A somewhat daffy book editor on a rail trip from Los Angeles to Chicago thinks that he sees a murdered man thrown from the train. When he can find no one who will believe him, he starts doing some investigating of his own. But all that accomplishes is to get the killer after him.
Gene Wilder
George Caldwell
Jill Clayburgh
Hildegard 'Hilly' Burns
Richard Pryor
Grover Muldoon
Patrick McGoohan
Roger Devereau
Ned Beatty
Bob Sweet
Clifton James
Sheriff Chauncey
Ray Walston
Mr. Edgar Whiney
Stefan Gierasch
Professor Schreiner & Johnson
Len Birman
Chief
Valerie Curtin
Plain Jane
Lucille Benson
Rita Babtree
Scatman Crothers
Ralston
Richard Kiel
Reace
Fred Willard
Jerry Jarvis
Delos V. Smith Jr.
Burt
Mathilda Calnan
Blue-Haired Lady
Margarita García
Mexican Mama-San
Henry Beckman
Conventioneer
Harvey Atkin
Conventioneer
Lloyd White
Porter
Ed McNamara
Benny
Raymond Guth
Night Watchman
John Daheim
Engineer #2
Jack O'Leary
Fat Man #1
Lee McLaughlin
Fat Man #2
Bill Henderson
Red Cap
Tom Erhart
Cab Driver
Gordon Hurst
Moose
J.A. Preston
Waiter (uncredited)
Nick Stewart
Shoeshiner
Steve Weston
Conventioneer
Director
Arthur Hiller
Writer
Colin Higgins
April 11, 2023
8
**_Drama, romance, crime, mystery, comedy, adventure, suspense and action on a train_**
A book editor traveling from Los Angeles to Chicago by rail (Gene Wilder) supposedly witnesses a crime while partying with a secretary (Jill Clayburgh). He suddenly finds himself embroiled in a dangerous conspiracy. Richard Pryor plays a helpful thief, Ned Beatty a passenger, Patrick McGoohan a smooth art expert, Richard Kiel a heavy and Len Birman a cop.
"Silver Streak” (1976) meshes Hitchcockian murder thriller with the amusing antics of Wilder and Pryor for an entertaining train flick. As my title blurb states, it expertly mixes genres into a fun and compelling rail ride.
If you like train flicks like "Runaway Train" (1985), "Transiberian" (2008), "Train" (2008), “Night Train” (2009), "Beyond the Door III" (1989), “The Cassandra Crossing” (1976), “Breakheart Pass” (1975) and “Horror Express” (1972) you’ll also enjoy this one. It’s as good or better than most of ’em. It just includes amusement along with the life-or-death thrills à la the 80’s Indiana Jones adventures.
The film runs 1 hour, 54 minutes, and was shot in SoCal, including Century City (studio), Union Station in Los Angeles, South Pasadena (New Mexico train stop), the Mojave Desert (the ranch with the plane) and Brea (the redneck sheriff’s office), as well as Alberta (the prairie scenes), Locust Hill in Ontario, Union Station in Toronto and Northwestern Station in Chicago.
GRADE: A-/B+
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$6,500,000.00
Revenue:
$51,100,000.00