The First Great Train Robbery backdrop - movieMx Review
The First Great Train Robbery movie poster - The First Great Train Robbery review and rating on movieMx
1978110 minThriller, Adventure, Drama, Crime

The First Great Train Robbery

Is The First Great Train Robbery a Hit or Flop?

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Is The First Great Train Robbery worth watching? With a rating of 6.681/10, this Thriller, Adventure, Drama, Crime film is a must-watch hit for fans of the genre. Read on for our detailed analysis and user reviews.

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The First Great Train Robbery Synopsis

In Victorian England, a master criminal makes elaborate plans to steal a shipment of gold from a moving train.

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Top Cast

Sean Connery
Sean ConneryEdward Pierce
Donald Sutherland
Donald SutherlandRobert Agar
Lesley-Anne Down
Lesley-Anne DownMiriam
Susan Hallinan
Susan HallinanEmma Barnes
Alan Webb
Alan WebbEdgar Trent
Malcolm Terris
Malcolm TerrisFowler
Robert Lang
Robert LangSharp
Wayne Sleep
Wayne SleepClean Willy
Michael Elphick
Michael ElphickBurgess
Gabrielle Lloyd
Gabrielle LloydElizabeth Trent

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is The First Great Train Robbery worth watching?

The First Great Train Robbery has received mixed reviews with a 6.681/10 rating. It might be worth watching if you're a fan of Thriller, Adventure, Drama movies.

Is The First Great Train Robbery hit or flop?

The First Great Train Robbery has received average ratings (6.681/10), performing moderately with audiences.

What genre is The First Great Train Robbery?

The First Great Train Robbery is a Thriller, Adventure, Drama movie that In Victorian England, a master criminal makes elaborate plans to steal a shipment of gold from a moving train....

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Critic Reviews

WuchakJun 18, 2020
★ 6

_**Robbing a train of a shipment of gold in Victorian England**_ Written/directed by Michael Crichton and released in 1978/79, “The Great Train Robbery” was loosely based on the real-life Great Gold Robbery of 1855 that took place in England. Sean Connery plays the mastermind, Lesley-Anne Down his girlfriend and Donald Sutherland a safecracker with whom they team-up. I generally don’t like caper films because the protagonists are criminals, but Crichton wisely makes the characters played by Connery and Sutherland likable rapscallions; meanwhile Down is babelicious, in particular in her jaw-dropping first scene. Crichton intentionally made the movie more farcical compared to his novel and I appreciated the wit and low-key humor. I didn’t expect to like this movie, but it won me over. The film runs 1 hour, 51 minutes, and was shot primarily in Ireland (Dublin, Bray, Cork & Moate), but also Pinewood Studios, England. GRADE: B-/B

JPV852Jun 13, 2023
★ 8

Seen this once before many years ago but decided to check out the new Blu-ray from Kino Lorber. A solid heist-thriller though what struck me was these thieves were stealing gold meant for British soldiers, so not exactly stealing from some corporation, and our lead played by Sean Connery had no issue murdering a guy. Even so, still found it entertaining and some suspense-filled scenes, among them a great sequence with Connery on top of a moving train. **3.75/5**

CinemaSerfJun 2, 2024
★ 7

I think it's Jerry Goldsmith's opening theme that gives a clue that we're in for some fun antics on the railways! That's confirmed when Michael Elphick chucks some would-be robber from the speeding carriage down an embankment where he lands at the feet of "Pierce" (Sean Connery). This bowler hatted gent wouldn't have been out of place in the Reform Club at the start of "Around the World in Eighty Days", so is a natural at another gentleman's club where the manager of a bank is bragging about their impregnable transfer of gold to pay the soldiers of the Crimea. Hardly patriotic, but "Pierce" has his eyes on this bullion and so with the help of girlfriend "Miriam" (Lesley-Anne Down) and cracksman "Agar" (Donald Sutherland) sets about doing the impossible - robbing a ton's worth of gold from a moving train. Each key to the safe is kept separately, so they have to use their guile and wits to find them, copy them, and return them without anyone suspecting! It's this series of escapades that is quite fun to watch whilst shining a light on the double-standards of the Victorian elite. Can they all get away with it? Well this is one of those charismatic ensemble efforts that makes you hope that they do. There's mischief a plenty, some precision thievery and quite impressive acrobatics from the nimble Wayne Sleep along the way too. Hats off to Sutherland though. What was he doing with that cat in the coffin?