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Union Street station
Evening all,
One for the collectors of fictitious underground stations - and in particular for the specialists who like fictitious abandoned underground stations! There's a film out at the moment called The Escapist, about a prison break, made by means of underground passages. At some point, the escapees reach the capital-U Underground, in the shape of an abandoned station, Union Street. There's WW2 paraphernalia on the floor, and a copy of the 1941 tube map on the wall: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/clive.b...maps/1941.html Which is utterly distinctive because of the way interchanges are shown. I didn't spot Union Street on that map, but my companion did, and he said it was just east of Elephant & Castle. There is a Union Street in Southwark, but north of Elephant. However, the prison is described as "south of the river", and they walk through the tunnels to Charing Cross, so either of those makes sense. I'm afraid i couldn't tell you if it was on the Bakerloo or the Northern line, though! I don't think there are any prisons in that vicinity - perhaps the producers thought HMP Clink was still in operation? Or, more geographically but less comically, Marshalsea or Horsemonger Lane. Anyway, it's a decent enough film, so if you're stuck for something to do and like fairly well-acted crime capers, give it a go. tom -- I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me. -- Hunter S. Thompson |
Union Street station
On Mon, 23 Jun 2008 23:34:28 +0100, Tom Anderson
wrote: Evening all, One for the collectors of fictitious underground stations - and in particular for the specialists who like fictitious abandoned underground stations! There's a film out at the moment called The Escapist, about a prison break, made by means of underground passages. At some point, the escapees reach the capital-U Underground, in the shape of an abandoned station, Union Street. There's WW2 paraphernalia on the floor, and a copy of the 1941 tube map on the wall: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/clive.b...maps/1941.html Which is utterly distinctive because of the way interchanges are shown. Indeed. I saw this film on Sunday and commented to my companion "that's definitely a WWII-era tube map" and she thought I was bonkers :-) I didn't spot Union Street on that map, but my companion did, and he said it was just east of Elephant & Castle. There is a Union Street in Southwark, but north of Elephant. However, the prison is described as "south of the river", and they walk through the tunnels to Charing Cross, so either of those makes sense. I'm afraid i couldn't tell you if it was on the Bakerloo or the Northern line, though! I don't think there are any prisons in that vicinity - perhaps the producers thought HMP Clink was still in operation? Or, more geographically but less comically, Marshalsea or Horsemonger Lane. The letter that Perry receives names the prison - though I can't recall now what it was, it was fictitious, though I remember it did have an SE1 postcode. The actual prison used for the set is in Dublin, FWIW. Anyway, it's a decent enough film, so if you're stuck for something to do and like fairly well-acted crime capers, give it a go. Agreed. I loved it, which surprised me as the reviews have been generally positive. |
Union Street station
James Farrar wrote:
On Mon, 23 Jun 2008 23:34:28 +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: Evening all, One for the collectors of fictitious underground stations - and in particular for the specialists who like fictitious abandoned underground stations! There's a film out at the moment called The Escapist, about a prison break, made by means of underground passages. At some point, the escapees reach the capital-U Underground, in the shape of an abandoned station, Union Street. There's WW2 paraphernalia on the floor, and a copy of the 1941 tube map on the wall: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/clive.b...maps/1941.html Which is utterly distinctive because of the way interchanges are shown. Indeed. I saw this film on Sunday and commented to my companion "that's definitely a WWII-era tube map" and she thought I was bonkers ....or just needed to get out more! |
Union Street station
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 02:53:19 +0100, "Stephen O'Connell"
