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{{Short description|1949 British film by Sidney Cole et al}}
{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}}
{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}}
{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = Train of Events
| name = Train of Events
| image = Train_of_Events_original_poster.jpg
| image = Train_of_Events_original_poster.jpg
| caption = Original British quad format poster
| caption = Original British quad poster
| director = [[Sidney Cole]]<br/>[[Charles Crichton]]<br/>[[Basil Dearden]]
| director = [[Sidney Cole]]<br/>[[Charles Crichton]]<br/>[[Basil Dearden]]
| producer = [[Michael Balcon]]<br/>[[Michael Relph]]
| producer = [[Michael Balcon]]<br/>[[Michael Relph]]
| writer = [[T.E.B. Clarke]]<br/>[[Basil Dearden]]<br/>[[Angus MacPhail]]<br/>[[Ronald Millar]]
| writer = [[T.E.B. Clarke]]<br/>[[Basil Dearden]]<br/>[[Angus MacPhail]]<br/>[[Ronald Millar]]
| starring = [[Jack Warner (actor)|Jack Warner]] <br/>[[Peter Finch]] <br/>[[Valerie Hobson]]
| starring = [[Jack Warner (actor)|Jack Warner]] <br/>[[Peter Finch]] <br/>[[Valerie Hobson]]
| music = Leslie Bridgewater
| music = Leslie Bridgewater
| cinematography = Lionel Banes<br/>[[Paul Beeson]]<br/>[[Gordon Dines]]
| cinematography = [[Lionel Banes]]<br/>[[Paul Beeson]]<br/>[[Gordon Dines]]
| editing = [[Bernard Gribble]]
| editing = [[Bernard Gribble]]
| studio = [[Ealing Studios]]
| studio = [[Ealing Studios]]
| distributor = [[General Film Distributors|GFD]] {{small|(UK)}}
| distributor = [[General Film Distributors|GFD]] {{small|(UK)}}
| released = {{Film date|df=y|1949|08|18|UK}}
| released = {{Film date|df=y|1949|08|18|UK}}
| runtime = 90 minutes
| runtime = 90 minutes
| country = United Kingdom
| country = United Kingdom
| language = English
| language = English
| budget = £144,978<ref name="money">Chapman, J. (2022). The Money Behind the Screen: A History of British Film Finance, 1945–1985. Edinburgh University Press p 356.</ref>
| budget =
}}
}}


'''''Train of Events''''' is a 1949 British [[portmanteau film]] made by [[Ealing Studios]] and directed by [[Sidney Cole]], [[Charles Crichton]] and [[Basil Dearden]]. It tells the story about a train that crashes into a stalled petrol tanker at a level (grade) crossing, and then flashes back and tells four different stories about some of the passengers before the crash.
'''''Train of Events''''' is a 1949 British [[portmanteau film]] made by [[Ealing Studios]], directed by [[Sidney Cole]], [[Charles Crichton]] and [[Basil Dearden]] and starring [[Jack Warner (actor)|Jack Warner]], [[Peter Finch]] and [[Valerie Hobson]].<ref name="BFIsearch2">{{Cite web |title=Train of Events |url=https://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceFilmWorks/150043272 |access-date=8 December 2023 |publisher=British Film Institute}}</ref> The film premiered on 18 August 1949 at the [[Gaumont Haymarket]] in London.<ref>{{cite news |date=18 August 1949 |title=Picture Theatres, Gaumont |page=10 |newspaper=The Times |url=http://find.galegroup.com/ttda/infomark.do?&source=gale&prodId=TTDA&userGroupName=kenlib&tabID=T003&docPage=article&searchType=&docId=CS167987474&type=multipage&contentSet=LTO&version=1.0 |access-date=2015-06-22}}</ref> In the film, as a train is heading for a crash into a stalled petrol tanker at a level crossing, four different stories are told in flashback.


==Plot==
==Plot==
A [[Liverpool]]-bound train departs from [[Euston railway station|Euston]] station in London in the period immediately after World War II. After dark, the train is travelling north at speed when a lantern being waved by the trackside is seen by the driver. He applies the brakes but a road tanker stalled across a [[level crossing]] is looming up just ahead. Plainly, there is not enough room to stop but, just as the collision is about to occur, there is a fade-out succeeded by a view of the locomotive sheds at Euston three days earlier. Personal stories of passengers are then told in flashbacks which make up the "train of events" of the title.
The film opens with a long shot of a [[Liverpool]]-bound train waiting to depart from Euston station in London. The train leaves with various characters on board.


