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Second Ave. Sagas

News and Views on New York City Transportation

Service Advisories

It’s the return of the Weekend Service Advisories

by Benjamin Kabak January 4, 2008
written by Benjamin Kabak on January 4, 2008

Despite the tourists, despite the crowds, despite all the bad parts of living through the holiday season in New York, one of the many good aspects is the subway service. For six blissful weeks in between Thanksgiving and New Year’s, the MTA ramps down their weekend track work.

They can’t, after all, have confused tourists on their hands trying to figure out why the D is running in two sections and up the 8th Ave. line in Manhattan. And forget about asking the station workers about service changes; they probably won’t know what’s going on anymore than the rest of us do.

But now that the holidays are over, the work returns. For the month of December, West Siders were blissfully aware of the return of express service on the IRT. This weekend? Fughedaboutit. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. The 7 is running express in sections; the F is running on the V; and the D is indeed running in two sections and down 8th Ave.

The weekend service advisory press release is here. The alerts are below.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, 1 trains skip 28th, 23rd, and 18th Streets in both directions due to Part Authority work on the WTC site at Cortland Street.

From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, there are no 1 trains between 14th Street and South Ferry due to Part Authority work on the WTC site at Cortland Street. Customers may take the 2 or 3 between 14th Street and Chambers Streets. There is a free shuttle bus available between Chambers Street and South Ferry.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, 2 & 3 trains run local between 96th Street and Chambers Street due to Part Authority work on the WTC site at Cortland Street, roadbed reconstruction at 59th Street and station rehab work at 96th Street.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, Flushing-bound 7 trains skip 69th, 74th, 82nd, 90th, 103rd and 111th Streets due to preparatory work for the installation of the 74th Street interlocking.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, Manhattan-bound A & C trains run express from Utica Avenue to Hoyt-Schermerhorn Sts due to ventilation work at Lafayette Avenue.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, downtown C trains run express from 145th Street to Canal Street due to station rehab work at 47th-50th Street.

From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, downtown D trains run on the A from 59th to West 4th Streets due to station rehab work at 47th-50th Street.

From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, D trains run in two sections due to station rehab work at 47th -50th Street:

  • Between 205th Street and Broadway-Lafayette Street and
  • Between Broadway-Lafayette Street and Coney Island -Stillwell Avenue


From 11 p.m. Friday, January 4 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, Coney Island-bound F trains skip 4th Avenue, 15th Street-Prospect Park, and Ft. Hamilton Parkway due to roadbed reconstruction at 7th Avenue.

From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, Manhattan-bound F trains run on the V line from Roosevelt Avenue to 47th-50th Sts. due to 63rd Street tunnel work.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, there are no G trains between Forest Hills-71 Avenue and Court Square. G trains run every 20 minutes between Court Square and Smith-9th Sts. due to Crosstown tunnel work. Customers may take the E or R instead.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, January 5 to 5 a.m. Monday, January 7, Brooklyn-bound NR trains are rerouted over the Manhattan Bridge from Canal Street to DeKalb Avenue due to structural rehabilitation work between Whitehall Street and Canal Street and Montague tunnel work.


From 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday, January 5 and Sunday, January 6, Manhattan-bound Q trains run express from Kings Highway to Prospect Park due to rail replacement.

January 4, 2008 0 comment
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View from Underground

TSTC rates the MTA’s 2007 trend as ‘steady’

by Benjamin Kabak January 4, 2008
written by Benjamin Kabak on January 4, 2008

As the calendar turned from 2007 to 2008 a few days ago, a few transportation advocacy groups started doling out their end-of-the-year awards. The Tri-State Transportation Committee, a group with an impressive Board of Directors and dedicated to reducing car dependency in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, used the new calendar to look at how New York under Gov. Eliot Spitzer has dealt with transportation issues. Their overall conclusions are positive, but the MTA’s last 12 months could have been better.