wrote: James Farrar wrote: On Mon, 23 Jun 2008 23:34:28 +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: Evening all, One for the collectors of fictitious underground stations - and in particular for the specialists who like fictitious abandoned underground stations! There's a film out at the moment called The Escapist, about a prison break, made by means of underground passages. At some point, the escapees reach the capital-U Underground, in the shape of an abandoned station, Union Street. There's WW2 paraphernalia on the floor, and a copy of the 1941 tube map on the wall: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/clive.b...maps/1941.html Which is utterly distinctive because of the way interchanges are shown. Indeed. I saw this film on Sunday and commented to my companion "that's definitely a WWII-era tube map" and she thought I was bonkers ...or just needed to get out more! She already knew that ;) |
Union Street station
"Stephen O'Connell" wrote in message
... James Farrar wrote: On Mon, 23 Jun 2008 23:34:28 +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: Evening all, One for the collectors of fictitious underground stations - and in particular for the specialists who like fictitious abandoned underground stations! There's a film out at the moment called The Escapist, about a prison break, made by means of underground passages. At some point, the escapees reach the capital-U Underground, in the shape of an abandoned station, Union Street. There's WW2 paraphernalia on the floor, and a copy of the 1941 tube map on the wall: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/clive.b...maps/1941.html There apparently is such a station in New York City. |
Union Street station
"Tom Anderson" wrote in message .li... On Wed, 25 Jun 2008, wrote: "Stephen O'Connell" wrote in message ... James Farrar wrote: On Mon, 23 Jun 2008 23:34:28 +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: There's a film out at the moment called The Escapist, about a prison break, made by means of underground passages. At some point, the escapees reach the capital-U Underground, in the shape of an abandoned station, Union Street. There apparently is such a station in New York City. So there is: I didn't clarify myself. Apparently, there was a phantom station somewhere out in Brooklyn, the existence of which the relevant authorities have denied. |
Union Street station
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008, wrote:
"Tom Anderson" wrote in message .li... On Wed, 25 Jun 2008, wrote: "Stephen O'Connell" wrote in message ... James Farrar wrote: On Mon, 23 Jun 2008 23:34:28 +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: There's a film out at the moment called The Escapist, about a prison break, made by means of underground passages. At some point, the escapees reach the capital-U Underground, in the shape of an abandoned station, Union Street. There apparently is such a station in New York City. So there is: I didn't clarify myself. Apparently, there was a phantom station somewhere out in Brooklyn, the existence of which the relevant authorities have denied. Ah! I don't think that's analogous to what was in the film. But it's still interesting (more so!) - can you tell us any more? tom -- GODZILLA PLEASE EAT THE ****IN COLDPLAY -- a poster in Bergen |
Union Street station
"Tom Anderson" wrote in message
h.li... I didn't clarify myself. Apparently, there was a phantom station somewhere out in Brooklyn, the existence of which the relevant authorities have denied. Ah! I don't think that's analogous to what was in the film. But it's still interesting (more so!) - can you tell us any more? tom -- I read about it on nyc.transit. Apparently there was a station that either opened up, but closed a few days later or it was projected and half built. I'm not sure what the situation is with that. |
Union Street station
wrote:
"Tom Anderson" wrote in message h.li... I didn't clarify myself. Apparently, there was a phantom station somewhere out in Brooklyn, the existence of which the relevant authorities have denied. Ah! I don't think that's analogous to what was in the film. But it's still interesting (more so!) - can you tell us any more? tom -- I read about it on nyc.transit. Apparently there was a station that either opened up, but closed a few days later or it was projected and half built. I'm not sure what the situation is with that. I think you are referring to the *76th* Street station: http://www.columbia.edu/~brennan/abandoned/76st.html After reading the page be sure to look at the date. It would have been the stop after Euclid had the line stayed underground instead of using the BMT el to Lefferts. The NY Division of the ERA had published proposed track layout back in 2004. -- ------------------------------------------------- | Joseph D. Korman | | | | Visit The JoeKorNer at | | http://www.thejoekorner.com | |-------------------------------------------------| | The light at the end of the tunnel ... | | may be a train going the other way! | | Brooklyn Tech Grads build things that work!('66)| |-------------------------------------------------| | All outgoing E-mail is scanned by NAV | ------------------------------------------------- |
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