A romanticized history of the building of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad in the Colorado mountains.A romanticized history of the building of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad in the Colorado mountains.A romanticized history of the building of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad in the Colorado mountains.
Kasey Rogers
- Linda Prescott
- (as Laura Elliott)
George Barrows
- Railroad Worker
- (uncredited)
Chet Brandenburg
- Saloon Worker
- (uncredited)
Russell Custer
- Railroad Worker
- (uncredited)
Jack Daly
- Tolliver - General's Secretary
- (uncredited)
Jimmy Dime
- Railroad Worker
- (uncredited)
Lester Dorr
- Dealer
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe yellow "bumblebee" paint scheme seen on the locomotives in the film is not accurate for the era depicted. The yellow paint scheme was first created for the 1949 Chicago Railroad Fair, where D&RGW locomotive #268 was displayed as a symbol of the D&RGW (formerly D&RG) railroad's history. It was used again in the movie, along with several locomotives painted to match. After filming, it returned to normal service, becoming the only steam locomotive to do so in the yellow paint scheme. (The other two that were painted yellow for the film were destroyed in the crash scene.)
In real life, the D&RG's locomotives would have been painted black during this era. Some may have had dark green boilers, but records are conflicting on this, and no color photos exist to settle the debate. Coal-fired locomotives like these were generally not painted in bright colors because, thanks to the soot and smoke from the coal, it would take a lot of extra work to keep them looking clean, so they were painted black or dark grey to make the soot less visible. (There were exceptions to this, of course, such as the Southern Railway's bright green paint scheme.) Older steam locomotives with vivid paint schemes and shiny brass fittings used wood for fuel, which produced a lot less soot.
Locomotive #268 wore the yellow paint scheme from 1949 until its retirement in 1955. It was the last of the railroad's C-16 class 2-8-0 locomotives to be retired, and the only one to wear the yellow paint scheme while in service. It is now on display at the Gunnison Pioneer Museum, once again in its famous "bumblebee" paint (a new paint job - it was painted black for many years before it was cosmetically restored). Unfortunately, there are no immediate plans to restore it to working condition.
The "bumblebee" paint scheme has become an iconic part of the D&RGW's legacy. Although #268 is considered the original "Bumblebee", several other locomotives have worn the paint scheme over the years, and numerous models have been made with the yellow paint scheme (including models of locomotives that never carried it in real life, even for the movie). The Durango & Silverton, a tourist railroad that operates today on former D&RG trackage (including many of this movie's filming locations), uses a similar yellow paint scheme on its passenger cars as an homage to the "Bumblebee" scheme, although the locomotives are painted in their historically accurate black (Period-correct passenger cars would most likely have been painted dark green or maroon).
- GoofsAfter the landslide Vesser assumes the engineer is dead because he's sees his cap lying on a rock near the river. But the cap is yellow and in the scenes where the engineer is driving the train you can clearly see he's wearing a black cap, not a yellow one. The engineer is still dead though.
- Quotes
Jim Vesser: Who put you up to this?
CC&SJ Man: Nobody put us up to anything.
Jim Vesser: Well, you're fired!
CC&SJ Man: Who are you to fire me? You didn't hire me!
Gil Harkness: No but I did... and you're fired.
- Crazy creditsFOREWORD: "With grateful acknowledgement to the officials and personnel of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad whose splendid cooperation made this picture possible."
- ConnectionsReferenced in A Fellow Journeyman: Byron Haskin at Paramount (2022)
Featured review
There were some weak points to this film that could have easily been fixed or edited and they probably should of. First of all the way Nelson is killed- how can you be convinced you shot someone when you were fist fighting them? Second of all the fact that Linda was the sister of Bob Nelson should have been saved to be revealed to the audience when it was revealed to Jim Vesser after the trains crashed. It would keep the audience in suspense and wondering where she's riding off to and why. And finally the head on collision between two old narrow gauge steam locomotives. Since they were capturing such an amazing scene the filming makers should have set up multiple cameras to capture that awesome crash. A couple close up shots would have been so much better than the single shot from far away. All in all I love this movie. Even though the script was empty at times the work put in to get those spectacular shots of the trains and the mountains made up for it.
- aplasmeier
- Jan 6, 2009
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- How long is Denver & Rio Grande?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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