The first story, "The Actor", is about Philip who has a dark secret. He has been visited by his estranged wife and we learn that she has been unfaithful while he was in the Army. She jeers at him and he is roused to revenge, strangling her while a gramophone plays ''[[These Foolish Things]]''. The theatre party to which he belongs is on the train, en route to Canada. Also on board is a costume hamper containing the body of his wife. He is hoping to get rid of it on the transatlantic crossing but detectives have been tracking him and are on the train.
After dark, the train is still travelling north at speed when a light being waved by the trackside is seen by the driver. He applies the brakes, but a road tanker stalled across a level crossing is looming up just ahead. Plainly, there is not enough room to stop. Just as the collision is about to occur there is a fade out, which is succeeded by a general view of the railway locomotive sheds at Euston, three days earlier.


The second story, "The Prisoner-of-War", is about Richard and Ella. He is a prisoner of war on the run who doesn't wish to return to Germany. They have hitherto endured a miserable secret life in assorted seedy lodgings and Ella is hoping they can start again abroad. However, she has stolen money from her landlady to pay her fare and there is only enough for one of them to emigrate. Selflessly, she intends it be him.
Several personal stories are then told in a series of flashbacks which make up the train of events referred to in the title.


The third story, "The Composer", is about composer Raymond Hillary who is travelling to a performance with his star pianist, the temperamental Irina. Although married he has had a string of dalliances, Irina being the latest.
The first story, "The actor", is about Philip ([[Peter Finch]]), an actor on board the train who has a dark secret. He has been visited by his estranged wife, and in a tense scene set in his lodgings we learn that she has been unfaithful while he was serving in the Army. She jeers at him, and he is roused to one supreme effort of revenge, strangling her while a gramophone plays ''These Foolish Things''. The theatre party to which he belongs is travelling on the train, en route to a tour of Canada. Also on board is a costume hamper, which contains the body of his wife. He is hoping to "lose" it somehow on the transatlantic crossing, but two suspicious detectives have been tracking him, and are on board the train too.


The fourth story, "The Engine Driver", is centred on engine driver Jim Hardcastle. He is facing his own crisis: he is a candidate for a management job at the locomotive sheds. Getting the job would take him off the footplate and allow him to work office hours, the heartfelt wish of his wife Emily. However, to cover for his daughter's future husband who was accidentally knocked out when Jim and his mate were trying to stop him resigning, then put into a fish wagon to come round which was hitched to a loco that ends up in Macclesfield, Jim covers for him by working his shift and, if this were to come to light, it could cost him the promotion.
The second story, "The Prisoner-of-War", is about Richard ([[Laurence Payne]]) and Ella ([[Joan Dowling]]). He is a former prisoner of war on the run, who hates the idea of returning to Germany. They have endured a miserable life of subterfuge in a succession of seedy lodgings, and Ella is hoping that they can start again on the other side of the Atlantic. However, Ella has stolen money from her landlady's cashbox to pay for the journey, and there was only enough for one of them to emigrate. Selflessly, she intends that it will be him.


The film returns to the train, roaring through the night. Again we see the light by the track and the tanker just ahead but this time also the collision. The derailed and damaged train lies in ruins. Jim Hardcastle groggily recovers consciousness in a pile of coal from the overturned tender, as shocked passengers wander about. One of them is Richard but his Ella is badly injured and on a stretcher; she dies before she can be taken away and Richard runs from the scene (and the attending police) unaware of the steamship ticket in Ella's handbag, which blows away. Philip seems unhurt and makes a dash for freedom, but as he tries to evade the detectives he runs dangerously close to the wreckage and an unstable coach collapses upon him. Irina and Raymond are only bruised and their company is able to continue, albeit in bandages. There is a happy ending for driver Jim. The final scene shows him waving goodbye to his wife as he prepares to cycle across to the locomotive sheds on the first day of his new job.
The third story, "The Composer", is the tale of composer Raymond Hillary ([[John Clements (actor)|John Clements]]), who is travelling to a performance away from London with his star pianist, the temperamental Irina ([[Irina Baronova]]). Although married, he has a string of dalliances behind him, and Irina is the latest of these.