TSTC’s premise plays off of Spitzer’s campaign promise that “on day one, everything changes.” Spitzer, they write, during his campaign try to “push smart growth and transit-oriented development.” The first part of their extensive essay deals with NYS DOT, and we’ll leave them alone. What we care about, of course, is the MTA. Highlighting five areas in which the MTA could improve, TSTC rated this year as a steady one for the MTA. Those areas please:

  • Fare and toll increases
  • A lack of a formal transit-oriented development program
  • Integration between regional transit agencies
  • Capital construction projects
  • Customer service, transparency, and the public process

For the MTA, 2007 was truly a year of changes. As TSTC notes, it was their first year under a transit policy won — new CEO Elliot “Lee” Sander — and the agency should have seen more change. However, what TSTC fails to note is that the outgoing MTA Board Chair Peter Kalikow stuck around for most of the year. If things seemed to stall out in the early months, I think this can largely be attributed to the transitional period surrounding a change in leadership.

That being said, 2007 was indeed a year of ups and downs for the MTA. We know all about the fare hike drama. In the end, I think the fare hike will matter less than people thought, but I’ll have more on that later today. As TSTC notes, the fare hike is indeed hitting subway riders harder than it is hitting drivers, and that is not a step in the right direction for the MTA.

The next two items on the list — regional coordination and transit-oriented development — go hand-in-hand, in a way. The regional plan — something that could integrate PATH trains more smoothly into the New York City subways and provide a one-ticket ride from Long Island to Westchester or New Jersey is still in its nascent stages. For the MTA to truly achieve better vertical integration, they need to be able to overhaul their internal management structure and combine MetroNorth and LIRR operations into one unit. However, state legislation approval is required for such a change, and our representatives have been loathe to give it out. The MTA gets mixed reviews from me on these matters.

Transit-oriented development is one of the goals set forth by the MTA for the next five-year plan. The idea is to build transit vilages that minimize driving and maximize public transportation. This includes plans for densely-settled, centralized downtown areas with lush pedestrian spaces and various transit options. Reminiscent of the old Gardent city movement but with more common sense, this form of development could be beneficial if suburban dwellers are willing to embrace a city-in-the-suburbs mentality. It’s still too early to tell.

As we all know, capital construction projects are alive and well. The Second Ave. Subway is on the move, and the 7 is heading west. While Bus Rapid Transit plans — a topic I hardly touched upon this year — are on hold, these two extension projects are the city’s most ambitious subway construction efforts in decades.

And finally, the customer service efforts. They started with Rider Report Cards and ended with public workshops. While the MTA seems more willing to listen customers these days, the real test will come in 2008. Do they continue to respond to customer complaints? Do they continue to improve services and the overall presentation of the subway system or were these measures simply token gestures designed to curry favor with riders faced with a fare hike? Again, time will tell.

Now, my assessment here is a little more optimistic than TSTC’s. I like what I hear and see from Lee Sander’s MTA. Having a transportation export in charge can only bring about more positive changes. To me, the MTA had a good 2007 despite the fare hike and August flooding disaster. Things may be holding steady overall, but they are trending in the right direction. Hopefully, we’ll see more of that in 2008.

January 4, 2008 1 comment
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View from Underground

Showing the subway some ‘World of Tomorrow’ love

by Benjamin Kabak January 3, 2008
written by Benjamin Kabak on January 3, 2008

As part of their New Year’s extravaganze, the City Section of this Sunday’s New York Times asked 10 folks to look ahead to 2108 and predict what New York City will be like in the future. Based on an article from 1908 in which New Yorkers predicted 2008, the article featured its fair share of kitschy, flying-cars type predictions and two global warming doomsday scenarios. How creative.

What the article didn’t do — other than through the illustration that accompanied the piece — was give mention to the subway. One of the global climate change folks predicted archeological digs in what would be our flooded subway system, but other than a visual reference of a U and X train — as part of the Sixth Ave. line based on the orange — nary a word of the MTA’s future was at hand.

Well, luckily, you all have me, and I’m going to correct that oversight. So let’s delve into five things that I hope New Yorkers in 2108 can enjoy as they ride New York City’s subways. That is, if they’re still riding the subways. Maybe by then, we’ll have transporter technology. That would be the cure for the rush hour blues.

