Talk:Strangers on a Train (film)

References to use

 * Please add to the list references that can be used for the film article.



Location
Isn't it located in the Washington DC area? is the tournament famous?
 * Some scenes are in or around DC, others are in New York. And of course some are on the train between the two.


 * The tournament is the US Open, referred to in the film as "Forest Hills," after the neighborhood in Queens where it was held at the time.


 * Squidd 14:04, 3 March 2006 (UTC)

Raymond Chandler
Could anyone illuminate Chandler's role in this picture? The Raymond Chandler article says, rather tantalizingly: "Chandler also collaborated, somewhat disastrously, on the screenplay of Alfred Hitchcock's Strangers on a Train (1951)." But this article makes no mention of the disaster, nor does the Chandler article. Any takers? 69.113.93.125 03:51, 19 May 2006 (UTC)


 * Apparently, Chandler complained that Hitchcock's visualisation of the film was so complete that he had little do but write dialogue.Jsteph 05:06, 29 October 2006 (UTC)


 * From memory, Hitchcock and Chandler simply didn't get on -- Chandler was prone to drinking before the script meetings and frequently offended Hitchcock with comments about his weight. In the end, Hitchcock started again from scratch with a new writer (Czenzi Ormonde) but Chandler's name stayed on the credits (I forget if this was for contractual reasons or simply that Chandler's name might attract a larger audience). Davepattern (talk) 14:38, 25 November 2008 (UTC)


 * It's obviously been a while, but one point I found in McGilligan: Chandler thought Hitchcock's new plot was shit & thought he should have followed the novel more closely. Which of course is correct; I don't know what the hell Hitchcock & his screenwriters thought they were doing but nothing in the film plot works correctly. It goes wrong from the beginning, the moment we learn that Guy is a tennis star & Bruno is a huge tennis fan & has also been following Guy's personal life in the news, and tells him all this directly. It basically seems like Bruno's been stalking Guy, and Guy naturally is super-uncomfortable with him from the start, so when he drops the murder plot it's like the culmination of a long series of examples of him being a huge fucking creep. In the novel, Guy is a quiet professional and Bruno is an aimless rich kid, but somewhat nice and charming so it makes sense that Guy would hang out with him long enough on the train for him to suddenly get weird. Dingsuntil (talk) 03:28, 2 June 2022 (UTC)

Fair use rationale for Image:Strangers on a train.png
Image:Strangers on a train.png is being used on this article. I notice the image page specifies that the image is being used under fair use but there is no explanation or rationale as to why its use in this Wikipedia article constitutes fair use. In addition to the boilerplate fair use template, you must also write out on the image description page a specific explanation or rationale for why using this image in each article is consistent with fair use.

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BetacommandBot (talk) 04:37, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

Allmovie
I removed the Allmovie external link because it does not add anything to the article that would not exist if this article was a Featured Article. A film article ideally has a plot summary, a sampling of reviews, list of cast members, production credits, and a list of awards, if they were received. Other basic details also exist. Is Allmovie only being added because of the metadata available there? Erik (talk) 14:43, 8 January 2010 (UTC)


 * The article lacked any mention of awards and honors, so I cited Allmovie as a reference for them. Erik (talk) 14:50, 8 January 2010 (UTC)


 * Michael, you wrote this: "With respects, 'Ideal' is a POV term. This EL provides information from a knowledgable reliable source that is not in any way included in the article. Its removal does not have consensus." I use "ideal" in reference to WP:ELNO: "Any site that does not provide a unique resource beyond what the article would contain if it became a featured article."  A Featured Article about a film will already cover anything that Allmovie can provide, with the exception of metadata, which I doubt is important to anyone.  It is a reliable source, which is why I used it for the new "Awards and honors" section, but it is not a unique resource that supplements a Featured version of this article. Erik (talk) 17:29, 8 January 2010 (UTC)


 * Finally. A discussion. Thank you. I just rolled back my addition, and apreciate that you used what was an EL instead as a source.  Schmidt,  MICHAEL Q. 17:32, 8 January 2010 (UTC)


 * Is your issue more with the placement of a possible reference to use? It is a common habit for us to put references into the "External links" section for use, but I try to put them on the talk page instead.  Like I made this move because they are items that can be used, not to supplement the article. Erik (talk) 17:35, 8 January 2010 (UTC)


 * In looking at these links:, .... I see much other subject-pertinant information from a knowledgable and reliable source that is inappropriate to include in the body of an article, but still lends itself to a reader's deeper understanding of the subject.    Schmidt,  MICHAEL Q. 17:39, 8 January 2010 (UTC)


