Snakes on a Train is a 2006 direct-to-video action thriller horror film released by The Asylum as a mockbuster on August 15, 2006.[1] Aspects of the film are inspired by the film Snakes on a Plane, which was scheduled for theatrical release three days later on August 18, 2006.

Snakes on a Train
DVD release cover
Directed byPeter Mervis (as The Mallachi Brothers)
Written byEric Forsberg
Produced byDavid Michael Latt
David Rimawi
StarringJulia Ruiz
Giovanni Bejarano
Al Galvex
CinematographyMark Atkins
Edited byPeter Mervis
Music byMel Lewis
Distributed byThe Asylum
Release date
  • August 15, 2006 (2006-08-15)
Running time
91 minutes
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,000,000

Plot edit

Although taking the same basic idea from Snakes on a Plane (many deadly snakes loose on a claustrophobic, high-speed means of transport), the background story of how the snakes end up on the train differs.

In the film, a woman has been put under a Mayan curse which causes snake eggs to hatch inside her belly and eat their way out. In order to recover the "lost pieces" of herself (the snakes), she must travel to Los Angeles where a powerful Mayan shaman can lift the curse. She takes the snakes along with her in small jars. While on the train, bandits attack her, allowing the snakes to escape, endangering the other passengers.

Eventually, and inexplicably, she herself transforms into a gigantic snake and swallows the moving train whole.

Six passengers manage to escape unharmed, and one of them performs a magic ritual which causes her to vanish. However, one girl is shown to have been unknowingly bitten, suggesting that the curse will remain.

Cast edit

  • Alby Castro as Brujo
  • Julia Ruiz as Alma
  • Giovanni Bejarano as Miguel
  • Amelia Jackson Gray as Crystal
  • Shannon Gayle as Summer
  • Lola Forsberg as Lani
  • Carolyn Meyer as Klara
  • Isaac Wade as Martin
  • Madeleine Falk as Nancy
  • Derek Osedach as Mitch
  • Stephen A.F. Day as Conductor
  • Al Galvex as Julio
  • Jay Costelo as Juan
  • Jason S. Gray as Chico
  • Sean Durrie as Dickie
  • Nick Slatkin as Raz

Production edit

According to co-producer David Rimawi, The Asylum initially had no intention of making the film, but they proceeded when an earlier film project fell through. While looking for international distributors at Cannes, a group of Japanese investors saw the film's poster and asked if there really was a giant snake eating a train (which was originally not part of the film). In response, Rimawi had his crew in Los Angeles add the aforementioned scene to the film to make the Japanese audiences happy.[2]

Reception edit

The film has received mostly negative reviews. When reviewed by Variety magazine, it was described "neither undiscriminating action fans nor connoisseurs of high camp will find much bite in this latest direct-to-video product from The Asylum."[3] Scott Foy, reviewing the film for Dread Central, asked "how the hell do you produce a rip-off this dispirited?"[4]

Spin-off edit

Snakes on a Train is prominently featured in the 2022 film 2025 Armageddon. In the film's prologue, the two main characters become fans of The Asylum as children when their grandmother purchases Snakes on a Train for them, having mistaken it for Snakes on a Plane. Later, in the present, a giant snake attacks a subway train in Tokyo in the same fashion as in the ending of Snakes on a Train; this similarity helps the sisters realize the aliens attacking Earth with the creatures are mimicking The Asylum's films.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Snakes on a Train". The Asylum. Archived from the original on 2008-06-19. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
  2. ^ Solomon, Dan (2011-08-23). "How to Make a Mockbuster (In Five Easy Steps)". Adult Swim. Archived from the original on 2011-09-17. Retrieved 2011-08-24. (note that the article misspelled David Rimawi's name as "Rimaldi")
  3. ^ Leydon, Joe (August 18, 2006). "Snakes on a Train". Variety. Retrieved 2006-08-27.
  4. ^ Foy, Scott. "Snakes on a Train (DVD)". Dread Central. Retrieved 2006-08-27.

External links edit