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Play Safe is a 1936 animated short film produced by Fleischer Studios and released by Paramount Pictures.This film was part of Max Fleischer's Color Classics series. [1] The film follows the story of a boy who has a dream about being on a real train (and learns a lesson about train safety).
The gang is playing around the railroad station, and Joe and Chubby's father, an engineer, lectures against the kids playing in such a dangerous area. True to his word, after Joe and Chubby's father leaves, a crazy man named Loco Joe starts a train with most of the kids on it, save for Farina who is nearly run over several times.
For Season 2, he appeared in the episodes: A Long Haul: Part 1, Fix and Lift's Music Battle, Loco the Fabulous Freight Train, Oh Please, Genie, Diesel and Rogi and Genie's New Friend. Voiced by. Robyn Slade (A Day in the Life of Tayo (2010) - The Little Buses' Play (2016)) Monique Dami Lee (Emergency Dispatch!
Shining Time Station is a children's television series jointly created by British television producer Britt Allcroft and American television producer Rick Siggelkow. The series was produced by Quality Family Entertainment (the American branch of The Britt Allcroft Company), in association with Catalyst Entertainment in seasons 2 and 3, for New York City's PBS station WNET, and was originally ...
The Children's Train (Italian: Il treno dei bambini) is an Italian film co-written and directed by Cristina Comencini, based on the novel of the same name by Viola Ardone. It premiered at the 19th Rome Film Festival on 20 October 2024 and was released on Netflix on 4 December 2024.
The voice-over of a headmaster tells his students that he knows that some of them have been playing on the railway, and that "the railway is not the game field". A young boy is sitting on a railway bridge wall. As the boy ponders on his thoughts, he pictures a school Sports Day-style event being held on the railway line. The rest of the film ...
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Prior to the 1950s, there was little distinction between toy trains and model railroads—model railroads were toys by definition. Pull toys and wind-up trains were marketed towards children, while electric trains were marketed towards teenagers, particularly teenaged boys. It was during the 1950s that the modern emphasis on realism in model ...