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  1. 31 de may. de 2005 · Danny DeVito as the director is able to find all kinds of comedic nuances, from Mr. Crystal sitting at his typewriter trying to find the perfect adjective to describe the night, to the ending where they literally try to throw momma from the train. Even the cartoon-like ways that they try to kill mother come off as witty rather than silly.

  2. Throw Momma from the Train is a 1987 American black comedy film directed by and starring Danny DeVito in his directorial feature film debut. The film co-stars Billy Crystal, Rob Reiner, Anne Ramsey, Branford Marsalis, Kim Greist, and Kate Mulgrew appearing in supporting roles.

  3. Throw Momma From the Train. A timid man plots to do away with his overbearing mother. 1,035 IMDb 6.3 1 h 24 min 1987. PG-13. Comedy · Suspense · Quirky · Feel-good. Free trial of MGM+. Watch with MGM+. Start your 7-day free trial.

  4. Throw Momma from the Train is a 1987 American comedy film directed by Danny DeVito, and starring DeVito and Billy Crystal, with Rob Reiner, Anne Ramsey, Branford Marsalis, Kim Greist, and Kate Mulgrew appearing in supporting roles. The title comes from Patti Page's 1956 hit song, "Mama from the Train (A Kiss, A Kiss)".

  5. Throw Momma From the Train. Larry (Billy Crystal), an author with a cruel ex-wife, Margaret (Kate Mulgrew), teaches a writing workshop where Owen (Danny DeVito), one of his students, is fed up with his domineering mother (Anne Ramsey). When Owen watches a Hitchcock classic that seems to mirror his own life, he decides to put the movie's plot ...

  6. Watch Throw Momma From the Train and other popular TV shows and movies including new releases, classics, Hulu Originals, and more. It’s all on Hulu. The paths of professor Billy Crystal and dimbulb student Danny DeVito crisscross in murder in this spoof of 'Strangers on a Train.' ...

  7. Throw Momma from the Train includes scenes from Alfred Hitchcock’s 1951 film, Strangers on a Train (see entry). A 10 Jun 1987 DV article reported that Orion Pictures made a trade-off deal with Warner Bros. Pictures to use the scenes, without which screenwriter Stu Silver was unwilling to move forward with the project. In exchange, producer Larry Brezner surrendered remake and sequel rights ...