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The First Great Train Robbery

The First Great Train Robbery

6,7 /10 (432 Votes)
1978 EN 110 min

Overview

In Victorian England, a master criminal makes elaborate plans to steal a shipment of gold from a moving train.

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Release date

14/12/1978

Votes

432

Popularity

2.1

Never have so few taken so much from so many.

Status

Released

Language

EN

Runtime

110 min

Budget

$6,000,000

Original Soundtrack

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Wuchak

Wuchak

2020-06-18

⭐ 6

_**Robbing a train of a shipment of gold in Victorian England**_ Written/directed by Michael Crichton and released in 1978/79, “The Great Train Robbery” was loosely based on the real-life Great Gold Robbery of 1855 that took place in England. Sean Connery plays the mastermind, Lesley-Anne Down his girlfriend and Donald Sutherland a safecracker with whom they team-up. I generally don’t like caper films because the protagonists are criminals, but Crichton wisely makes the characters played by Connery and Sutherland likable rapscallions; meanwhile Down is babelicious, in particular in her j…

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JPV852

JPV852

2023-06-13

⭐ 8

Seen this once before many years ago but decided to check out the new Blu-ray from Kino Lorber. A solid heist-thriller though what struck me was these thieves were stealing gold meant for British soldiers, so not exactly stealing from some corporation, and our lead played by Sean Connery had no issue murdering a guy. Even so, still found it entertaining and some suspense-filled scenes, among them a great sequence with Connery on top of a moving train. **3.75/5**

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CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

2024-06-02

⭐ 7

I think it's Jerry Goldsmith's opening theme that gives a clue that we're in for some fun antics on the railways! That's confirmed when Michael Elphick chucks some would-be robber from the speeding carriage down an embankment where he lands at the feet of "Pierce" (Sean Connery). This bowler hatted gent wouldn't have been out of place in the Reform Club at the start of "Around the World in Eighty Days", so is a natural at another gentleman's club where the manager of a bank is bragging about their impregnable transfer of gold to pay the soldiers of the Crimea. Hardly patriotic, but "Pierce" ha…

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