==Cast==
The fourth story, "The Engine Driver", takes place at the front of the train, centred on engine driver Jim Hardcastle ([[Jack Warner (actor)|Jack Warner]]). He is facing his own crisis, because he is a candidate for a job in management at the locomotive sheds. This would take him off the footplate and allow him to work office hours for the first time in his career, which is the heartfelt wish of his wife Emily ([[Gladys Henson]]). However, to protect his daughter's future husband when he was accidentally absent, Jim illicitly worked the younger man's shift, and this innocent deception could cost him the promotion.
{{div-col}}

The film then returns to the train, which is roaring through the dark of the evening. Again, there is the light by the track, and the tanker just ahead – but this time, we see the whole collision.

The derailed and damaged train is lying in ruins. Jim Hardcastle groggily recovers consciousness in a pile of coal from the overturned tender, and shocked passengers wander about. One of them is Richard, the prisoner of war on the run, but his Ella isn't walking. She is on a stretcher and evidently badly hurt, and dies before she can be taken away for treatment. Richard runs from the scene (and the attending police), unaware of the steamship ticket in Ella's handbag, which blows away across the tracks.

Philip, the actor who has murdered his wife, seems unhurt and tries to make a dash for freedom. But as he tries to evade the detectives who were on board, he runs dangerously close to the wreckage, and an unstable coach collapses on top of him.

Irina and Raymond, the pianist and the composer, are only bruised, and their company is able to continue with their performance, albeit in bandages.

There is a happy ending for driver Jim. The final scene shows him waving goodbye to his wife, as he prepares to cycle across to the locomotive sheds on his first day in that nine-to-six job.

==Main cast==
{{div col|colwidth=20em}}
'''"The Engine Driver"''' (directed by [[Sidney Cole]])
'''"The Engine Driver"''' (directed by [[Sidney Cole]])
* [[Jack Warner (actor)|Jack Warner]] as Jim Hardcastle
* [[Jack Warner (actor)|Jack Warner]] as Jim Hardcastle
Line 55: Line 44:
* [[Susan Shaw]] as Doris Hardcastle
* [[Susan Shaw]] as Doris Hardcastle
* [[Patric Doonan]] as Ron Stacey
* [[Patric Doonan]] as Ron Stacey
* [[Miles Malleson]] as Timekeeper
* [[Miles Malleson]] as timekeeper
* Philip Dale as Hardcastle's fireman
* Philip Dale as Hardcastle's fireman
* [[Leslie Phillips]] as Stacey's Fireman
* [[Leslie Phillips]] as Stacey's Fireman
Line 62: Line 51:
* [[Joan Dowling]] as Ella
* [[Joan Dowling]] as Ella
* [[Laurence Payne]] as Richard
* [[Laurence Payne]] as Richard
* [[Olga Lindo]] as Mrs. Bailey
* [[Olga Lindo]] as Mrs Bailey


'''"The Composer"''' (directed by [[Charles Crichton]])
'''"The Composer"''' (directed by [[Charles Crichton]])
Line 68: Line 57:
* [[John Clements (actor)|John Clements]] as Raymond Hillary
* [[John Clements (actor)|John Clements]] as Raymond Hillary
* [[Irina Baronova]] as Irina
* [[Irina Baronova]] as Irina
* [[John Gregson]] as Malcolm
* [[John Gregson]] as Malcolm Murray-Bruce
* Gwen Cherrell as Charmian
* Gwen Cherrell as Charmian
* Jacqueline Byrne as TV Announcer
* Jacqueline Byrne as TV Announcer
Line 77: Line 66:
* [[Laurence Naismith]] as Joe Hunt
* [[Laurence Naismith]] as Joe Hunt
* Doris Yorke as Mrs Hunt
* Doris Yorke as Mrs Hunt
* [[Michael Hordern]] as Plainclothesman
* [[Michael Hordern]] as plainclothesman
* [[Charles Morgan (actor)|Charles Morgan]] as Plainclothesman
* [[Charles Morgan (actor)|Charles Morgan]] as plainclothesman
* Guy Verney as Producer
* Guy Verney as producer
* [[Mark Dignam]] as Bolingbroke
* [[Mark Dignam]] as Bolingbroke
* Philip Ashley as Actor
* Philip Ashley as actor
* Bryan Coleman as Actor
* Bryan Coleman as Actor
* [[Henry Charles Hewitt (actor)|Henry Hewitt]] as Actor
* [[Henry Charles Hewitt (actor)|Henry Hewitt]] as actor
* [[Lyndon Brook]] as Actor
* [[Lyndon Brook]] as actor
{{div col end}}
{{div-col-end}}