 * Do you not think that IMDb already covers cast and crew sufficiently? It's the more popular database for interlinking names and titles, putting aside the secondary information like trivia.  As for this, what are you perceiving as adding a deeper understanding?  My experience with "similar works" (tried to add them at Fight Club, see discussion) was not favorable. Erik (talk) 17:44, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
 * Certainly IMDB usualy has lengthier cast/crew coverage... but with the total disdain some editors feel toward IMDB, it is better to have the highest quality ELs as possible. By deeper understanding, I meant just that... information that lends itself to understanding other production details that are not suitable for inclusion in the body of an article. Another example is while the pocket sumaries at Allmovie cannot normally be used in a recpetion section (unless lengthy and in-depth), they offer an acceptable decent N POV insight into a film. A similar summary at IMDB is worthless. And yes, your section move at Fight Club was good, and did not remove something of potential value.  Schmidt,  MICHAEL Q. 17:54, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
 * By pocket summaries, do you mean the plot synopses? They seem to be written with a lot of flair.  I even checked how a synopsis on a bad film would be, and it does not sound neutral.  Plot summaries are kind of supposed to be dull—"this is what happened" in a librarian's voice—where we explore the love or hate for the film in the rest of the article. Erik (talk) 18:01, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
 * Sorry... "pocket summaries" is the term as used at RS and a description always used by excluding editors if someone tries to use such to show coverage. Flair by experts (such as Ebert) is allowable, as that is their educated opinion. So I've modified my words above. But yes, if such includes insight or knowledge for the reader's understanding of a subject, yet is otherwise inappropriate for inclusion in the body of an article, they are suitable as high quality suitable ELs.  And plot summaries need be dull and boring only on Wikipedia.  Schmidt,  MICHAEL Q. 18:24, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
 * Do you mean at WP:N and not WP:RS? "Pocket summary" seems to apply to describing coverage about a film when said coverage from the source is a small summary of what happens in the film, which the excluding editors, I assume, would not consider significant.  In addition, I am confused about the correlation between such summaries and film critics' reviews.  All film critics summarize the film in their reviews, but we sample their specific thoughts in "Critical reception" sections.  Are you saying to link to Allmovie for a more entertaining or engaging read of what happens in the film?  It seems to me that they're not very neutral in how they would get a reader "excited" about the events of a film.  Linking to such elements does not seem neutral on Wikipedia's end. Erik (talk) 18:45, 8 January 2010 (UTC)

(oudent) Yes... N... not RS. My bad... But sorry.. I suppose we're getting off-topic by dissecting my perhaps poor example. It was commendable that you determined a way in Strangers on a Train to include Allmovie as a citation, thus ensuring readers could click the reflink and visit it themselves for further, non-included information on the film. Before I go through the 100+ others that were cleaned up, was this done for each as well? Were you able to find ways in all 100+ to include Allmovie as a citation, so that readers might then have the option for themselves to click off-site for more information from that RS?  Schmidt,  MICHAEL Q. 19:33, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
 * 1) IMDB is considered by current consensus to be an unreliable source.
 * 2) Allmovie has been determined by current consensus to be a reliable source.
 * 3) Duplicative in major facts, Allmovie rarely has the same quantity of information as does IMDB
 * 4) Though a non-RS, but by its providing information relevent to a film article, IMDB has been accepted by current consensus as acceptable as an EL.
 * 5) Even if duplicative of some information from the non-RS IMDB, Allmovie makes a superior EL if providing access to ANY information that might otherwise be inappropriate for use in the article as an citation.

Highsmith's "story by" credit in infobox
A "Story by" credit on a film is a strictly defined credit, per the WGA. Highsmith's byline on the novel is not the same as an official "story by" credit, so I removed it from the infobox. — HarringtonSmith (talk) 03:32, 10 October 2010 (UTC)

Recommended research
Harrington, if you want to research the film further (specifically finding print publications), I recommend using WorldCat.org's results and to explore the books in each year. WorldCat is nice because it lists the table of contents for a book, so for example, one can see that this 2006 book discusses Strangers on a Train. Keep up the good work on the article! Erik (talk &#124; contribs) 20:41, 27 October 2010 (UTC)


 * Wow, Erik, that's a terrific resource. Think of the logo for Vertigo — the figure swirling down the vortex — and you'll know how I feel with the lure of all those film books to get lost in. Thanks for hipping me to the place! Thanks also for the kind words about Strangers — it's a labor of love. — HarringtonSmith (talk) 04:00, 29 October 2010 (UTC)


 * That's the way our contributions should be. :) I hope you don't love Psycho as much... see the references I put together for the article. Erik (talk &#124; contribs) 11:06, 29 October 2010 (UTC)

