Narrow Margin

It will take you to the edge of suspense.

6.4
19901h 37m

Production

Logo for Carolco Pictures

An L.A. District Attorney attempts to take an unwilling murder witness back to the United States to testify against a top-level mob boss. Frantically attempting to escape two deadly hitmen sent to silence her, they board a Vancouver-bound train only to discover that the killers are onboard with them. For the next 20 hours, as the train hurls through the beautiful but isolated Canadian wilderness, a deadly game of cat and mouse ensues in which their ability to tell friend from foe is a matter of life and death.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Narrow Margin 1990 TV trailer

Narrow Margin 1990 TV trailer

Thumbnail for video: Narrow Margin (trailer)

Narrow Margin (trailer)

Cast

Photo of Gene Hackman

Gene Hackman

Robert Caulfield

Photo of Anne Archer

Anne Archer

Carol Hunnicut

Photo of Harris Yulin

Harris Yulin

Leo Watts

Photo of J. T. Walsh

J. T. Walsh

Michael Tarlow

Photo of M. Emmet Walsh

M. Emmet Walsh

Sergeant Dominick Benti

Photo of Susan Hogan

Susan Hogan

Kathryn Weller

Photo of Nigel Bennett

Nigel Bennett

Jack Wootton

Photo of J.A. Preston

J.A. Preston

Martin Larner

Photo of Antony Holland

Antony Holland

Elderly Man

Photo of Kevin McNulty

Kevin McNulty

James Dahlbeck

Photo of Lesley Ewen

Lesley Ewen

Larner's Secretary

Photo of Robert Rozen

Robert Rozen

Dining Car Waiter

Photo of Tom McBeath

Tom McBeath

Conductor #2

Photo of Ron Cummins

Ron Cummins

Hotel Valet

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Reviews

J

John Chard

6.5/10

Narrow Margins and Wide Loads.

Director and writer Peter Hyams took the bold decision to reimage one of the best film noir crime pictures of the 1950s, and all things considered it’s not half bad. Without getting close to the greatness of Richard Fleischer’s 1952 claustrophobic suspenser that is.

Having Gene Hackman and Anne Archer heading up your two principal characters is a good foundation. As the district attorney employee and witness to a mob killing respectively, both actors come up trumps for their director as they are thrust into a game of cat and mouse aboard a speeding train. As the Canadian wilderness outside the train’s windows soothes the eyes, the cramped interiors make for good suspense as Hackman plays the calm to Archer’s panic.

There’s nothing new here in terms of thriller conventions, and the pitfalls and familiarity of the plot’s ideas keep it from hitting better heights: people still do dumb things – important details are all too quickly swept aside – laws of gravity non existent and etc. But refreshingly Hyams resists the chance to insert a cloying romance, while his staging of suspense scenes are very well handled. But of course he’s got Hackman being as cool as a cucumber. 6.5/10

J

JPV852

7/10

Second time watching this and still a solid thriller with a great finale that, save for one shot, looked practical which was great and today would've been done with visual effects. Good performances from Hackman and Archer and at only 94-minutes, a quick but entertaining way to spend a weekend night. **3.5/5**

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