== Production ==
== Production ==
{{More citations needed section|date=December 2023}}
Jack Warner was permanently injured while making this film. He had insisted on learning how a steam engine is driven to get his posture right, but fell into a locomotive turntable pit and injured his back. He had a slight limp ever afterwards as a result, which became noticeably worse as he aged.
Jack Warner was permanently injured while making this film. He had insisted on learning how a steam engine is driven to get his posture right, but slipped on a patch of oil and fell into a locomotive turntable pit and injured his back. He had a slight limp ever afterwards as a result which remained with him and became noticeably worse as he aged until his death.

One quirk of the film is that one of the digits on the smokebox number plate of a locomotive featured in one of the early scenes is painted out (presumably to avoid worrying passengers who might fear that it really would be involved in an accident) but is still clearly readable because the numbers themselves were made from raised metal.

The locomotives used in the film included two [[LMS Class 3F "Jinty" 0-6-0T]]s Nos. 47327 and 47675, and [[LMS Royal Scot Class]] No. 46126 ''Royal Army Service Corps'', though at the time this film was being made, it was in its rebuilt condition from 1943. One of these engines 47327 survives to this day and is based on the [[Midland Railway – Butterley|Midland Railway]] in [[Butterley]].

==Critical reception==
''[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]]'' wrote: "This new 'portmanteau' film from Ealing Studios – stories of three separate groups of people travelling on an express from Euston to Liverpool – is far less successful than their earlier ''[[Dead of Night]]'' [1945]. The episodes are loosely held together by a fourth story, which presents scenes in the life of an engine driver (Jack Warner), his wife and family, cut-to-pattern semi-[[The Huggetts (film series)|Huggett]] cockneys. Moods are dutifully varied – melodrama of a hysterical young actor who strangles his unfaithful wife, ritzy comedy of a philandering composer-conductor unable to choose between his wife and a concert pianist, tragedy of an orphaned girl in love with an escaped German P.o.W. – but the dialogue and characterisation lack feeling, wit and authenticity. While the comedy sequence is merely a facetious attempt at the sophisticated manner, the other two are novelettes, stagily conceived and handled. Once all the characters are aboard the train, a crash provides the inevitable climax and arbitrary solutions. There are three directors, stiff, bloodless, highly conscientious, their styles indistinguishable except for Dearden's pronounced use of melodramatic angles. One performance, that of Mary Morris as the actor's wife, gives a momentary breath of life to a disappointingly artificial film."<ref>{{Cite journal |date=1 January 1949 |title=Train of Events |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/1305806687/804F7E2312C4434DPQ/2 |journal=[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]] |volume=16 |issue=181 |pages=159 |via=ProQuest}}</ref>

''[[Kine Weekly]]'' wrote: "Composite melodrama, hinging on a railway crash. It's made up of four complete stories and each, extremely well acted, staged and directed, subtly heighitens the other without becoming detached from the main thread. Amusing, moving, heart-warming and thrilling, the veritable library of popular fiction carries wide appeal.&nbsp;... The magazine type of film is seldom a commercial success, but one of the few exceptions was Ealing's ''Dead of Night.'' Tlhs, from the same stable, shapes like another. By skilfully intertwining its four stories it enables comedy, drama and tragedy to travel hand in hand without loss of continuity. Each episode is good of its kind and all, whether serious or satirical, have the popular touch. The direction, like the acting, is uniformly good, but if we had to single out a director for special mention it would be Sidney Cole for his showmanlike handling of the train crash sequences. Of the more intimate scenes, the death of Ella is a little gem. Smart and natural dialogue is another of the film's many conspicuous attributes."<ref>{{Cite journal |date=18 August 1949 |title=Train of Events |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/2687787773/B7D02275AB81424CPQ/4 |journal=[[Kine Weekly]] |volume=390 |issue=2207 |pages=18 |via=ProQuest}}</ref>

''[[The Times]]'' said: "The contrivance at best is clumsy, and there are not any inherent virtues in ''Train of Events'' to compensate for the inevitable distraction and division of attention."<ref>{{cite news |date=22 August 1949 |title=New films in London |page=8 |newspaper=The Times |url=http://find.galegroup.com/ttda/infomark.do?&source=gale&prodId=TTDA&userGroupName=kenlib&tabID=T003&docPage=article&searchType=&docId=CS134433046&type=multipage&contentSet=LTO&version=1.0 |access-date=2015-06-22}}</ref>