1. Technology Upgrades: Train-Arrival Boards That Work — In a way, this should have been on the list for 2008. London has it; San Francisco has it; Washington, DC, has it. But New York with one of the biggest and oldest subway systems in the world can’t seem to find a way to get train-arrival boards that work into subway stations. The test run on the L line has gone for nearly a year now, and the signs themselves have popped up in random places — Bergen St. on the Flatbush IRT local, for example — but the MTA isn’t much closer to a system-wide rollout today than they were a year ago. By 2108, I fully expect to know when the next train is coming, and here’s a hint: If I’m waiting on a downtown platform, I don’t really care when the next uptown train is coming. Just ask L riders traveling west from First Ave. about this one.

2. Service Upgrades: Second Ave. Subway — Eighty years in the making, the Second Ave. subway is no sure thing. Yes, we will be getting a Q extension up to 96th St. sometime around 2014, but beyond that, it’s anyone’s guess. The MTA has yet to secure funding for the rest of the line and than 2020 completion date could end up being rather fluid. By 2108, I hope that the Second Ave. subway would run from 125th St. down to Hanover Square and, hopefully, beyond. But as its tortured history has shown, the Second Ave. subway is never a safe bet.

3. Technology Upgrades: Automated Trains — Right now, the MTA is dealing with plans for automated subway cars. The L train test run didn’t go as smoothly as they planned, but as the technology improves and the subway systems are retrofitted with 21st Century technology, I full expect the MTA to go with automated trains. These communications-based train control systems allowed for more track volume and a more efficient level of service. Yes, by 2108, robots will, in effect, be driving our subways.

4. Service Upgrades: Airport Raillinks — Can you tell me how to get, how to get to LaGuardia Airport? Sure can. Take the subway and then a bus and hope you make it to your flight on time! While the least likely of my subway dreams, a subway connection to LaGuardia is certainly something this city in its fight to cut down on automobile traffic could use. I know some subchatters have suggested running the N/W past Astoria Boulevard to the airport, but right-of-way concerns in the densely-settled regions of Queens between the airport and Astoria present some major obstacles. With the nearest lines in Queens all elevated, construction of such a spur would be quite the battle.

5. Technology Upgrades: Wireless Service — Yet again, this one’s rather obvious as it’s in the works right now. But in 100 years, whatever wireless services people are using will be readily available in the subways. ‘Nuff said.

So that’s my list. Maybe it’s too inside-the-box. Four of these proposals are in various stages of development but all four feature significant barriers to implementation. In 100 years, the subway system should run faster, smoother and cover more ground. We should see more Brooklyn-Queens-Bronx connections that bypass Manhattan and more reliable service for the Outer Boroughs as they undergo another century of population explosion. We’ll see advances in payment technology, and two more generations of subway cars will come and go.

Make no mistake about it: If New York is still a thriving, prosperous, international city in 2108, it will have a very modernized, 200-year-old subway system.

Illustration from The New York Times by Bob Scott.

January 3, 2008 7 comments
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AsidesF Express Plan

Brooklynites receive online laurels for F Express efforts

by Benjamin Kabak January 2, 2008
written by Benjamin Kabak on January 2, 2008

In their year-end review of Brookly, The Gowanus Lounge named the F Express effort as the borough’s number two participatory democracy effort of 2007. While we depressingly know that the F Express option won’t be back on the table until the completion of the Culver Viaduct rehabilitation, the accolades for Gary Reilly’s project are much deserved. [The Gowanus Lounge]

January 2, 2008 1 comment
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Second Avenue Subway

Retailers bemoaning Second Ave. subway construction

by Benjamin Kabak January 2, 2008
written by Benjamin Kabak on January 2, 2008

img_5288.JPG

Construction on the Second Ave. subway has cut into sidewalk space along the avenue. This shot looks south at the southwest corner of 94th St. and Second Ave. (Photo courtesy of The Launch Box)

It’s no small feat to construct a subway. Old photos — available in The City Beneath Us — clearly show the distruptive nature of underground construction. Today, businesses along Second Ave. are learning that subway construction comes with a price, and many of them aren’t too happy.

