Texas Night Train

Texas Night Train

Poster art
Directed by Shanti Guy
Produced by Shanti Guy
Kathryn Guy
Dan Huber
Written by Shanti Guy
Starring Chuck Huber
Lydia Mackay
Lloyd W.L. Barnes Jr.
Music by Time Starks/Byron
Richard Hood
Dan Phillips
Cinematography Shanti Guy
Edited by Shanti Guy
Distributed by Dope Scope Productions
Release dates
  • September 21, 2001 (2001-09-21)
Running time
72 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Texas Night Train is a 2001 independent horror film by Fort Worth, Texas-based artist and first-time filmmaker Shanti Guy.

Plot

Texas Night Train follows the odyssey of Jake (Chuck Huber), a hipster who becomes entangled with the voodoo witch Mae (Lydia Mackay). One night at a bar, she drugs his drink and he passes out. When he awakes the next morning, Jake finds one of his kidneys has been cut from his body. He is also handcuffed to a railroad track. Freeing himself, he hops on a passing freight train and encounters a mysterious hobo (Lloyd W.L. Barnes, Jr.) who shares the secret of Mae’s activities. Jake goes into seclusion for years, then returns to seek his revenge on Mae.[1]

Production and reception

Texas Night Train was produced on a US$7,200 budget. According to the filmmaker, it was inspired by the rockabilly song "Moppin’ the Floor with My Baby’s Head."[1]

The film had its theatrical premiere in New York City on September 21, 2001, and reviews were overwhelmingly negative. Rob Nelson, writing in the Village Voice, called it "repugnant" and "a slow train to nowhere."[2] Lawrence Van Gelder, reviewing the film for The New York Times, said the production "amounts to about 10 minutes of storytelling in 75 minutes of repetitive film, ill-defined characters, wretched acting and droning voice-over maunderings."[3] Rob Firsching’s review at the Amazing World of Cult Movies web site stated: "Every copy should be destroyed and Shanti Guy should be legally prohibited from ever picking up a camera again."[4]

Despite the negative critical reaction, filmmaker Shanti Guy told the media that audiences were more receptive. As he stated in an interview: “There are three standard reactions that I got. Number one: we are proud of you whatever you do. Number two: that was some much cooler than I thought it would be. And number three: so, what was it about? I plan to try the film in some festivals and see if it gets picked up there. If nothing happens with that, I will distribute it myself in the hopes that it will become an underground rockabilly cult film.”[5]

To date, Texas Night Train has not been released on DVD.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/28/2012. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.