''The [[Radio Times]] Guide to Films'' gave the film 3/5 stars, writing: "As the night express from Euston to Liverpool is about to career off the rails, the movie also lurches into flashback, showing why various passengers were making the fated journey. There's the engine driver; a philandering orchestra conductor; an actor who's killed his wife; and a girl in love with an escaped German PoW. This portmanteau effort is inevitably uneven, though the cast of stalwarts is worth watching."<ref>{{Cite book |title=Radio Times Guide to Films |publisher=[[Immediate Media Company]] |year=2017 |isbn=9780992936440 |edition=18th |location=London |pages=955}}</ref>
One quirk of the film is that the number of a locomotive featured in one of the early scenes is painted out (presumably to avoid worrying passengers who might fear that it really would be involved in an accident) but is still clearly readable because the numbers themselves were made from raised metal.


In ''British Sound Films: The Studio Years 1928–1959'' [[David Quinlan (film critic)|David Quinlan]] rated the film as "average", writing: "Not one of the better British portmanteau films."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Quinlan |first=David |title=British Sound Films: The Studio Years 1928–1959 |publisher=[[Batsford Books|B.T. Batsford Ltd.]] |year=1984 |isbn=0-7134-1874-5 |location=London |pages=254}}</ref>
The locomotives used in the film included two [[LMS Class 3F "Jinty" 0-6-0T]]s Nos. 47327 and 47675, and [[LMS Royal Scot Class]] No. 46126 ''Royal Army Service Corps''.


[[Leslie Halliwell]] said: "A rather mechanical entertainment, proficiently made."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Halliwell |first=Leslie |title=Halliwell's Film Guide |publisher=Paladin |year=1989 |isbn=0586088946 |edition=7th |location=London |pages=1047}}</ref>
==Reception==
The film premiered on 18 August 1949 at the [[Gaumont Haymarket]] in London,<ref>[http://find.galegroup.com/ttda/infomark.do?&source=gale&prodId=TTDA&userGroupName=kenlib&tabID=T003&docPage=article&searchType=&docId=CS167987474&type=multipage&contentSet=LTO&version=1.0 The Times, 18 Aug. 1949, page 10: ''Picture Theatres, Gaumont''] Linked 2015-06-22</ref> and the reviewer for ''[[The Times]]'' didn't appreciate the four-in-one storyline : "''The contrivance at best is clumsy, and there are not any inherent virtues in "Train of Events" to compensate for the inevitable distraction and division of attention.''"<ref>[http://find.galegroup.com/ttda/infomark.do?&source=gale&prodId=TTDA&userGroupName=kenlib&tabID=T003&docPage=article&searchType=&docId=CS134433046&type=multipage&contentSet=LTO&version=1.0 The Times, 22 Aug. 1949, page 8: ''New films in London''] Linked 2015-06-22</ref>


==References==
==References==
Line 101: Line 101:


==External links==
==External links==
* {{BFI Explore| 4ce2b6b8d0d9a |Train of Events}}
* {{IMDb title|id=0041982|title=Train of Events}}
* {{IMDb title|id=0041982|title=Train of Events}}
* [https://www.reelstreets.com/films/train-of-events/ ''Train of Events''] at [https://www.reelstreets.com/ ReelStreets]


{{Charles Crichton}}
{{Charles Crichton}}
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[[Category:1949 films]]
[[Category:1949 films]]
[[Category:British anthology films]]
[[Category:British anthology films]]
[[Category:British films]]
[[Category:1949 drama films]]
[[Category:1940s drama films]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Basil Dearden]]
[[Category:Films directed by Basil Dearden]]
[[Category:Films directed by Charles Crichton]]
[[Category:Films directed by Charles Crichton]]
Line 118: Line 116:
[[Category:British drama films]]
[[Category:British drama films]]
[[Category:Ealing Studios films]]
[[Category:Ealing Studios films]]
[[Category:Films set in London]]
[[Category:Films with screenplays by Basil Dearden]]
[[Category:British black-and-white films]]
[[Category:1940s English-language films]]
[[Category:1940s British films]]

