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It's the FUTURE… of 1997! Sweet! Jamie Lee Curtis does a brief voice-over to inform us that the U.S. devised a solution for prison overpopulation, which was to wall off the Manhattan Island and ship all of the criminals there without any possibility of parole. The bridges are mined, the water patrolled, and the police kind of grumpy. We're also told that this is the only remaining prison in the country, which makes me wonder:
Without much exposition, we're handed the following scenario: a terrorist has hijacked Air Force One and crashes it into the New York Prison, but not before the President ejects in a trendy pod that free falls through eighty stories of a building. I'm not going to pontificate on the connections between this and 9/11, but… wow. With the President captured by underground gang forces, only One Man can be entrusted with such an essential search and rescue mission: a convicted criminal who hates the government! Seriously? Is that the standard military response plan — in case of Presidential kidnapping, eschew your highly trained police and military forces and go straight to the nearest felon with an eye patch? Because, darn tootin' if it doesn't work! Faced with a Presidential pardon if he succeeds, and a bomb exploding in the head if he doesn't, Snake ponies up and enters the prison like a man with a hiatal hernia. He's not happy about the mission, but he'll get it done. Even if he has to search every abandoned department store until he… ooh! Sale at Macy's! He'll be back in three hours! Escape From New York was one of John Carpenter's first babies, and his love for it shows in every decrepit sewer-dwelling scab that creeps down the street. It's such a great idea (if preposterous) for a movie, and its lead so iconic that you can't help but fall in love with it, even with the minimal production values present. I kept thinking that this could've gone from cult to widespread mainstream if the studios had pumped a 20 million or so more into it. As it is, Carpenter does a great job with very little, although I could imagine his frustration at wanting to do more. It's a movie that launched a sequel, a proposed remake (sans Russell or Carpenter), inspired the Metal Gear video games, and entrenched a made-for-soap-opera action hero into pop culture history. It's also pretty freaking cool. I'd tell you to see it, but I'd have to kill you when it's all over.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Unnecessary Background
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
A scene in the beginning of the film where Snake and another criminal are robbing a high-security bank, which leads to his arrest and sentence to New York, was in the original script but was cut from the film before release. The only scene actually filmed in New York was the opening dolly shot, which follows a character pass the Statue of Liberty. The rest was filmed in East St. Louis, Illinois (across the river from the decidedly more wealthy St. Louis proper), which had been burned out in 1976 during a massive urban fire. Carpenter and his crew convinced the city to shut off the electricity to ten blocks at a time at night and shot most of the movie in the summer of 1979 and 1980. The shot where the helicopter glides over Central Park were actually filmed in San Fernando. The buildings in the background were matte-paintings by future director James Cameron. Isaac Hayes's '77 Cadillac Fleetwood sedan with the fender-mounted chandeliers is the first art car in a feature film. Groovy Quotes
Snake Plissken: Call me Snake. The Duke: They sent in their best man, and when we roll across the 59th Street bridge tomorrow, on our way to freedom, we're going to have their best man leading the way - from the neck up! On the hood of my car! The Duke: Snake Plissken... I've heard of you. I heard you were dead!
Bob Hauk: There was an accident. About an hour ago, a small jet went down inside New York City. The President was on board.
Soundtrack Review
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