THE PHANTOM EXPRESS is an engaging little mystery thriller from the early days of talkie cinema. The story is about steam trains that keep being derailed on a certain area of track. The rail company heads suspect sabotage but the drivers report seeing the apparition of an approaching train of which no trace is ever made. The wreck scenes are done via miniature effects which are pretty decent for the era.
Eventually the mystery solves itself in a very cleverly-done way with maximum entertainment value. Before that point we get the usual padded sub-plot with romance and the like but at 55 minutes this film never outstays its welcome. It also has a keen and sympathetic performance from old-timer J. Farrell MacDonald playing the conductor and wins point for that alone.
Eventually the mystery solves itself in a very cleverly-done way with maximum entertainment value. Before that point we get the usual padded sub-plot with romance and the like but at 55 minutes this film never outstays its welcome. It also has a keen and sympathetic performance from old-timer J. Farrell MacDonald playing the conductor and wins point for that alone.