Train - Marry Me (2011\')\"JB59
- Movie: Train
- Detected quality: 720p
- IMDb link: 1485809
- IMDb rating: 7.8 (28 votes) Search
- Genres: Thriller, Crime, Drama, Short
- Director: Darius Clark Monroe
- Cast: Ali Crosier, Patricia Donohue, Alani Ilongwe, Robbie Sublett and others
- Release date: 6 Jan 2010
- Release year: 2010
- Runtime: 7 minutes
- Country: United States
- Keywords: student film, african american, independent film
It's late, and Carl's just off from work. As usual, he takes the Brooklyn bound F Train home.
Torrent Contents Size: 108.53 MB
| Train - Marry Me (2011'JB59).avi |
AVI
|
108.53 MB
|
Description
Location
Trackers
| Tracker name |
|---|
| udp://tracker.coppersurfer.tk:6969/announce |
| udp://9.rarbg.me:2850/announce |
| udp://9.rarbg.to:2920/announce |
| udp://tracker.opentrackr.org:1337 |
| udp://tracker.leechers-paradise.org:6969/announce |
Torrent hash:
Media Information
ⓘ Description
Feb 27, 2026
General
Format:
AVI
Overall Bit Rate:
3.2 MbpsOverall Bit RateTotal data per second for the entire file — video, audio, and subtitles combined.
Video Streams
Video Stream 1
H.264
720p
Resolution:
1280 x 720 (720p/HD)
Codec:
H.264 (AVC)Video CodecThe compression method used for the video. Newer codecs keep the same quality with smaller files.
MPEG-2→H.264→HEVC→AV1
OlderMore efficient →
Bit Rate:
2.9 MbpsVideo Bit RateThe amount of data used per second for the video. Higher generally means better picture quality, but also a larger file.
Frame Rate:
29.97 fpsFrame RateHow many images are shown per second to create the illusion of motion.
24 fps — Cinema standard (filmic look)
30 fps — Common for TV shows
60 fps — Smooth motion (sports, gaming)
Audio Streams
Audio Stream 1
2.0
Channels:
StereoAudio ChannelsStereo — left and right channels. The standard for most music and casual viewing.
LR👤
Sample Rate:
48 kHzSample RateHow many audio snapshots per second. 48 kHz is the video standard — more than enough for the full range of human hearing.
Bit Rate:
320 kbpsAudio Bit RateData per second for the audio. Higher means better quality for lossy codecs. Lossless audio always preserves full quality regardless of bitrate.
