Strangers on a Train (film)
Strangers on a Train was a film released in 1951 by Warner Bros. The film was directed by Alfred Hitchcock. The film starred Farley Granger, Ruth Roman, Robert Walker and Leo G. Carroll. The movie was based on Patricia Highsmith's novel. Detective novelist Raymond Chandler wrote an early draft of the screenplay.
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The story
Tennis star Guy Haines (Granger) wants to divorce his unfaithful wife in order to marry the woman he loves, Anne Morton (Roman). Haines meets the unstable Bruno Anthony (Walker) on a train and Bruno tells Guy about his idea to switch murders: Bruno would kill Guy's wife if Guy kills Bruno's father. Guy doesn't take Bruno seriously, but Bruno kills Guy's wife and then demands that Guy to honor his part of the bargain.
The motif of the double
Like Shadow of a Doubt, Strangers on a Train is one of many Hitchcock films to explore the doppelgänger theme. The film employs a number of puns and visual metaphors to suggest the motif of double-crossing and crossing one's double. "Isn't it a fascinating design?" Hitchcock is reputed to have said; "You could study it forever."
A few examples:
- Bruno orders two double drinks on the train in the beginning of the film
- Guy's lighter, which plays an important role in the film, features two crossed tennis rackets
- A murder committed early in the film is seen doubly reflected in both lenses of the victim's glasses
- Hitchcock's cameo comes early in the film, as he carries a double-bass -- the physical double for the rotund director
Parodies
Hitchcock's film was the basis for the farcical film Throw Momma from the Train (1987), starring Billy Crystal and Danny DeVito.