Strangers on a Train Comments

  • Bill 2022-04-20 09:01:34

    Unhurriedly creating tension Swap between innocent victims, immoral but attractive villains, and heroes restoring...

  • Dameon 2022-04-20 09:01:34

    In fact, the film is good, showing Hitchcock's good at creating atmosphere, grasping the rhythm and paying attention to details. The story itself is also very interesting. The two strangers who met on the train each have haters, and they proposed a plan to exchange murders. The plot did not fully follow the audience's expectations. It's a pity that this film has a big flaw, which will make people feel that everything that follows is superfluous, purely for suspense and suspense. No spoilers...

  • Wilford 2022-04-20 09:01:34

    The idea of ​​the story is absolutely amazing, and the photography is not bad. The close-up of the feet following the low-camera position and the broken shots of the tennis match interspersed with the narrative are impressive. It's a pity that one mountain can't hold two tigers. The reason why there is such an unloading ending must also be related to the disagreement between Raymond Chandler and Xi...

  • Dillon 2022-03-27 09:01:04

    NY 111. 1. The funfair's spinning wood play is another classic scene. The various atypical compositions of the killing play fully demonstrate the level of Xi Fat. 2. Put the main character in a situation where there is a crisis but can't do anything. In a tennis match 3. Financial professionals said that SWAP can still be used in this way, but it turns out that the actor finally made a lot of arbitrage at the cost of his counterparty's...

  • Toby 2022-03-27 09:01:04

    Just for kicking you under the table. Textbook-style use of film language. Crazy carousel. The story itself lacks suspense and tension. And the suggestive use of same-sex roles and affection in that era (in fact, the tennis player is actually...

  • Leanna 2022-03-27 09:01:04

    Oh no! The ending is like a deep boudoir and a cloud of doubts! Although I tried to accost the audience and smile with a stranger who echoed from the beginning to the end, but no matter what I think, the dark ending is more emotional! And how much Bruno is so gloomy and weird for a Psycho-style deep psychoanalysis! But the language of the lens is really excellent! I watched the merry-go-round a few times, from exciting to relaxing entertainment and then to exciting. Children use it wonderfully....

  • Pearlie 2022-03-27 09:01:04

    Personally, I think it's one of Hitchcock's worst. First of all, the Hitchcock-style suspense of the big reversal was not reflected until the end. The climax of the movie was propped up by slightly dull montages, fancy carousel action scenes and soundtracks, and the tension was not strong. Then Hines was suspected of killing his wife with just a motive and was watched by the police all the way. He felt that this was a contempt for the judicial system, and it was so obvious that the evidence was...

  • Brooke 2022-03-27 09:01:04

    The suspense about the movie The reason why I recklessly called "The Train Strangers" no suspense is that if we give up the details and choose to fast-forward playback, we will find that this is a story of "exchange killing" that tells the result first and then the process. The film exposed the murderer to the audience early, and the audience just watched how the story ended, and even waited for the end in disappointment. But Hitchcock simply borrowed the story of Patricia Highsmith (the...

  • Gillian 2022-03-27 09:01:04

    Since the lighter fell into the ditch, the five stars have been reduced to four stars. I don't like the merry-go-round fight scene either. Still prefer pure wits-type suspense. However, I like the photography of the ups and downs of the Trojan horse as if stepping on the two of...

  • Fernando 2022-03-27 09:01:04

    There are two clips that can be used as textbooks. tennis. Carousel. Every Fat Man movie has its...

Extended Reading

Strangers on a Train quotes

  • Senator Morton: I'll have him called up immediately.

    Barbara Morton: Obstructing the wheels of justice, Daddy?

  • Guy Haines: Doesn't that bloodhound ever relax? He sticks so close he's beginning to grow on me - like a fungus.