I don't know if this was already posted somewhere, if so I'm sorry!
HORROR-SEX IM NACHTEXPRESS aka TERROR EXPRESS aka LA RAGAZZA DEL VAGONE LETTO
Italian Genre Cinema Collection 5 (continuation of the collection startet by Sazuma some years ago - design, packaging stay exactly the same)
for the first time uncut on DVD
street date: 20.10.2009
sound: German (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), Italian (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
picture: 1.66:1, 16:9 (anamorphic widescreen) / PAL
subtitles (optinal): German, English (for the bonus featurette as well)
bonus materials: interview featurette with George Eastman, Zora Kerova and Carlo de Mejo (with optional English and German subtitles) - booklet with an essay by Christian Kessler (German+English), gallery, trailers
packaging: DigiPak with cardboard sleeve
rating: unrated
82 minutes
When young Julia hops on the night train, she is unaware of what the following hours hold in store for her. It was supposed to be nothing more than a quick job: quick money and quick sex in the anonymity of her private compartment. But what starts out as harmless fun, turns into an infernal trip into sheer terror when three shady characters declare the train their own personal hunting ground. Soon Julia and her fellow travelers fall prey to their perverted games. Tortured and humiliated, they have only one chance to survive: they must strike back – with a vengeance! Soon the night train turns into hell on wheels, unstoppable in its blood-crazed race on the tracks of pure madness...
Terror Express is probably one of the most radical revelations of Italian terror cinema. Ferdinando Baldi's super seedy sleaze excess embodies the very core of the wonderfully perverted exploitation cinema of the 70’s – a shameless hommage to Last House on the Left and I Spit on Your Grave, and at the same time a sign of what’s to come out of Italy in the following years. Terror Express is a dirty bastard of a film, and this is the reason for why it's so great!
director: Ferdinando Baldi
cast: Werner Pochath, Zora Kerova, Carlo de Mejo
written by: George Eastman