Concave or convex?
Many references to this movie say convex, not concave. Convex would seem more likely for the wide-angle effect achieved and would have been much easier for Hitchcock to procure, since large concave mirrors are often used for seeing around corners and as rear-view mirrors on vehicles. ("Objects in mirror are closer than they appear.") The two words are often confused. Is there any authoritative description that describes the mirror's actual shape, that is, bulging or sunken in the middle? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 208.53.195.38 (talk) 19:55, 3 October 2011 (UTC)


 * It depends on your point of view. If you're looking at the side of a curved sheet of glass, plastic, metal, mirror, that curves away from you, that side is "concave". If you're looking at the other side of the curved surface that curves toward you, it's called "convex". I always remember which is which by thinking about a cave seen from the outside - it's concave. Shirt  waist &#9742;  04:07, 15 November 2011 (UTC)

3-D?
Was Strangers On a Train originally shot in 3-D, or were the filmmakers at least considering the idea? The entire carousel scene seems loaded with the type of imagery intended to make the most of the 3-D effect (Robert Walker kicking at the camera, the old man crawling under the spinning carousel, and so on.) It was released just before the golden era of 3-D began, so I'd imagine the idea might have been on the drawing board. --RevWaldo (talk) 03:18, 23 February 2012 (UTC)

Is this the primary meaning? PatGallacher (talk) 15:18, 13 January 2013 (UTC)

Alternate/alternative
I changed the heading "Alternate versions" to "Alternative versions". For people who think the two words mean the same thing, this shouldn't matter. And I don't think those who recognise the difference will complain. Machiajelly (talk) 19:19, 10 May 2013 (UTC)


 * That works for me. I think the latter is more commonplace in this context anyway. Erik (talk &#124; contribs) 19:27, 10 May 2013 (UTC)

Length of plot summary
The plot summary was 950 words long. I have cut it down to about 750. Invertzoo (talk) 19:53, 16 November 2013 (UTC)

I think over-simplifying Hitchcock plots can leave out his noted suspense in climactic scenes (e.g. the entry for North By North West on Wikipedia is similar - where it is initially unclear if Martin Landau will assist or hinder as he slowly walks towards Cary Grant who dangles off Mount Rushmore - that isn't mentioned).

e.g. the carousel does not simply crash when the dead fairground worker falls onto the controls and it begins to whirl faster. This is what happens;

The (initial) fairground worker indeed falls onto the carousel control (a large lever) when shot dead by the police in error, and it causes the carousel to speed up. The police then attempt to jump onto it, to arrest the hero, but are all instantly thrown off by the resulting centrifugal force, and so are now helpless.

A second (elderly) fairground worker arrives, and says that he knows how to stop the out of control carousel (by crawling under the small gap between it and the ground to reach the control in the centre that way) - and he sets off. However (the Hitchcock suspense genre) he is elderly, so crawls very slowly.

Meanwhile, as the carousel spins out of control, the passengers scream etc (except a small boy who by contrast enjoys the quicker ride). Also, the hero and villain are now fighting on the carousel, with the villain trying to force the hero off the speeding ride.

The camera cuts between the fight and the slowly crawling fairground worker (who even pauses at one point to mop his brow with a hankerchief - surely Hitchcock trying to frustrate the audience with suspense further).

The small boy (misunderstanding the situation again) then becomes involved in the fight between the two men, seeing it as a way to increase his enjoyment further - his intervention unwittingly assists the villain (it distracts the hero and then forces him to move the child to a safer location on the ride) and as a result the hero's position on the ride seems to become unrecoverable as the villain begins to stamp on his gripping hands to make him let go and be thrown off at high speed.

GA nomination?
Would everyone be happy if I nominated this article for GA status? -MagicatthemovieS
 * Strongly oppose at present Dingsuntil (talk) 06:23, 2 June 2022 (UTC)

External links modified
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(1) Production company. (2) Script.
(1) The production company is listed as Transatlantic Pictures, but neither the Wiki article nor the IMDB entry list this picture.

(2) The section about the script contains


 * "Together the three women, working under the boss's guidance and late into most nights, finished enough of the script in time to send the company East. The rest was complete by early November. Three notable additions the trio had made were the runaway merry-go-round, the cigarette lighter, and the thick eyeglasses."


 * What does "finished enough of the script in time to send the company East" mean?
 * Surely they contributed more than the "three notable additions." Do we know how much of the script was different from Chandler's, an important point given the stature of Chandler, Hitchcock, and "the trio."
 * If Chandler's contribution really was as minor as is suggested, was it the WGA, Warner's, or both that made the credit happen?

