Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Terror on a Train: Directed by Ted Tetzlaff. With Glenn Ford, Anne Vernon, Maurice Denham, Harcourt Williams. After a terrorist plants a bomb on board a train, the ...

    • (877)
    • Crime, Film-Noir, Thriller
    • Ted Tetzlaff
    • 1953-07-14
  2. In their survey of British B movies, Steve Chibnall and Brian McFarlane describe Time Bomb as "a slickly made suspense thriller with a twist in the tail" that "pointed the direction for British second features over the next decade": "Its compact story, clear narrative trajectory, convincing location work and engaging central performance augmented with entertaining character studies, all provided a template for smaller British production outfits looking to give their films some international ...

  3. Jul 8, 2014 · A race-against-time thriller! Glenn Ford plays a bomb disposal expert called on to find an incendiary device hidden on a train carrying military explosives. ...

    • 3 min
    • 5.2K
    • World of Warner Bros.
  4. Terror on a Train (UK: Time Bomb) is a 1953 post-war film noir thriller film starring Glenn Ford and Anne Vernon. After a terrorist plants a bomb on board a ...

    • 3 min
    • 990
    • Classic Robb's Glenn Ford Channel
  5. 1.37 : 1. Film Length. 6,501ft (8 reels) As a freight train loaded with explosives passes the depot in Birmingham, England, a man who was hiding onboard jumps off and, after fighting off a railway security officer, Constable Charles Baron, runs away. At the office of the railway police, Sgt. Collins examines the satchel the man left behind when ...

    • Ted Tetzlaff
    • Glenn Ford
  6. An expert (Glenn Ford) tries to defuse a time bomb found on a British freight train full of explosives. Director Ted Tetzlaff Production Co Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Genre Mystery & Thriller Original ...

    • Mystery & Thriller
  7. People also ask

  8. A terrorist has placed a bomb on board a train transporting sea mines to Portsmouth. The train is stopped but near a small town, which actually exacerbates the problem. In desperation, the local authorities contact Peter Lyncort, a former Canadian Royal Engineers munitions expert, and ask him to help them dismantle the explosive device.