According to a recent story in the New York Post, store owners along Second Ave. are losing substantial amounts of revenue because of the construction, and these business owners aren’t too happy with the MTA’s and the City’s responsiveness so far. Kevin Fasick, Dan Kadison and Patrick Gallahue have more:

Shop owners on Second Avenue between 91st and 96th streets complain that their sidewalk space has been more than cut in half by guardrails and concrete barricades that are keeping customers away. “It cut down my traffic tremendously,” said Marcelo Ronchini, who owns Nina’s Pizzeria on Second Avenue between 91st and 92nd streets. “I’ve lost 20 percent of my revenue.”

John Ng, manager of Hokkaido restaurant, at the corner of East 94th Street, said, “Business has dropped at least $20,000 a month. We’re trying to wait it out. What can we do?”

And Vicky Schreier, owner of Rainbow Ace Hardware at 94th Street, said that her business, too, was down and she wanted the city, along with the MTA, to come up with ideas to help the shops. “There is a significant drop in business,” Schreier said. “We understand it’s good for New York, the good of people, but it’s not good for us.”

In six years when the subway is open and access to the Upper East Side is streamlined, these business owners will be doing a brisk business. But in the world of local stores, six years can be an eternity, and that $20,000 month-to-month decline in sales could be the difference bewteen life and death.

The Post reports that a coalition of shop owners have met with the Department of Small Business Services and the MTA. Assemblyman Jonathan Bing hopes to come to an agreement on some low-interest loans or tax-free zones for those businesses suffering from the construction. Street-level disruptions up and down Second Ave. will be an ongoing issue throughout the construction of the Second Ave. subway, and it would of course be best for everyone involved to find a happy medium to what could be a debilitation problem to businesses in the area.

January 2, 2008 3 comments
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Subway History

Remember Miss Subway a few decades later

by Benjamin Kabak December 31, 2007
written by Benjamin Kabak on December 31, 2007

Miss Subway from March-April 1959 now owns Ellen’s Stardust Diner at 50th St. and 7th Ave. (Source: The New York Times)

Last week, during my post on subway movies, I omitted On The Town. The Comden and Green musical follows three sailors on leave in New York for 24 hours. One of the sailors — Gabey played by Gene Kelly — falls in love with Miss Turnstiles.

Ah, Miss Turnstiles. It’s a New York subway reference lost to the ages. Once upon a time, from May 1941 through 1976, talent agencies appointed a woman Miss Subway every few months. The winner’s picture was plastered on placards throughout the system, and at one point, even Cher got in on the act, writing a song about the contest.

But as with many things, Miss Subway went by the wayside. Despite a one-year hiatus in 2004 that coincided with the 100-year anniversary of the opening of the IRT, the contest has been a relic of New York City history. Over the weekend, The New York Times had fun with past contest winners. In a great “Where Are They Now?” piece, photographer Fiona Gardner and reporter Amy Zimmer tracked down some winners and snapped their current pictures.

It’s a great multimedia presentation on The Times’ site. They have pieces on Miss Subway June 1942, a current lawyer who held the crown from February through August in 1968 and of course Ellen herself, a winner in 1959.

The contest and its spot in history sure do make the subways seem more humane 50 years ago than they are today. But that’s just the nostalgia talking.

December 31, 2007 2 comments
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Service Advisories

Weekend service changes picking back up

by Benjamin Kabak December 28, 2007
written by Benjamin Kabak on December 28, 2007

With the holidays mostly behind us, New York City Transit is ramping up the weekend work again. We have a light slate of service changes but more than the last few weeks. From the press release, here we go:


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, December 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, December 31, Manhattan-bound 6 run express from Hunts Point Avenue to 3rd Avenue due to communication equipment between 3rd Avenue and 125th Street.

