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Strangers On A Train
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Strangers On A TrainIcon_movClass_M

1951, 196 minutes, Rated M

Strange thing about this trip. So much occurs in pairs. Tennis star Guy (Farley Granger) hates his unfaithful wife. Mysterious Bruno (Robert Walker) hates his father. How perfect for a playful propostal: I'll kill yours, you kill mine. Now look at how Alfred Hitchcock reinforces the duality of human nature. The more you watch, the more you'll see. "Isn't it a fascinating design?" the Master of Suspense often asked.

Actually, it's doubly fascinating. For Hitchcock left behind two versions of Strangers on a Train. The original version (SIDE A) is an all-time thriller classic. A recently found longer prerelease British print (Side B) offers "a startling amplification of Bruno's flamboyance, his homoerotic attraction to Guy and his psychotic personality" (Bill Desowitz, Film Comment). The laying bare of Bruno's hidden nature, along with the great set pieces (head-turning tennis match, disintegrating carousel) and suspense as only Hitchcock can deliver, makes for a first-class trip.

Director:
Alfred Hitchcock [50],
Starring:
Farley Granger [7], Ruth Roman [1], Leo G. Carroll [7], Robert Walker [7],
Screen Formats:
Full Frame 1.33:1
Subtitles:
Arabic , Bulgarian , Dutch , English , French , Italian , Portuguese , Romanian , Spanish , German
Language and Sound:
English Mono
French Mono
Italian Mono

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