FINAL GIRL explores the slasher flicks of the '70s and '80s...and all the other horror movies I feel like talking about, too. This is life on the EDGE, so beware yon spoilers!

Jul 18, 2024

Chilling Classics Cthursday: HORROR EXPRESS (1972)

Spanish delight Horror Express chugga choo-chooed into my heart during that mysterious time known as "2010." I didn't watch the Mill Creek version at the time, but I'm sure the quality was about on par with the Chilling Classics edition: it was one of those $0.79 DVDs you find at your Dollar Trees and your Odd Lots. Essentially they're Chilling Classics-grade films sold individually in cardboard sleeves, real bargain bin stuff, right down to the muddy transfers. Well let me tell you that even under such circumstances it was love at first squint between me and Horror Express, and we've renewed our vows to each other many times over the years known as "since 2010." But I won't lie to you: now I feast my eyes solely on the Arrow Blu-ray over any bargain bin editions, even when it's Chilling Classic Cthursday. Go figure!


I've written about this movie before--right after that initial viewing--in more synopsis-y detail, and covered it in episode 167 of Gaylords of Darkness a couple of years ago, so hey: If you want more narrative tidbits and expansive insights, check those out. As for the here and now, I'm just a girl standing sitting in front of a blog telling you some of the reasons why I love and adore this movie about a frozen fossil ape-man who thaws out on a trans-Siberian train in 1906 and causes deathly havoc.

-- It's about a frozen fossil ape-man who thaws out on a trans-Siberian train in 1906 and causes deathly havoc! What's not to love about that?

-- That's only the start of it. He is so much more than a frozen fossil ape-man! He is what Dolly Parton sang about in "Coat of Many Colors," okay? And also what Chaka Khan and Whitney Houston sang about in "I'm Every Woman." He contains multitudes. 

-- The "deathly havoc" he wreaks includes causing people to bleed out of all of their head holes as their eyes turn white. It's so cool.

-- Yes, that is Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing in that pic up top. Two of the greatest tastes to ever be tasted together! It's especially nice to see them together in Horror Express because here they are sorta rivals but mostly colleagues instead of confined to their usual vampire-vampire hater relationship. Also I love it when Christopher Lee has a moustache.

-- Eventually Telly friggin Savalas shows up as a crazed Cossack and he just...sounds like Telly Savalas and I love it because he's really in his own film here.

-- The train is clearly a model train in some shots and it only serves to make everything better

-- Model or no, this is a train full of characters, baby! These folks have all come aboard: 

-- a mad monk who pulls what we political pundits* call "a JD Vance" as he goes from denouncing the monster as Satanic to worshipping it

-- a couple of sheltered aristocrats who I bet are probably swingers

-- a hot international spy, who is just sort of a spy for no reason and it's the best

-- a doctor's assistant who strikes so many blows for women's rights and has the power of a good...mmm, three to four Julia Sugarbaker monoologues

-- I dig the "1906 science" of it all. Many autopsies are performed and we get many a dubious insight, like pee is stored in the balls memories are stored in brain wrinkles and visions are preserved in eye fluid.

-- Horror Express chugs through many a subgenre. It's a period piece structured like a slasher at times, it's a monster movie, it's a body-hopping sci-fi flick, it's got touches of an Agatha Christie-inspired mystery, it's got Hammer vibes, and it even busts out some zombies. Again, she is every woman!

-- Though this movie is clearly ludicrous, the cast plays it completely straight (even Savalas, in his Savalas-centric way) and it's the only reason why, as "out there" as it all is, it kinda works. 

Horror Express is simply theee perfect Saturday afternoon Creature Double Feature monster kid movie, and like me, you can cram that notion right into one of your brain wrinkles.


*people who read headlines

8 comments:

matango said...

I absolutely love this movie. Unlike so many Eurohorror movies (that I also love) it has a good, full story.

Also, I desperately want there to be a third movie with Helga Line (the Spy) and Silvia Tortosa (the Countess), so I can call it an unofficial trilogy. (The other movie that does exist is the Loreley's Grasp, which is pretty meh, but is based on a poem). Alas, there are only the two.

Stacie Ponder said...

I have not seen The Loreley's Grasp, but I will join you in wanting a trilogy with those two!

tom j jones said...

It's not boring, that's for sure! I love films that throw everything but the kitchen sink at the screen/plot - imagine how boring this would have got if Telly Savalas hadn't turned up.

Don't know if this is true (given the movie business, it probably is) but the version I heard is that the model train set was left over from another film, I think Nicholas and Alexandra, a historical film about the last Tsar, so a producer just threw this together to get the money's worth out of the model!

Stacie Ponder said...

Ha, I love that...sounds like a very Roger Corman way of saving production costs!

The Flashback Fanatic said...

This is one of the very first flicks that I started my movie collection with back in the bad old days of VHS. At this point in my film fanaticism, I have already triple-dipped for this one. Anything with Helga Liné in it is well worth the upgrade. This is also a nice pairing of stars Cushing and Lee that is as interesting as any of their other co-starring efforts in perhaps their wildest plot. Doctor Who would not have been out of place stowing away on HORROR EXPRESS.

Richard said...

This is the last movie I can remember dropping everything to watch on broadcast TV (TCM of course) as it aired. The commentary on the Arrow BD is so good too. Kim Newman and Stephen Jones just having a blast, like you should with this movie, while naming 70 other movies to see (most memorably Psychomania and Zombies of Mora Tau)!

Steve K said...

Omg... I thought that name sounded familiar - I *have* seen The Loreley's Grasp (but I saw it under the name "When The Screaming Stops" -- I saw it in 1984 at a drive-in in Flint on a double bill with C.H.U.D.!

Stacie Ponder said...

Oh wait...I've seen that! I had no idea it was an alternate title! Okay, now I'm EXTRA on board with the trilogy.