
Last Train Home
Mystery · History · War
Overview
Three American soldiers board a train out of Germany after the end of World War Two. When another passenger is murdered it's up to the three soldiers, the train crew, and a mysterious stranger to uncover the killer amongst them.
Top Cast
Justin Nelson
Justin Nelson
Fred
Justin Nelson
Fred
Logan Fairchild
Logan Fairchild
Joe
Logan Fairchild
Joe
Michael Klahre
Michael Klahre
Mr. Werner
Michael Klahre
Mr. Werner
Adam Krause
Adam Krause
West
Adam Krause
West
Zack Sneed
Zack Sneed
Rich
Zack Sneed
Rich


Ellison Winterstein
Ellison Winterstein
John
Ellison Winterstein
John
Lucas Zeigler
Lucas Zeigler
Horst
Lucas Zeigler
Horst
Noah Bosch
Noah Bosch
Thief #1
Noah Bosch
Thief #1
Alex Dale
Alex Dale
Flashback Friend (voice)
Alex Dale
Flashback Friend (voice)
Justin Hailer
Justin Hailer
Thief #2
Justin Hailer
Thief #2
Similar Movies

A man awakens from a two-month-long coma. Total amnesia. A bullet fired point blank. He doesn't remember anything. He's told that he had a wife and a son. They've been killed. He's revealed his past identity by the Colonel, who insists they are best friends. He's a Major of the Military Security Agency. An inspector from the State Security Agency appears affirming that he has information on people responsible for the massacre of his family. The Major is discharged from the hospital. He tries to patch together a normal life but is confronted with emptiness and despair. His only chance of discovering his identity and the assassin of his family is to accept the game that the Inspector has set up for him with the Businessman, the Mafioso and the Politician. He agrees... Discovers that he was a war criminal... Realizes who took a shot at him... Finds out who killed his family... Discovers the Fourth Man!

The Spanish journalist Manuel Chaves Nogales (1897-1944) was always there where the news broke out: in the fratricidal Spain of 1936, in Bolshevik Russia, in Fascist Italy, in Nazi Germany, in occupied Paris or in the bombed London of World War II; because his job was to walk, see and tell stories, and thus fight against tyrants, at a time when it was necessary to take sides in order not to be left alone; but he, a man of integrity to the bitter end, never did so.


















