A
train is a vehicle that travels on rails, or a railway track, and which can
transport both people and cargo. Trains
might be diesel, electric or steam-powered.
Although
trains are not widely considered futuristic, they have nonetheless been
featured frequently throughout cult-TV history.
One
Step Beyond
(1959 – 1961), a paranormal anthology hosted by John Newland features a memorable
tale about a train. In the second season story “Goodbye Grandpa,” two poor
children in the west mourn the loss of their grandfather, who used to regale
them with tales of his days on the railroad.
Then, one day, their grandpa --- ensconced on a ghost train -- appears
on the abandoned rails near their house for one last goodbye.
One
of the most famous trains in cult-tv history involves not the mode of
transport, but the creepy destination. In a particularly dark episode of The
Twilight Zone (1959 – 1964) called “A Stop at Willoughby,” an unhappy
business man, Gart Williams (James Daly) dreams of an idyllic town called
Willoughby while commuting on the train each day.
Each
time he stops at Willoughby, he is more and more tempted to remain there
permanently. Finally, during one of his
slumbers, he decides to remain, forsaking the unhappy real world for the
fantasy world.
In
the real world, however, the train’s conductor saw Gart jump from the train to
his death. The name of the funeral home that takes care of his
corpse…Willoughby and Son Funeral Home.
Amazing
Stories (1985
– 1987), Steven Spielberg’s expensive NBC anthology, premiered with an episode
called “Ghost Train” that for all intents and purposes plays like a high-budget
remake of One Step Beyond’s “Goodbye Grandpa.”
In
this tale, a dying old man and grandfather (Roberts Blossoms) believes that a
train he once caused (accidentally) to crash will come back…to take him to
Heaven. The old man tells this story to his young grandson, who believes him.
Sure enough, the ghost train appears -- pulps
the family house -- and carries kindly old Grandpa away to the after-life.
An episode of Chris Carter's Millennium (1996 - 1999) also involves trains. In "Borrowed Time," an Angel of Death seeks to take several souls, including those on a train that is destined to derail and sink into a river.
The
first episode of Joss Whedon’s Firefly (2002) ever aired on FOX TV
was called “The Train Job,” and it involved Serenity’s crew and the futuristic
equivalent of a great train robbery.
In
particular, Captain Mal Reynolds (Nathan Fillion) and his crew were hired to
steal some crates right out from under a moving train and its garrison of
Alliance soldiers. The rogues succeeded,
only to find that they had stolen much needed medicine from local farmers…
Trains
can also be seen in crucial episodes of The X-Files (1993 – 2002) notably
the fourth season two-parter “Nisei”/”731” and in the introductory imagery of Adventures
of Superman (1951 – 1958).
The Wild Wild West (1965-1969) U.S. Secret Service train named The Wanderer always fascinated me in the '70s as a boy watching reruns. This train had hidden weapons and gadgets.
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And there's always the Tales From The Darkside episode The Last Car.
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