Snakes on a Train

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Snakes on a Train
Directed by The Mallachi Brothers
Written by Eric Frosberg
Starring Alby Castro
Julia Ruiz
Giovanni Bejarano
Al Galvex
Distributed by The Asylum
Release date(s) August 15, 2006 (US)
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Snakes on a Train is an action/horror B-movie released direct to DVD by The Asylum on August 15, 2006. Continuing The Asylum's notorius tradition of capitalizing on major films with low-budget films with similar titles/plots, many aspects of the film are inspired by the film Snakes on a Plane which was scheduled for theatrical release three days later on August 18, 2006. However, this film contains significantly more violence and gore than its counterpart and includes some supernatural elements as well.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Although taking the same basic idea from Snakes on a Plane (lots of deadly snakes loose on a claustrophobic, high speed means of transport), the background story of how and why the snakes are there is significantly different. In this movie, a woman has been put under a Mayan curse which causes snake eggs to hatch inside of her and eat their way out. In order to stop this, she must take a train to Los Angeles where a powerful Mayan shaman can lift the curse. When she gets on the train, things go wrong and the eggs start to hatch, leaving the rest of the people on the train to deal with the killer snakes.

While the box promises "100 Trapped Passengers - 3,000 Venomous Vipers"[citation needed], in reality there are only about a dozen passengers and a handful of snakes. There is also a wholly unconnected sideplot regarding two female passengers, one of whom is (Amelia Jackson-Gray). It should also be noted that the train involved consists on the inside of old post-World War II streamliners, rather timeworn and thus resemblent of late pre-Amtrak and early Amtrak trains. The movie's depictions of the train exterior is a study in inconsistent special effects: the train's consist of rolling stock appears to change magically, ranging anywhere from a full train of Bombardier bilevels to an Amfleet set to, perhaps, a chain of Superliners, and at almost no time do the exteriors shown match the interiors (which remain consistent throughout the movie). The interiors shown in the movie for a Los Angeles-bound train has been outdated for at least three decades, if not more.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Reception

When reviewed by Variety magazine, it was described "neither undiscriminating action fans nor connoisseurs of high camp will find much bite in this latest direct-to-video product from The Asylum."[1] Scott Foy, reviewing the film for Dread Central wrote "how the hell do you produce a rip-off this dispirited".[2]

[edit] Trailers

The official trailer was made available for download on The Asylum's official site. It has been televised on G4's Attack of the Show.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Joe Leydon. Snakes on a Train. Variety. Retrieved on 2006-08-27.
  2. ^ Scott Foy. Snakes on a Train (DVD). Dread Central. Retrieved on 2006-08-27.

[edit] External links

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