Film
- Night Train (1959 film) (PociÄ…g), a Polish film directed by Jerzy Kawalerowicz
- Night Train to Mundo Fine, alternative title for the 1966 Coleman Francis film Red Zone Cuba
- Night Train (1998 film), a film directed by John Lynch
- Night Train (1999 film), a film directed by Les Bernstien
- Night Train (2007 film), a Chinese film directed by Diao Yi'nan
- Night Train (2009 film), a thriller starring Steve Zahn
- Night Train (2010 film), an upcoming film starring Sigourney Weaver, based on Martin Amis's novel (see below)
Read more about this topic: Night Train
Famous quotes containing the word film:
“All the old supports going, gone, this man reaches out a hand to steady himself on a ledge of rough brick that is warm in the sun: his hand feeds him messages of solidity, but his mind messages of destruction, for this breathing substance, made of earth, will be a dance of atoms, he knows it, his intelligence tells him so: there will soon be war, he is in the middle of war, where he stands will be a waste, mounds of rubble, and this solid earthy substance will be a film of dust on ruins.”
—Doris Lessing (b. 1919)
“Film is more than the twentieth-century art. Its another part of the twentieth-century mind. Its the world seen from inside. Weve come to a certain point in the history of film. If a thing can be filmed, the film is implied in the thing itself. This is where we are. The twentieth century is on film.... You have to ask yourself if theres anything about us more important than the fact that were constantly on film, constantly watching ourselves.”
—Don Delillo (b. 1926)
“Television does not dominate or insist, as movies do. It is not sensational, but taken for granted. Insistence would destroy it, for its message is so dire that it relies on being the background drone that counters silence. For most of us, it is something turned on and off as we would the light. It is a service, not a luxury or a thing of choice.”
—David Thomson, U.S. film historian. America in the Dark: The Impact of Hollywood Films on American Culture, ch. 8, William Morrow (1977)