Directed by: John Frankenheimer, Arthur Penn
Stars: Burt Lancaster, Paul Scofield, Jeanne Moreau
Language: English + Commentaries (3tracks) | Subtitles: English (embed)
Commentary by film historians Paul Seydor, Julie Kirgo
Commentary by director John Frankenheimer
Country: Usa | Imdb Info | Ar: 16:9 | Brrip
Description: In 1944, a German colonel loads a train with French art treasures to send to Germany. The Resistance must stop it without damaging the cargo.
5.81GB | 133:14mins | 1920×1080 | mkv | English | Sub: English
https://tezfiles.com/file/37f00554fdf68/The.Train.1964.mkv


Any chance of getting the colorized version ?
Thank you
no info about any official colorized version
https://dvdcompare.net/comparisons/film.php?fid=65716
https://dvdcompare.net/comparisons/film.php?fid=28046
Thank you
The colorized version is available from Internet archive (produced by raremovies on 480p DVD ).
That said, the quality is somewhat lacking but an official version would be interesting (if they choose to do so).
https://archive.org/details/train-1964
its fanmade colorized version not by any studio
you can make any BW movie to colorized with AI these days with few clicks
thanks for sharing sir
An excellent find by Rarelust. One of John Frankenheimer’s best movies, this was arguably the last of the great black-and-white productions, and benefits from the absence of any computer generated imagery or model work in the railway sequences. This movie is as real as it gets, and is regarded as the best railroad film ever made along with ‘Runaway Train’. First class performances from Lancaster, Schofield and Jeanne Moreau and a great supporting cast. But it is the swooping, dynamic camerawork that really shows the talents of the director and cinematographer at their best. A real masterclass in film making.
Thank you very much for this excellent film. Not only it is difficult to find, this is a great quality copy. Rated the best railroad movie ever made by Trains Magazine and Railserve, (the top web site for all things trains). Terrific film. Highly recommended! A PG or PG-13 movie, if they had ratings in 1964, (the MPAA ratings were first used in 1968).
Brilliant! Thanks very much. A fantastic war time film.