From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, December 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, December 31, 6 trains run in two sections due to communication equipment between 3rd Avenue and 125th Street:

  • Between Pelham Bay Park and 125th Street and
  • Between 125th Street and Brooklyn Bridge


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, December 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, December 31, Manhattan-bound 7 trains skip 111th, 103rd, 90th, 82nd, 74th, and 69th Streets due to preparatory work for 74th Street interlocking.


From 12:01 a.m. to midnight, Saturday, December 29, Queens-bound E trains run express from Roosevelt Avenue to Queens Plaza due to track equipment delivery between Roosevelt Avenue to Forest Hills-71st Street and Manhattan-bound E & R trains run express from Roosevelt Avenue to Queens Plaza due to electrical work between Roosevelt Avenue and 36th Street (Queens).


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, December 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, December 31, Manhattan-bound F trains run on the V line from Roosevelt Avenue to 47th-50th Streets due to electrical work between 36th Street and 57th Street-7th Avenue and Coney Island-bound F trains skip 4 Avenue,. 15th Street-Prospect Park and Ft. Hamilton Parkway due to a track chip-out between 4th Avenue and Church Avenue.


From 8:30 a.m. Friday, December 28 to 5 a.m. Monday, December 31, there are no G trains between Forest Hills-71st Avenue and Court Square due to electrical work between Prince Street and DeKalb Avenue.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, December 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, December 31, Manhattan-bound N trains run on the D line from Stillwell Avenue to 36th Street (Brooklyn) due to track panel work between 59th Street and 86th Street stations.

From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, December 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, December 31, Brooklyn-bound N trains are rerouted over the Manhattan Bridge from Canal Street to DeKalb Avenue due to electrical work between Prince Street and DeKalb Avenue.

And one from the e-mail that didn’t make it to this list:


From 1 a.m. Saturday, December 28 to 5 a.m. Monday, December 31, Brooklyn-bound R trains are rerouted over the Manhattan Bridge from Canal St to DeKalb Av.

December 28, 2007 2 comments
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Fulton StreetPANYNJ

PATH WTC hub completion date delayed

by Benjamin Kabak December 28, 2007
written by Benjamin Kabak on December 28, 2007

Later than expected, Santiago Calatrava’s giant porcupine will be a cornerstone of Lower Manhattan. (Source: Lower Manhattan)

Here’s a shocker: The World Trade Center hub, much like every other project centered around Ground Zero, won’t open until at least a year later than expected. The Port Authority announced today that the completion date on Santiago Calatrava’s ridiculously ornate and oddly Star Trekian transit hub is now set for 2011, a mere 10 years after the 9/11 attacks.

The delay represents a set-back of two years for the beleaguered Port Authority. Originally, they had hoped to get the PATH station open by the end of 2009. “Construction of this magnitude is very complicated — things could change,” Josh Rosenbloom, director of city operations for the Lower Manhattan Construction Command Center, said to Downtown Express reporter Julie Shapiro.

And how, you may wonder, does this affect the MTA? Let me count the ways:

Within the next few months, the entrance to the PATH station will move from Church St. to the corner of Greenwich and Vesey Sts., said Josh Rosenbloom, director of city operations for the L.M.C.C.C. This will be the third and last temporary entrance for the station and will be in use for “several years,” Rosenbloom said, adding that the dates are not final…

The Port has already started dismantling the temporary station and will begin demolishing it in earnest toward the end of the first quarter of 2008, he said.

When the PATH entrance moves, the station will no longer have an underground connection to the A, C, E or 2, 3 trains. Construction will also demolish the elevator on Church St. that currently serves both PATH trains and the subway. Port Authority will build a new elevator on Vesey St., but it will only go to the PATH station, said Steve Coleman, a Port spokesperson.

Oops. Fewer access points for the disabled. That won’t go over too well with the Disabled Riders Coalition.

Meanwhile, the MTA is quietly facing their own scheduling difficulties as they work on the Fulton Street transit hub. Originally — many years ago — large portions of the hub — including the work at the Cortlandt St. stop on the BMT — were supposed to open in 2006. The plans have changed, and that station is now closed indefinitely. The MTA, however, maintains that they are on pace for a 2008 target date.