Latest revision as of 23:40, 19 October 2024

Train of Events
Original British quad poster
Directed bySidney Cole
Charles Crichton
Basil Dearden
Written byT.E.B. Clarke
Basil Dearden
Angus MacPhail
Ronald Millar
Produced byMichael Balcon
Michael Relph
StarringJack Warner
Peter Finch
Valerie Hobson
CinematographyLionel Banes
Paul Beeson
Gordon Dines
Edited byBernard Gribble
Music byLeslie Bridgewater
Production
company
Distributed byGFD (UK)
Release date
  • 18 August 1949 (1949-08-18) (UK)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£144,978[1]

Train of Events is a 1949 British portmanteau film made by Ealing Studios, directed by Sidney Cole, Charles Crichton and Basil Dearden and starring Jack Warner, Peter Finch and Valerie Hobson.[2] The film premiered on 18 August 1949 at the Gaumont Haymarket in London.[3] In the film, as a train is heading for a crash into a stalled petrol tanker at a level crossing, four different stories are told in flashback.

Plot

[edit]

A Liverpool-bound train departs from Euston station in London in the period immediately after World War II. After dark, the train is travelling north at speed when a lantern being waved by the trackside is seen by the driver. He applies the brakes but a road tanker stalled across a level crossing is looming up just ahead. Plainly, there is not enough room to stop but, just as the collision is about to occur, there is a fade-out succeeded by a view of the locomotive sheds at Euston three days earlier. Personal stories of passengers are then told in flashbacks which make up the "train of events" of the title.

The first story, "The Actor", is about Philip who has a dark secret. He has been visited by his estranged wife and we learn that she has been unfaithful while he was in the Army. She jeers at him and he is roused to revenge, strangling her while a gramophone plays These Foolish Things. The theatre party to which he belongs is on the train, en route to Canada. Also on board is a costume hamper containing the body of his wife. He is hoping to get rid of it on the transatlantic crossing but detectives have been tracking him and are on the train.

The second story, "The Prisoner-of-War", is about Richard and Ella. He is a prisoner of war on the run who doesn't wish to return to Germany. They have hitherto endured a miserable secret life in assorted seedy lodgings and Ella is hoping they can start again abroad. However, she has stolen money from her landlady to pay her fare and there is only enough for one of them to emigrate. Selflessly, she intends it be him.

The third story, "The Composer", is about composer Raymond Hillary who is travelling to a performance with his star pianist, the temperamental Irina. Although married he has had a string of dalliances, Irina being the latest.

The fourth story, "The Engine Driver", is centred on engine driver Jim Hardcastle. He is facing his own crisis: he is a candidate for a management job at the locomotive sheds. Getting the job would take him off the footplate and allow him to work office hours, the heartfelt wish of his wife Emily. However, to cover for his daughter's future husband who was accidentally knocked out when Jim and his mate were trying to stop him resigning, then put into a fish wagon to come round which was hitched to a loco that ends up in Macclesfield, Jim covers for him by working his shift and, if this were to come to light, it could cost him the promotion.

The film returns to the train, roaring through the night. Again we see the light by the track and the tanker just ahead but this time also the collision. The derailed and damaged train lies in ruins. Jim Hardcastle groggily recovers consciousness in a pile of coal from the overturned tender, as shocked passengers wander about. One of them is Richard but his Ella is badly injured and on a stretcher; she dies before she can be taken away and Richard runs from the scene (and the attending police) unaware of the steamship ticket in Ella's handbag, which blows away. Philip seems unhurt and makes a dash for freedom, but as he tries to evade the detectives he runs dangerously close to the wreckage and an unstable coach collapses upon him. Irina and Raymond are only bruised and their company is able to continue, albeit in bandages. There is a happy ending for driver Jim. The final scene shows him waving goodbye to his wife as he prepares to cycle across to the locomotive sheds on the first day of his new job.

Cast

[edit]

"The Engine Driver" (directed by Sidney Cole)

"The Prisoner-of-War" (directed by Basil Dearden)

"The Composer" (directed by Charles Crichton)

"The Actor" (directed by Basil Dearden)

Production

[edit]

Jack Warner was permanently injured while making this film. He had insisted on learning how a steam engine is driven to get his posture right, but slipped on a patch of oil and fell into a locomotive turntable pit and injured his back. He had a slight limp ever afterwards as a result which remained with him and became noticeably worse as he aged until his death.

