Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1979


Avalanche Express

Buy Avalanche Express now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'Avalanche Express' is a 1979 Cold War adventure thriller film starring Lee Marvin, Robert Shaw (in his final film appearance), Maximilian Schell, and Linda Evans and produced and directed by Mark Robson. The plot is about the struggle over a defecting Russian general. The screenplay by Abraham Polonsky was based on a 1977 novel by Colin Forbes.

Plot



Russian general Marenkov (Robert Shaw) decides to defect to the West and CIA agent Harry Wargrave (Lee Marvin) leads the team that is to get him out. Wargrave decides that Marenkov should travel across Europe by train, on the fictional "Avalanche Express". The idea is to lure the Russians into attacking the train and thus discover who their secret agents in Europe are. Consequently, during the train journey they must survive both a terrorist attack and an avalanche, all planned by KGB spy-catcher Nikolai Bunin (Maximilian Schell).

Cast



* Lee Marvin as Col. Harry Wargrave

* Robert Shaw as Gen. Marenkov (Voice later dubbed by Robert Reitty.)

* Linda Evans as Elsa Lang

* Maximilian Schell as Col. Nikolai Bunin

* Joe Namath as Leroy

* Horst Buchholz as Julian Scholten

* Mike Connors as Haller

* Claudio Cassinelli as Col. Molinari

* Kristina Nel as Helga Mann

* David Hess as Geiger

* Gnter Meisner as Rudi Muehler

* Sylva Langova as Olga

* Cyril Shaps as Sedov

* Vladek Sheybal as Zannbin

* Arthur Brauss as Neckermann

* Sky du Mont as Philip John

* Richard Marner as General Prachko

* Arnold Drummond as Commissar (Maxim Gorky)

* Paul Glawion as Alfredo

* Dan van Husen as Bernardo

Production problems



During production in Ireland, both director Mark Robson and starring actor Robert Shaw died of heart attacks within weeks of each other. Monte Hellman was brought in to finish the direction and Gene Corman (Roger Corman's brother) was called in to complete Robson's duties as producer.[https://books.google.com/books?id=cl2WzqT6hi8C&pg=PA133&lpg=PA133&dq=Avalanche+Express+monte+hellman&source=bl&ots=AIbKIoNZCY&sig=PEodw98uvTjiI59h2PjEhIYuoqw&hl=en&ei=RRB6TLXkE4Pi4gbJ-NScBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CDcQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=Avalanche%20Express%20monte%20hellman&f=false 'Monte Hellman: his life and films', pages 130 to 133]

Robert Rietti was hired to re-record Robert Shaw's dialogue in the opening scene, as it was decided to redo that scene in Russian with English subtitles instead of having the Russians speak broken English. As a consequence, for continuity, all of Shaw's dialogue throughout the film was re-recorded by Rietti.

Hellman, Corman and Rietti were not credited for their work, but the film's end credit contains a note stating: "The producers wish to express their appreciation to Monte Hellman and Gene Corman for their post production services."

Critical reaction



Vincent Canby of 'The New York Times' criticized the film's tackiness, suggesting it was copied from 'The Cassandra Crossing' and likening it to the work of exploitation filmmaker Lew Grade, criticising the actors as appearing "at a loss".

'Time Out' called it "awful", "formulary" and "hammily acted" but explained its curious editing as resulting from the production problems. The 'Radio Times' gave it 2/5 stars, noting its disjointed quality but praising the acting and snowy special effects. Leonard Maltin's annual publication "TV Movies" gives the film a BOMB rating.

See also



* List of American films of 1979

References




Buy Avalanche Express now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1979



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1106733980.