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Encyclopedia > Strangers on a Train

Strangers on a Train is a thriller novel by Patricia Highsmith, author of The Talented Mr. Ripley. It was adapted as a film in 1951 by director Alfred Hitchcock. The thriller is a broad genre of literature, film, and television. ... 1962 publicity photo of Patricia Highsmith Patricia Highsmith (January 19, 1921 - February 4, 1995) was an American novelist who is known mainly for her psychological crime thrillers which have led to more than two dozen film adaptations. ... The Talented Mr. ... Strangers on a Train is a film released in 1951 by Warner Bros. ... This article or section includes a list of works cited or a list of external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks in-text citations. ...


Plot summary

Architect Guy Haines wants to divorce his unfaithful wife, Miriam, in order to marry the woman he loves, Anne Morton. While on a train to see his wife, he meets the unstable and psychotic Charles Anthony Bruno. Bruno develops his idea to exchange murders: Bruno will kill Miriam if Guy kills Bruno's father; neither of them will have a motive, and the police will have no reason to suspect either of them. Guy does not take Bruno seriously, but Bruno kills Guy's wife while Guy is away in Mexico.


Guy begins to suspect Bruno's involvement in the murder, but hesitates to inform the police. He realizes that Bruno could always claim Guy's complicity in the planned exchange murders, and the longer he remains silent, the more he implicates himself. This implicit guilt becomes stronger as in the coming months, Bruno makes appearances demanding that Guy honor his part of the bargain. After Bruno starts writing anonymous letters to friends and colleagues of Guy, the pressure becomes too big, and Guy eventually murders Bruno's father.


Subsequently, Guy is consumed by guilt, whereas Bruno seeks Guy's company. He makes uninvited appearances at Guy's wedding, causing irritation among Guy, his new wife and his friends. At the same time, a private detective, who suspects Bruno of having arranged the murder of his father, establishes the connection between Bruno and Guy that started during the train ride, and suspects Bruno of Miriam's murder. Guy also becomes implicated due to his contradictions about the acquaintance with Bruno.


When Bruno falls over board during a sailing cruise, Guy identifies so strongly with Bruno that he tries to rescue him under threat to his own life. Nevertheless, Bruno perishes, and the murder investigation is closed. For Guy, however, the case is not closed, and to appease his conscience, he confesses the double murder to Miriam's former lover. This man, however, does not condemn Guy; rather, he considers the killings as appropriate punishment for the unfaithfulness. Still, the confession causes Guy's arrest, because it is overheard by the private detective who had been following the double murders.


CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

In the episode A Night at the Movies, Grissom's team investigated a crime similar to the plot of Strangers on a Train. In the end Grissom finds a paperback version of the book at the suspect's house, and confronts her with it. Although seemingly, she had nothing to do with the murder, the idea itself for the crime came from Strangers on a Train. While in the book they meet on a train, in the episode, the two women meet at an art house movie theater. One has a sexual abuse suit against a dentist, the other has a suit against her boss. The two apparently agree to "solve each others problems." One of the women kills the dentist that sexually abused the woman, but the other woman does not hold up her end of the bargain. The woman who killed the dentist strangles her former "partner in crime" and makes it look like she hung herself. A Night At The Movies is the nineteenth episode in the third series of the popular American forensic crime drama CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, which is set in Las Vegas, Nevada. ... Gilbert Gil Grissom, Ph. ...


External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Strangers on a Train (1951) (134 words)
Remade as Once You Kiss a Stranger and the inspiration for Throw Momma From the Train.
Raymond Chandler is credited as the main author of the script, but it was almost completely written by Czenzi Ormonde who was credited as second author.
Hitchcock makes his cameo appearance early in the film boarding a train carrying a double bass fiddle as Farley Granger gets off the train (see also his cameo in The Paradine Case).
culturevulture.net - review (2859 words)
Strangers On A Train, the 1951 fl and white film by Alfred Hitchcock, is a damned good movie- with many of the requisite Hitchcockian flourishes, but it is not a great film, despite many great aspects about it.
Strangers On A Train is almost a definitive, or archetypal, Hitchcock film in that it has all his film canon's glories and flaws.
When you watch Strangers On A Train you will wince, chuckle, smile, shake your head, be frustrated and relaxed, and if that is not the sign of a work of art that does more right than wrong, there are always new Hollywood releases to watch and wince to.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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