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"Night Train to Munich", 1940, with Rex Harrison is a terrific thriller that takes place almost entirely on a train.
"Saratoga Trunk", 1945, starring Gary Cooper and Ingrid Bergman, has a major section that shows a real "war" that took place between two rival railroads in New York State during the 19th century.
"Union Pacific", 1939, with good old Joel McCrea, Barbara Stanwick, and 24 year old Robert Preston as the bad guy.
"The Palm Beach Story", 1942, with Claudette Colbert, Joel McCrea and Rudy Vallee, has a long and hilarious section that takes place on a train.
"Wild Boys of the Road", 1933, depicts the lives of a couple of runaway kids during the Depression, mostly riding the rails.
"Broadway Limited", 1941, with the wonderful Victor McLaglen, is set on the famous Pennsylvania Railroad "Broadway Limited" train, that competed with the NY Central's 20th Century Ltd for the Chicago to New York business.
"Twentieth Century", 1934, screwball comedy with John Barrymore and Carole Lombarde, is set on the 20th Century Ltd.
I've never understood why "Night Train to Munich" doesn't get much attention as, as mentioned, it is a terrific thriller, but also a movie - owing to the quality of the acting and writing, and the wonderful time-travel feel one gets form it today - that can be watch over and over again as one picks up new things in the story line / character development each time while still enjoying the overall sweep of the movie. That said, and I'm doing this from memory as I haven't seen it in a few years, but I think Rex Harrison has one of those magical Hollywood guns that (in the final sequence) shoots 18 or 19 rounds before running out of bullets and, unbelievably, causing him surprise as if he thought he could just shoot forever without reloading.