Silver Streak is the first collaboration between Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor, and it’s as funny as they come (hindsight maybe they should have stopped here). The movie starts off in thriller mode, keeping you in suspense of when will Pryor show up, as we watch how things will play out between Gene Wilder and Jill Clayburgh. Then, after an hour in, Richard Pryor is introduced, and the film shifts into a comedy-thriller mashup. From that moment on, you’re hooked, eagerly waiting to see what Gene and Richard will do next. The problem is that one hour wait felt like a drag since I knew Pryor was coming.
Though set in
America, the film was actually shot in Canada, directed by Canadian filmmaker
Arthur Hiller. The story takes place on a fictional railroad called
"AMRoad."
The plot follows
George Caldwell (Gene Wilder), a book editor traveling by train from Los
Angeles to Chicago to attend his sister's wedding. On board the Silver Streak,
he meets a vitamin salesman named Bob, who insists that women on trains will
hook up with just about anyone. Taking his advice, George meets and quickly
connects with Hilly Burns (Jill Clayburgh).
Hilly works for
a professor who is about to publish a book on Rembrandt. But the professor’s
enemy, Devereau, is determined to stop the book from being released at any
cost. Things take a dark turn when George witnesses what appears to be the
professor’s dead body being thrown off the train. Suddenly, he finds himself
entangled in a dangerous plot. Now, with the help of a thief named Grover
Muldoon (Richard Pryor), George has to find a way to get back on the train he
was thrown off and rescue Hilly from Devereau.
While Wilder and
Pryor went on to make three more films together, none were as well-received or
as funny as Silver Streak. Despite the majority of the film taking place on a train—a setting that could
easily feel claustrophobic—the cinematography keeps it visually engaging. The
script is well written, making George’s repeated attempts to stay on the train
feel more like an unfortunate series of events rather than sheer incompetence. It later became repetitive, at first you start to feel sorry for the character and after a while annoyed by repetitiveness.
Silver Streak
was both a critical and box office success. It even landed a spot on AFI's 100
Years...100 Laughs list at number 95. It’s a great movie to own on DVD and one
you’ll enjoy watching again and again.


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