Southern Pacific 4449, also known as the Daylight, was born in the fires of the Lima Locomotive Works in 1941. Joining a fleet of GS-4 class engines already in service, Daylight would go on to be the lone survivor of the era as diesel soon took the lead in locomotive power, preserved as a static display in Portland, Oregon. In 1974, in preparation for the Bicentennial celebrations two years later, Daylight was given a second chance at life, undergoing a full restoration in order to pull the American Freedom Train in 1976. After touching on all this history, this film’s story begins in the early 1980s when Daylight would receive another overhaul and be put into excursionary service. Filmmaker Jim Mitchell and his crew document Daylight’s maintenance before filming the train’s inaugural excursion from the train itself and with an extensive chase crew using cars and helicopters.
Trains Of Fame – Daylight Express Adventures comes from a long line of railfan content focused on the experience of riding the rails, and in this aspect, it succeeds in spades. This multifaceted train documentary will be instructional for kids and informational for train nerds as well as a nostalgia blast for those (like me) who were raised on grainy second-hand VHS copies of Lots and Lots of Trains. I feel some viewers will complain that there hasn’t been an extensive 4K remaster done to this re-release, but the charm of being able to see that this was recorded on magnetic tape helps to cement the historic nature of this footage and this train. There are far too many AI-assisted uprenders that feel too unreal, dreamlike, or nightmarish. I’d prefer to see a few glitches and grains than feel like the documentary I’m watching doesn’t fully represent reality. If your patrons are looking for that type of nostalgia, they’ll love this footage. For railfans old and young, this historic train and its historic journeys will be captivating. Highly Recommended.
Why should public libraries add this railroad documentary to their collections?…