank, California) was an American author of crime fiction, a screenwriter, and an actor.
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Akira Kurosawa

Akira Kurosawa on the set of Kagemusha (1980).

Born March 23 1910(1910--)
Ota, Tokyo, Japan
Died September 6 1998 (aged 88)
Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan


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Paul Zindel (b. May 15 1936, New York City – d. March 27 2003) was an American author, playwright and educator.

Throughout his teen years he wrote plays, though he trained as a chemist at Wagner College and spent six months working at Allied Chemical after
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Andrey Sergeyevich Mikhalkov-Konchalovsky (Russian: Андре́й Серге́евич
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Academy Award

Awarded for Excellence in cinematic achievements
Presented by Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Country United States
First awarded May 16, 1929 to honor achievements of 1927/1928
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Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role is one of the Academy Awards of Merit presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry.
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Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role is one of the Academy Awards of Merit presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry.
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The Academy Award for Film Editing was first given for films issued in 1934.

1930s

  • 1934 Eskimo/Mala The Magnificent (see Ray Mala) - Conrad A.

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Alaska Railroad

Reporting marks ARR
Locale Alaska
Dates of operation 1914 – present

Track gauge 4 ft 8 in (1435 mm) (standard gauge)

Headquarters Anchorage The Alaska Railroad (AAR reporting marks ARR
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Type Mountain glacier
Location Alaska, U.S.
Coordinates _ 6043′38″N,
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Whittier, Alaska
Whittier, Alaska

Seal
Motto:
Location of Whittier, Alaska
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Alaska
Census Area Valdez-Cordova

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Deer Lodge, Montana

Seal
Motto:
Location of Deer Lodge, Montana
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Montana
County Powell
Area
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