A worker levels the iron ore in a freight train at a railway station at Chitradurga in the southern Indian state of Karnataka in this November 9, 2012 file photo. One of Indian prime ministerial hopeful Narendra Modi's main election planks is to crank up
A worker levels the iron ore in a freight train at a railway station at Chitradurga in the southern Indian state of Karnataka in this November 9, 2012 file photo. One of Indian prime ministerial hopeful Narendra Modi's main election planks is to crank up manufacturing to create millions of jobs by focusing on exporting steel, not iron ore. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui/Files

Essex residents in England are angry at the operator of a vintage railway because a hardcore porn movie was filmed on the train. The railway is also where thousands of Essex kids will go for their yearly Easter egg hunt on Sunday.

The 28-minute film was shot on the Epping Ongar Railway by Brazzers, an American X-rated movie company. The film features a brunette woman wearing a school uniform who had sex inside the train. It has been viewed over 235,000 times, reports The Telegraph.

The story revolves around a Hungarian nymphomaniac sent to live in England with her aunt who loves to seduce men and have romps with them in a carriage. The Hungarian schoolgirl likewise has her naked scenes with a man in one of the train’s wooden carriages, reports Metro.

Parents particularly are mad because the rail is often advertised as a place where the family could have fun. “They advertise it as a family-based business but one minute it’s Peppa Pig and Father Christmas and the next it’s an orgy train,” rails Amanda Mendel, a mother of two kids from Ongar.

The railway goes back to 1865 and run until 1994 when passenger services were withdrawn by London Underground which operated the train. It has served as backdrop for Halifax, Natwest, Barclays, BBC, BBC iPlayer and Flybe adverts.

The furor had led Dean Walton, business development manager of Epping Ongar Railway, to apologise to residents. “We are sorry that our decision may have caused offence. It is clear that this decision was an error of judgement,” Walton admitted.

To contact the writer, email: v.hernandez@ibtimes.com.au