Zürcher Nachrichten - Sex, death and madness on the night train from Tolstoy to Bond

EUR -
AED 4.328963
AFN 77.796969
ALL 96.362583
AMD 445.164335
ANG 2.11006
AOA 1080.272608
ARS 1706.516254
AUD 1.691919
AWG 2.123227
AZN 2.004531
BAM 1.953011
BBD 2.375308
BDT 144.114214
BGN 1.979561
BHD 0.444404
BIF 3480.962303
BMD 1.178752
BND 1.500415
BOB 8.149363
BRL 6.17631
BSD 1.179316
BTN 106.749022
BWP 15.530823
BYN 3.367791
BYR 23103.535666
BZD 2.371913
CAD 1.613411
CDF 2622.722404
CHF 0.916837
CLF 0.025703
CLP 1014.905321
CNY 9.395536
CNH 8.186669
COP 4293.014127
CRC 584.665137
CUC 1.178752
CUP 31.236923
CVE 110.107773
CZK 24.381715
DJF 210.010119
DKK 7.468259
DOP 74.320708
DZD 153.236542
EGP 55.277332
ERN 17.681277
ETB 182.679226
FJD 2.603851
FKP 0.86039
GBP 0.865215
GEL 3.170699
GGP 0.86039
GHS 12.949509
GIP 0.86039
GMD 86.640044
GNF 10350.615145
GTQ 9.046083
GYD 246.737675
HKD 9.204578
HNL 31.152834
HRK 7.526924
HTG 154.585819
HUF 379.641778
IDR 19824.012353
ILS 3.648007
IMP 0.86039
INR 106.65594
IQD 1544.75426
IRR 49654.92059
ISK 144.691813
JEP 0.86039
JMD 184.902246
JOD 0.835716
JPY 184.899602
KES 152.259529
KGS 103.081703
KHR 4750.370043
KMF 491.539233
KPW 1060.811967
KRW 1726.057758
KWD 0.362325
KYD 0.982797
KZT 585.973269
LAK 25367.776479
LBP 101549.469201
LKR 365.018777
LRD 219.132152
LSL 18.930427
LTL 3.480548
LVL 0.713015
LYD 7.453357
MAD 10.814458
MDL 19.954506
MGA 5223.588295
MKD 61.59467
MMK 2475.303529
MNT 4207.963272
MOP 9.490548
MRU 46.831327
MUR 54.081214
MVR 18.22355
MWK 2048.670747
MXN 20.463591
MYR 4.648983
MZN 75.157435
NAD 18.930645
NGN 1616.540545
NIO 43.399685
NOK 11.443111
NPR 170.798111
NZD 1.970219
OMR 0.453229
PAB 1.179316
PEN 3.963556
PGK 5.052978
PHP 69.357933
PKR 329.865174
PLN 4.217609
PYG 7805.853753
QAR 4.292131
RON 5.094802
RSD 117.377152
RUB 89.879057
RWF 1720.928736
SAR 4.420532
SBD 9.506218
SCR 17.422286
SDG 709.015346
SEK 10.612079
SGD 1.502066
SHP 0.884369
SLE 28.938202
SLL 24717.835419
SOS 672.153089
SRD 44.667612
STD 24397.782777
STN 24.465998
SVC 10.319265
SYP 13036.494032
SZL 18.930491
THB 37.507292
TJS 11.021063
TMT 4.131525
TND 3.354137
TOP 2.838151
TRY 51.312009
TTD 7.988593
TWD 37.352879
TZS 3032.337429
UAH 50.86509
UGX 4199.004097
USD 1.178752
UYU 45.455093
UZS 14457.355844
VES 445.549741
VND 30593.914104
VUV 140.927782
WST 3.213478
XAF 654.902391
XAG 0.015426
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.185636
XCG 2.125465
XDR 0.814637
XOF 655.021672
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.925999
ZAR 19.047805
ZMK 10610.182421
ZMW 23.086035
ZWL 379.557605
  • RBGPF

    4.4200

    86.52

    +5.11%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RELX

    -0.7300

    29.78

    -2.45%

  • BP

    0.3800

    39.2

    +0.97%

  • NGG

    1.5600

    87.79

    +1.78%

  • BTI

    -0.2400

    61.63

    -0.39%

  • RIO

    0.1100

    96.48

    +0.11%

  • GSK

    3.8900

    57.23

    +6.8%

  • AZN

    3.1300

    187.45

    +1.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.1400

    23.52

    -0.6%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3100

    16.62

    -1.87%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    26.34

    +0.91%

  • BCC

    5.3000

    90.23

    +5.87%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.87

    -0.29%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.15

    +0.23%

  • VOD

    0.4600

    15.71

    +2.93%

Sex, death and madness on the night train from Tolstoy to Bond
Sex, death and madness on the night train from Tolstoy to Bond / Photo: VALERIE MACON - AFP

Sex, death and madness on the night train from Tolstoy to Bond

The return of the sleeper train from Berlin to Paris is a reminder of the romance of railways that has long inspired writers, musicians and filmmakers.