One quirk of the film is that one of the digits on the smokebox number plate of a locomotive featured in one of the early scenes is painted out (presumably to avoid worrying passengers who might fear that it really would be involved in an accident) but is still clearly readable because the numbers themselves were made from raised metal.

The locomotives used in the film included two LMS Class 3F "Jinty" 0-6-0Ts Nos. 47327 and 47675, and LMS Royal Scot Class No. 46126 Royal Army Service Corps, though at the time this film was being made, it was in its rebuilt condition from 1943. One of these engines 47327 survives to this day and is based on the Midland Railway in Butterley.

Critical reception

[edit]

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "This new 'portmanteau' film from Ealing Studios – stories of three separate groups of people travelling on an express from Euston to Liverpool – is far less successful than their earlier Dead of Night [1945]. The episodes are loosely held together by a fourth story, which presents scenes in the life of an engine driver (Jack Warner), his wife and family, cut-to-pattern semi-Huggett cockneys. Moods are dutifully varied – melodrama of a hysterical young actor who strangles his unfaithful wife, ritzy comedy of a philandering composer-conductor unable to choose between his wife and a concert pianist, tragedy of an orphaned girl in love with an escaped German P.o.W. – but the dialogue and characterisation lack feeling, wit and authenticity. While the comedy sequence is merely a facetious attempt at the sophisticated manner, the other two are novelettes, stagily conceived and handled. Once all the characters are aboard the train, a crash provides the inevitable climax and arbitrary solutions. There are three directors, stiff, bloodless, highly conscientious, their styles indistinguishable except for Dearden's pronounced use of melodramatic angles. One performance, that of Mary Morris as the actor's wife, gives a momentary breath of life to a disappointingly artificial film."[4]

Kine Weekly wrote: "Composite melodrama, hinging on a railway crash. It's made up of four complete stories and each, extremely well acted, staged and directed, subtly heighitens the other without becoming detached from the main thread. Amusing, moving, heart-warming and thrilling, the veritable library of popular fiction carries wide appeal. ... The magazine type of film is seldom a commercial success, but one of the few exceptions was Ealing's Dead of Night. Tlhs, from the same stable, shapes like another. By skilfully intertwining its four stories it enables comedy, drama and tragedy to travel hand in hand without loss of continuity. Each episode is good of its kind and all, whether serious or satirical, have the popular touch. The direction, like the acting, is uniformly good, but if we had to single out a director for special mention it would be Sidney Cole for his showmanlike handling of the train crash sequences. Of the more intimate scenes, the death of Ella is a little gem. Smart and natural dialogue is another of the film's many conspicuous attributes."[5]

The Times said: "The contrivance at best is clumsy, and there are not any inherent virtues in Train of Events to compensate for the inevitable distraction and division of attention."[6]

The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 3/5 stars, writing: "As the night express from Euston to Liverpool is about to career off the rails, the movie also lurches into flashback, showing why various passengers were making the fated journey. There's the engine driver; a philandering orchestra conductor; an actor who's killed his wife; and a girl in love with an escaped German PoW. This portmanteau effort is inevitably uneven, though the cast of stalwarts is worth watching."[7]

In British Sound Films: The Studio Years 1928–1959 David Quinlan rated the film as "average", writing: "Not one of the better British portmanteau films."[8]

Leslie Halliwell said: "A rather mechanical entertainment, proficiently made."[9]

References

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  1. ^ Chapman, J. (2022). The Money Behind the Screen: A History of British Film Finance, 1945–1985. Edinburgh University Press p 356.
  2. ^ "Train of Events". British Film Institute. Retrieved 8 December 2023.
  3. ^ "Picture Theatres, Gaumont". The Times. 18 August 1949. p. 10. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  4. ^ "Train of Events". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 16 (181): 159. 1 January 1949 – via ProQuest.
  5. ^ "Train of Events". Kine Weekly. 390 (2207): 18. 18 August 1949 – via ProQuest.
  6. ^ "New films in London". The Times. 22 August 1949. p. 8. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  7. ^ Radio Times Guide to Films (18th ed.). London: Immediate Media Company. 2017. p. 955. ISBN 9780992936440.
  8. ^ Quinlan, David (1984). British Sound Films: The Studio Years 1928–1959. London: B.T. Batsford Ltd. p. 254. ISBN 0-7134-1874-5.
  9. ^ Halliwell, Leslie (1989). Halliwell's Film Guide (7th ed.). London: Paladin. p. 1047. ISBN 0586088946.
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