 
  Popularity: 2 (history)
| Director: | Danny DeVito | 
|---|---|
| Writer: | Stu Silver | 
| Staring: | 
| Larry Donner, an author with a cruel ex-wife, teaches a writing workshop in which one of his students, Owen, is fed up with his domineering mother. When Owen watches a Hitchcock classic that seems to mirror his own life, he decides to put the movie's plot into action and offers to kill Larry's ex-wife, if Larry promises to murder his mom. Before Larry gets a chance to react to the plan, it seems that Owen has already set things in motion. | |
| Release Date: | Dec 11, 1987 | 
|---|---|
| Director: | Danny DeVito | 
| Writer: | Stu Silver | 
| Genres: | Comedy, Crime | 
| Keywords | writer's block, train, overbearing mother, ex-wife, aspiring writer, mystery writer, crime fiction writer, dominant mother, murder swap | 
| Production Companies | Orion Pictures | 
| Box Office | Revenue: $57,915,972 Budget: $14,000,000 | 
| Updates | Updated: Feb 01, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 | 
| Name | Character | 
|---|---|
| Danny DeVito | Owen / Ned 'Little Ned' Lift | 
| Billy Crystal | Larry Donner | 
| Kim Greist | Beth Ryan | 
| Anne Ramsey | Mrs. Lift | 
| Kate Mulgrew | Margaret | 
| Branford Marsalis | Lester | 
| Rob Reiner | Joel | 
| Bruce Kirby | DeBenedetto | 
| Annie Ross | Mrs. Hazeltine | 
| Oprah Winfrey | Herself | 
| Raye Birk | Pinsky | 
| Olivia Brown | Ms. Gladstone | 
| Joey DePinto | Sargeant | 
| Philip Perlman | Mr. Perlman | 
| Stu Silver | Ramon | 
| J. Alan Thomas | Millington | 
| Randall Miller | Bucky | 
| Andre Rosey Brown | Rosey | 
| Tony Ciccone | Mr. Lopez | 
| Larry McCormick | Announcer | 
| Peter Brocco | Old Man | 
| Hettie Lynne Hurtes | Reporter | 
| Name | Job | 
|---|---|
| David Newman | Original Music Composer | 
| Allegra Clegg | Production Coordinator | 
| Danny DeVito | Director | 
| Barry Sonnenfeld | Director of Photography | 
| Dana Dru Evenson | Stunts | 
| Michael Jablow | Editor | 
| Ida Random | Production Design | 
| George Stokes | Construction Coordinator | 
| C.J. Maguire | Property Master | 
| William A. Elliott | Art Direction | 
| Bob Newlan | Sound Editor | 
| Joseph G. Pacelli Jr. | Set Designer | 
| Larry Holt | Stunts | 
| Stu Silver | Screenplay | 
| Ken Chase | Makeup Artist | 
| Vince Deadrick Sr. | Stunt Coordinator | 
| Laurel Moore | Still Photographer | 
| Robert R. Rutledge | Supervising Sound Editor | 
| Fred Scialla | Camera Operator | 
| Anne D. McCulley | Set Decoration | 
| Esther Vivante | Script Supervisor | 
| Richard Drown | Stunts | 
| Jerry Stanford | Sound Editor | 
| Robert Waxman | Sound Editor | 
| M. Todd Henry | Camera Operator | 
| R. Gilbert Clayton | Set Designer | 
| Dorothy Byrne | Hairstylist | 
| Michele Neely | Costume Supervisor | 
| David B. Cohn | ADR Editor | 
| Orwin C. Harvey | Stunts | 
| Joe Napolitano | First Assistant Director | 
| Scott A. Hecker | Sound Editor | 
| Marilyn Vance | Costume Design | 
| John Frazier | Special Effects Coordinator | 
| Vince Deadrick Jr. | Stunts | 
| Donna Garrett | Stunts | 
| Marguerite Happy | Stunts | 
| Patricia Highsmith | Original Film Writer | 
| Name | Title | 
|---|---|
| Larry Brezner | Producer | 
| Organization | Category | Person | 
|---|
Popularity History
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| 2024 | 4 | 20 | 26 | 15 | 
| 2024 | 5 | 21 | 35 | 12 | 
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| 2024 | 7 | 22 | 45 | 15 | 
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| 2025 | 1 | 16 | 30 | 11 | 
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| 2025 | 10 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 
Trending Position
A little all over the place, granted, but I still felt entertained by <em>'Throw Momma from the Train'</em>. Danny DeVito stars in what is his theatrical directorial debut. I chose to watch this because of him being in it, as I want to watch more of his stuff, and he is the film's strongest eleme ... nt, I'd say. Billy Crystal is good too, him and DeVito work nicely together throughout. Anne Ramsey's character annoyed me a lot, I can't lie. I'm actually flabbergasted to read that the performance got Ramsey an Oscar nomination - 1987 must've been a slow year for Best Supporting Actress. No hate for Ramsey though, btw - happy for her! I know Momma is supposed to be annoying, but she's way too far along that particular scale for me. The aforementioned is my only complaint, however. It's a good time otherwise, even if I feel like it meanders here and there in setting up each part of the story. It's all worthy of your time, mind.
Though she doesn't really feature enough, Anne Ramsey does steal the show with her scenes as the mother whom henpecked son "Owen" (Danny DeVito) wants to chuck from the train! Meantime, stagnating author "Larry" is shouting as the television whilst his ex-wife "Margaret" (Kate Mulgrew) is doing the ... chat show circuit with a book he claimed to have written. He would cheerfully see her dead, and that's exactly what happens when his student "Owen" takes advantage of a scenario on a luxury yacht. Thing is, he owns up to "Larry" and demands - à la "Strangers on a Train" (1951) - a quid pro quo. "Larry" isn't keen on becoming a murderer though, but having encountered the harridan mother first-hand and having become a police suspect in the demise of his former wife he might find his options limited! I'm not really a lover of buddy comedy as such. Usually the scenarios are so obviously contrived to get a series of laughs before a dead cert conclusion that you could have written them yourself. This one isn't really very different on that front, but DeVito and Crystal do work well together keeping the story from becoming too formulaic and at times it provides quite a poignant assessment of friendship and marriage. I had forgotten just how big Oprah's hair was in the 1980s!