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Subway (Homicide: Life on the Street)

"Subway"
Homicide: Life on the Street episode
A man wearing a white shirt and blank pants kneels and speaks to a man in a blue shirt who is pinned between a subway train car and a platform. Emergency equipment lies in front of them, while the obscured figures of firefighters and emergency personnel stand behind them.
Frank Pembleton talks to John Lange, a man pinned between a subway train and platform.
Episode no. Season 6
Episode 7
Directed by Gary Fleder
Written by James Yoshimura
Cinematography by Alex Zakrzewski
Production code 604
Original air date December 5, 1997
Guest appearance(s)
  • Vincent D'Onofrio as John Lange
  • Shari Elliker as witness
  • Bruce MacVittie as Larry Biedron
  • Laura MacDonald as Sarah Flannigan
  • Lisa Matthews as witness
  • Wendee Pratt as Joy Tolson
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List of Homicide: Life on the Street episodes

"Subway" (sometimes referred to as "The Accident") is the seventh episode of the sixth season of the American police television drama Homicide: Life on the Street, and the 84th episode overall. It first aired on NBC in the United States on December 5, 1997. In the episode, John Lange (Vincent D'Onofrio) becomes pinned between a Baltimore Metro Subway train and the station platform. The Baltimore homicide department is informed that Lange will be dead within an hour and Pembleton tries to solve the case while comforting Lange in his final minutes.

"Subway" featured guest star Bruce MacVittie as a man suspected of pushing Lange into the path of the train. The episode was written by James Yoshimura, who co-produced with David Simon. It was directed by Gary Fleder and was the only episode of Homicide: Life on the Street helmed by the feature film director. Yoshimura based "Subway" on an episode of the HBO hidden-camera documentary show Taxicab Confessions, in which a New York City detective described a real-life instance of a man trapped between a subway train and platform.

"Subway" was filmed on location in a Baltimore Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) station. Fleder included cinematic elements that were uncommon in the traditionally naturalistic show. This led to conflicts between Fleder and director of photography Alex Zakrzewski. "Subway" received overwhelmingly positive reviews but ranked number three in its time-slot during its original broadcast, capturing 10.3 million viewers but falling behind ABC's 20/20 and CBS's Nash Bridges.


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