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  • Superman Returns: Lex Luthor (Kevin Spacey) had a multi-gauge layout.
  • Close Encounters of the Third Kind: Richard Dreyfus' character had an H.O. layout under construction.
  • Clockers: There was a drug dealer who used his profits to buy O gauge toy trains.
  • End of the Line: (Movie about a rail line being shut down). The president of the company had an H.O. layout in his office. Ironically, the engineer and conductor who stole a locomotive and drove it to the corporate headquarters helped him fix a derailment problem on the layout. He then takes off with them and sells them the rail line for $1.00. Cute, but ain't gonna happen.
  • Unstoppable: Oops. Those were real trains acting like models due to GGI special effects. Entertaining movie, but they took a few liberties.

Arthur (original), Throw Momma From a Train, A Christmas Story, Holliday Affair, Back to the Future III, The Black Scorpion.  The last one has the distinction of a train set (complete with Lionel Lines on the sides of some of the equipment) playing the role of a "real train" with a "giant" stop motion scorpion.

Though it wasn't a movie, Dr Jeffery Geiger playing with his Lionel train on the floor of his office on the TV show, Chicago Hope. Mandy Patinkin actually had a great love of Lionel Trains.

On one episode, as best I can remember, Dr. Geiger offering a young patient a "special" Lionel GG1. Maybe someone can add the details of that episode.

Track 29

 

A doctor's wife tires of his obsession with model trains, and spends her days wondering about the son she gave up for adoption at birth. While eating at a roadside cafe, she encounters a British hitchhiker, who turns out to be her son. They spend time together trying to find a bond. The son begins to hate the husband, and the wife begins worrying about the safety of her husband and his train set.

In the first "Godfather" movie there was a scene shot at the former Polk's Hobby Shop, you can make out an O gauge train running on a display layout.

 

Also there was an HO layout in the latest "Lone Ranger" movie, interesting since it was also an electric train that was pretty elaborate in detail, including the layout.  Don't think they had HO electric trains in 1869, let alone model or toy trains that would look like intricate brass or plastic models we have today. 

 

 

Last edited by John Korling
Originally Posted by AGHRMatt:
  • Unstoppable: Oops. Those were real trains acting like models due to GGI special effects. Entertaining movie, but they took a few liberties.

Watch the BR extra features......while events were 'out there' much of the train wrecks were real.....some came close to getting out of hand.

 

TV trains...Addams family and Capt Kangaroo.....local TV Engineer Bill show which I was on myself!

Last edited by AMCDave

I had an uncle who scratch built a train set, making it look so realistic that when he needed money he put the set in the "For Sale" section of the news paper, a movie company bought it and used it for a WWII B&W movie.

The train is supposed to be a German freight train, which runs over a bridge and gets blown up!!!!!!

My uncle made realist looking model trains, cars, trucks, ships, boats and planes, that would be right up there with the foreign imports of today!!!!!

Before, he passed, he worked for NASA, on small intricate parts for the Space Program, down in Florida.

Ralph

Last edited by RJL
Originally Posted by chuck:

Arthur (original), Throw Momma From a Train, A Christmas Story, Holliday Affair, Back to the Future III, The Black Scorpion.  The last one has the distinction of a train set (complete with Lionel Lines on the sides of some of the equipment) playing the role of a "real train" with a "giant" stop motion scorpion.

The Black Scorpion trailer, one of my favorites (pause the vid at 0:59)

 

 

Originally Posted by Big_Boy_4005:

The Station Agent starts out with Peter Dinklage working in a train shop. Lots of Lionel trains, and I think there was a layout, but it is a very short sequence.

There was one. It featured a Lionel MPC Union Pacific Berkshire and modern Lionel rolling stock. You could also see many postwar and modern Lionel on the shelves as well as MTH.

Post

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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