Text size:

One of the first-ever films, the 50-second "Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat Station", reportedly terrified audiences in 1896 who thought they were about to be squashed in their seats.

Long before and since, trains have provided a setting for love, mystery and danger in some of the most enduring works of art.

- Love and intrigue -

Despite the romance, night trains fell out favour early this century, and most lines in Europe closed in the 2010s.

But with growing demand for low-emission forms of travel, several European countries are now looking into bringing them back.

On Monday, a number of government ministers were on hand as the first Berlin-Paris night train in nine years left the German capital on its 10-hour journey to Paris.

The service will run three days a week in each direction before going daily in October 2024.

Night trains became trendy after World War I as prices fell and Europeans sought a break after the war, said Andrew Martin, author of "Night Trains: The Rise and Fall of the Sleeper".

A whole genre of books and films emerged, most famously Agatha Christie's "Murder on the Orient Express".

"Night trains evoke crime, sex and intrigue," Martin said. "It's an enclosed setting, like a country house, perfect for a mystery."

Railways were a place for life-changing romance in David Lean's classic "Brief Encounter" and Richard Linklater's "Before Sunrise".

One of the most iconic moments in Bollywood history was superstar Rajesh Khanna serenading his beloved from his jeep as she rode the Darjeeling toy train in 1969's "Aradhana".

Alfred Hitchcock used trains repeatedly -- a place to hatch conspiracies ("Strangers on a Train"), disappear ("The Lady Vanishes") or fall in love ("North by Northwest"), the latter ending with the much-parodied sexual innuendo of a train entering a tunnel.

Journeying through the night is exotic, Martin said.

"And you can move around," he added. "You can't murder someone on a plane and then go back to your seat."

- Action -

High speed and cramped spaces have made for memorable cinematic set-pieces.

Tom Cruise leapt between a helicopter and a train in the first "Mission: Impossible" and clambered up falling carriages in the most recent.

James Bond is a train enthusiast, from Sean Connery's bruising carriage fight in "From Russia With Love" to Daniel Craig plummeting off one in "Skyfall", via Roger Moore dressed, cringe-inducingly, as a gorilla on a circus train in "Octopussy".

Few have matched the chutzpah of Buster Keaton, whose dedication to realism saw him drive a real locomotive onto a collapsing bridge for 1926's "The General" -- the costliest stunt in silent movie history.

Another Bollywood landmark was the fast-paced train robbery with its galloping horses in 1975's "Sholay".

- Music and painting -

Songwriters have loved the metaphor of trains bringing them home or veering off-track.

Johnny Cash dreamed of the "train-a-comin'" to take him away from his cell in "Folsom Prison Blues", while the US band Soul Asylum saw depression as a "Runaway Train".

Cat Stevens called for a "Peace Train" to end the Vietnam War; Ozzy Osbourne feared the Cold War had driven him "off the rails on a crazy train".

Billowing smoke, movement and modernity were ideal fodder for experimental painters.

JMW Turner's "Rain, Steam, and Speed" is one of his most celebrated works, while Claude Monet's 12 paintings of the Gare St Lazare station in Paris were his first series on a single theme.

- Social commentary -

Sceptical of rapid technological change, Leo Tolstoy made trains a harbinger of doom and death in "Anna Karenina".

In Emile Zola's "The Beast Within" they are relentless machines, mirroring the protagonist's descent into madness.

Trains connect people but can also pull families apart, as they do in Yasujiro Ozu's classic film, "Tokyo Story".

Their arrival could signal the end of an old way of life, such as the villains arriving by train in Sergio Leone's "Once Upon A Time In The West".

Or they could mark the demise of civilisation, like the train in "Snowpiercer", a graphic novel, film and TV series, as an authoritarian prison for the last survivors of a climate apocalypse.

S.Scheidegger--NZN