== Peter NYC (talk) 04:20, 14 May 2021 (UTC)


 * The credits in the film itself say that it's produced and distributed by Warner Bros., and Transatlantic would likely have been defunct by this point, so this does seem like an error. Mattymatt (talk) 07:37, 7 January 2023 (UTC)

A bit too much seems to be made of matte in the murder in the eyeglasses

 * "Hitchcock and Burks collaborated on a double printing technique to create this iconic shot still studied in film schools today."

This is a stunning and memorable bit of filmmaking, but the "double printing technique" is standard Matte (filmmaking), not even as technically challenging as in "Bringing up Baby", where in the end they had to hand paint Baby's leash on film because it could not be lined up with Cary Grant's hand. == Peter NYC (talk) 06:19, 2 June 2021 (UTC)

Short Story
A short story version appearred in one of Hitchcock's anthologies. Drsruli (talk) 18:59, 8 February 2022 (UTC)

Differences from the novel
From McGilligan we get the claim that ""Highsmith's Bruno is a physically repugnant alcoholic... but in [Whitfield Cook's] hands, the film's Bruno became a dandy, a mama's boy who speaks French, and who professes ignorance of women." Besides my disagreement with McGilligan's "physically repugnant" on the novel's talk page, there's also the fact that novel Bruno is definitely a mama's boy, might well be a bit of a dandy, and whether he speaks French doesn't arise (although as he's supposed to be a Harvard dropout, I figure there's a solid chance he would have taken French in high school). He definitely doesn't profess ignorance of women in the novel, but given everything McGilligan gets wrong here, I don't know what to do with this statement other than to just cut it. Dingsuntil (talk) 10:27, 1 June 2022 (UTC)

I've also decided to take out the claim from McGilligan that Cook "...softened Bruno from a coarse alcoholic into a dapper, charming mama's boy — a much more Hitchcockian villain." Film Bruno was a drunk, although maybe a bit less than Novel Bruno. Novel Bruno wasn't coarse, was charming, and IMO was actually a very Hitchcockian villain. I think McGilligan just isn't an RS for any claims about the novel, except indirectly. For example, he says (IMO believably) that Cook added way more homosexual subtext into the story than was present before. It's just that he doesn't realize that there wasn't any basis for saying there was any homosexual subtext in the novel to begin with (I don't think he really cares about the novel; he was writing a Hitchcock biography so it's not a big consideration). Thus we can use him as a source for the claim that Cook added a brand-new homosexual subtext to the story. Dingsuntil (talk) 03:00, 2 June 2022 (UTC)

Problems with "Political Subtext" section at present
There are a lot of issues with it. I don't feel up to just fixing them all myself, so I'll just point them out and maybe somebody else will make good use of the info.

The bit "Robert L. Carringer has written of a political subtext to the film.[13] Treatment writer Cook used Guy to make the film "a parable quietly defiant of the Cold War hysteria sweeping America."[13]" is a kind of awkward way of saying that this is Carringer's point, and indeed McGilligan does attribute the phrase "quietly defiant of the Cold War hysteria sweeping America" (but not "a parable") to "in the words of film scholar Robert L. Carringer" except that those are not actually Carringer's words in the paper McGilligan refers to (https://doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2001.116.2.370). The article also says "Carringer has argued that the film was crucially shaped by the Congressional inquiries" which is sourced to McGilligan and while McGilligan does say this, Carringer does not argue this in the paper. Carringer attributes this claim to Robert J. Corber in the "Hitchcock's Washington: Spectatorship, Ideology, and the 'Homosexual Menace'in Strangers on a Train", and Carringer's paper mainly argues that Corber actually went too far in many places with respect to how much the film was or could have been shaped by the inquiries. So when McGilligan talks about the relevance of the cold war probe into homosexuals and the senate-commissioned study, and says that Carringer said the film was shaped by "these Cold War events" he is attributing to Carringer the claims that were actually made by Corber and which Carringer attempted to refute. For example Carringer points out that most of this stuff was actually in secret executive sessions, and that at best Hitchcock might have seen some vague press reports to the effect that the senate is holding some kind of hearing about homos in the civil service or something, we're not really sure. Thus for Corbin to say that the senate study was an influence on the film was in Carringer's opinion "chimerical" (I assume he just misspelled "fucking stupid").

In any case I'm rapidly coming to the conclusion that McGilligan is not a reliable source for ANYTHING, not just for the specifics of the original novel, and since the entire political subtext section (and half of the rest of the article) is sourced to him, I think it needs to be fixed. Or maybe just deleted entirely. I mean it could just all be "chimerical" as they say in the academic film criticism business. Dingsuntil (talk) 07:23, 2 June 2022 (UTC)