18 Maine nonprofits collaborate on Full Speed Ahead Festival to celebrate Maine’s Railroad Heritage, National Train Day
ROCKLAND — Full Speed Ahead, a statewide festival of train movies and events, will take place May 6-11 at locations around Maine, including Rockland at the Strand Theatre, and in Belfast, at the Colonial Theater.
As a festival presenter, the Strand Theatre will show two train-related films by director Alfred Hitchcock, the renowned “master of suspense.”
Strangers On A Train (1951) will be screened Friday, May 9, at 5:30 p.m., and The Lady Vanishes (1938) will be shown Saturday, May 10, at 5:30 p.m. Alicia Malone, author and host on Turner Classic Movies, will host these presentations.
Movies and trains have a long and productive relationship; more than 300 films have captured the anticipation and thrill of leaving, travelling, and returning by train. Eighteen nonprofit Maine cinemas, museums, and schools have collaborated to produce the “Full Speed Ahead” festival, which will offer entertainment, information, and recreation, and coincides with National Train Day (May 10). Twenty-four movies, plus live activities, will be offered in 16 locations.
In Strangers On A Train, a chance encounter in the club car of a passenger train between an amateur tennis player (Farley Granger) and a charismatic fellow traveler (Robert Walker) sparks a provocative though purely speculative plan: how to “exchange” murders to solve their respective family problems. Hitchcock’s adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s novel is widely praised for its unsettling exploration of fate and the dark dualities of human nature, according to the Strand, in a news release.
The Lady Vanishes stars Margaret Lockwood as a young woman traveling by train through Europe who becomes increasingly alarmed when an elderly governess (Dame May Whitty) mysteriously disappears – all other passengers denying ever having seen her.
"A masterful blend of humor, romance, and suspense, the film is a brilliant display of Hitchcock’s emerging talent for crafting intricate, witty, knife-edge thrillers," said the Strand.
“Alfred Hitchcock enjoyed using trains as a way to increase tension,” said Alicia Malone, in the release. “The claustrophobic interiors forced his characters to be in close proximity to each other, with little chance of leaving – though there were always plenty of closed cabins and shadowy corners to hide their dark deeds. Hitchcock films are always a lot of fun to watch on a big screen with a crowd, and I’m excited to experience both movies at the Strand Theatre!”
Maine’s Unique Railroad HeritageMaine once had five narrow-gauge railroads carrying passengers and freight on small two-foot-wide tracks. Several of these railroads are gone although engines and other equipment representing all five lines still exist. Wiscasset, Waterville & Farmington Railway Museum (WW&F) in Alna supports an ambitious building and restoration program that adheres to historic accuracy, the subject of a May 9 Maine Historical Society live stream. And in western Maine a group recently formed to rebuild part of what was the Bridgton & Saco River Railroad.
The “Full Speed Ahead” Train Festival is sponsored by the Midcoast Villager.
Visit www.MaineTrainFest.com for more information about the festival. Go to www. RocklandStrand.com or call (207) 594-0070 for tickets and more information about the Strand screenings. Regular movie ticket pricing applies to these shows: $10/Adults, $8/Seniors and kids, $7/Strand Members.
The Strand Theatre is located at 345 Main Street, Rockland.