“We’re trying to live down here,” CB1 Board Member Barry Skolnick said. “MTA is famous for being behind schedule. I’m very concerned, and I don’t think it’s acceptable.”

That about sums up the state of most Ground Zero projects. At least the MTA isn’t alone on this one.

December 28, 2007 2 comments
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AsidesRolling Stock

MTA appoints new anti-graffiti task force

by Benjamin Kabak December 27, 2007
written by Benjamin Kabak on December 27, 2007

While the subways are no longer the hotbed for graffiti that they were in the 1970s and 1980s, the MTA is still combatting subway taggers. To that end, they’ve appointed a new squad of retired police officers to patrol popular train yards and catch taggers in the act. While this squad should be beneficial to the MTA, you have to wonder, as a recent Subchatter did this week, whether a bunch of retired cops are going to be able to track down, on foot, young and agile taggers. [Daily News]

December 27, 2007 4 comments
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Subway Movies

Second Ave. Sagas goes to the movies

by Benjamin Kabak December 27, 2007
written by Benjamin Kabak on December 27, 2007

Over the long holiday weekend, I took a trip to the movies to catch I Am Legend, the latest in New York City destruction. While Will Smith, the only surviving human on the island of Manhattan, shuns what I imagine to be a deserted subway in exchange for his product-placed Ford cars, I couldn’t help but imagine the subway in an empty Manhattan. Devoid of people, there would be seats for everyone. Those would be the days.

Of course, Hollywood is not afraid of the New York City subways. (And why should they be? Subway crime is at an all-time low.) So with a slow news week upon us — not much happens in the aftermath of a fare hike when many are off for the holidays — let’s go to the movies. Or at least let’s ride the subways to the movie.

Any discussion about the subway movies must begin with the Joseph Sargent classic The Taking of Pelham One Two Three. Preying on the fears of New Yorkers during the city’s economic and social problems in the 1970s, the movie, based on a bestselling book, features a hijacking of a subway. Led by Robert Shaw, a group of men who clearly influenced Quentin Taratnino’s Reservoir Dogs take a subway car hostage and threaten death if they don’t get one million dollars. It’s up to an excellent Walter Malthau to rescue the hostages and catch the criminals.

The movie is notable for taking place in actual subway tunnels and for a mention in a Beastie Boys song. The MTA allowed filming in the then-abandoned Court Street station and tunnels. Currently, that station houses the Transit Museum. The movie was remade poorly in 1998, but Tony Scott is looking to rectify that misstep with a new remake starring Denzel Washington as Walter Mathau and John Travolta as Robert Shaw. It’s set to open in July of 2009.

On the other side of subway crime thrillers is Money Train, a 1995 movie with Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson and Jennifer Lopez. Harrelson, a disgruntled former employee of the the Transit Authority, conspires to rob the money train. While filming took place in Los Angeles, filmmakers modified an old R22 car that was eventually donated to New York City Transit. The film was criticized after its release when teenagers perpetrated copy-cat crimes in firebombing token booths. Authorities, however, did not believe that the crimes were related to the movie. The money trains have since been retired.

Moving back in time, we come across The Incident, Martin Sheen’s movie debut. For this one, the New York Transit Authority outright denied permission to film. Two kids board a train late at night and begin to psychologically terrorize the passengers. Filmed in black and white, it’s a snapshot into another era when the subways were considered dangerous, and this movie, more than any others, has set the tone for the Hollywood portrayal of the New York City subways as a dark, lonely and dangerous place.

Finally, we come to The French Connection. This one needs no introduction. It is simply the greatest train chase scene in movie history. See it.

Of course, there are always other seminal moments of film history in the subways. Patrick Swayze meets a subway ghost in Ghost, and On The Town features Miss Turnstile, a relic lost to history. But these four featured here are great starting points, and three of them — all but The Incident — are out on DVD. While you may not have to take the train to work this week, catch a train in the movies instead.

December 27, 2007 9 comments
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