Escape from New York

Escape from New York

Infobox_Film
name = Escape from New York


caption = Theatrical poster
director = John Carpenter
producer = Larry J. Franco
Debra Hill
writer = John Carpenter
Nick Castle
starring = Kurt Russell
Lee Van Cleef
Ernest Borgnine
Donald Pleasence
Isaac Hayes
Harry Dean Stanton
Adrienne Barbeau
Season Hubley
Tom Atkins
movie_music = John Carpenter
Alan Howarth
cinematography = Dean Cundey
Jim Lucas
editing = Todd Ramsay
distributor = AVCO Embassy Pictures
released = France June 24, 1981
USA July 10, 1981
runtime = 99 minutes
language = English
imdb_id = 0082340
amg_id = 1:16035
music = John Carpenter
Alan Howarth
website = http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/themovies/ny/ny.html
budget = USD $7,000,000 (est.)cite web | url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082340/business |title=Escape from New York (1981) - Box office / business|accessdate=2007-05-04]
gross = USD $25,244,626cite news | last = | first = | coauthors = | title = "Escape from New York" | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Box Office Mojo | date = May 4, 2007 | url = http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=escapefromnewyork.htm | accessdate = 2007-05-04 ]
followed_by = "Escape from L.A." (1996)|

"Escape from New York" is a 1981 science fiction/action film directed and scored by John Carpenter. He also co-wrote the screenplay with Nick Castle. The film is set in the near future in a crime-ridden United States that has converted Manhattan Island in New York City into a maximum security prison. Ex-soldier and legendary fugitive "Snake" Plissken (Kurt Russell) is given 24 hours to find the President of the United States, who has been captured by inmates after Air Force One crashed on the island.

Carpenter originally wrote the film in the mid-1970s as a reaction to the Watergate scandal, but no studio wanted to make it because Carpenter proved unable to articulate just how this film could relate to the Watergate scandal. After the success of "Halloween", he had enough influence to get the film made and shot most of it in St. Louis, Missouri, where significant portions of the city were used in place of New York City.cite news | author=Phantom of the Movies | title = "Escape From New York" rushes into a DVD world| work =Washington Weekend| pages =M24 | publisher = Washington Times | date =2003-12-11]

The film's total budget was estimated to be USD $7 million. It was a commercial hit, grossing over $50 million worldwide. It has since developed its own cult following, particularly around the anti-hero Plissken. A sequel, "Escape from L.A.", was released in 1996. On March 13, 2007, a remake of the original film was announced tentatively with actor Gerard Butler set to play Plisskencite news |first=Michael |last=Fleming |title=Butler has "Escape" plan |url=http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117961020.html |publisher=Variety |date=March 13, 2007 |accessdate=2007-06-07 ] with Len Wiseman to direct.cite news | last = McNary
first = Dave | coauthors = | title = Len Wiseman to direct "New York"
work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Variety
date = August 14, 2007 | url= http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117970242.html?categoryid=13&cs=1
accessdate = 2007-08-15
] Both have since dropped out of the project.cite news | last = Fleming
first = Michael | coauthors = | title = Butler escapes "New York" remake
work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Variety
date = October 29, 2007 | url= http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117975061.html?categoryid=13&cs=1&query=%22Escape+from+New+York%22 | accessdate = 2007-11-05
]

Plot

In a dystopian 1997, the Soviet Union still exists, as does the threat of World War III. Manhattan was turned into a maximum security prison in 1988 due to a nationwide crime increase of 400% in the United States. Surrounded by a 50-foot (15 m) containment wall, all inmates are sentenced to life imprisonment, and have formed gangs which control the crumbling, garbage-strewn city. Travelling to a three-way summit between the United States, the Soviet Union and China, Air Force One, the plane of the President of the United States, is hijacked by a member of a revolutionary organization opposed to the government. The militant crashes the plane into Manhattan but the unnamed President (Donald Pleasence) is safely sealed in an escape pod and survives. Unfortunately, the inmates quickly find him and take him hostage, cutting off one of his fingers to present as evidence and ordering all soldiers to leave the island immediately or they will kill him.

United States Police Force Commissioner Bob Hauk (Lee Van Cleef) offers a deal to a newly arrived prisoner, a famous special-forces-soldier-turned-armed-robber named "Snake" Plissken (Kurt Russell). If Snake rescues the President, and retrieves a cassette tape that contains important information on nuclear fusion, Hauk will give him a full pardon. However, Plissken must complete his mission before the international summit that the President was due to attend, which begins in 24 hours. After Plissken reluctantly agrees to attempt the rescue, Hauk secretly has him injected with microscopic explosives that will blow open his carotid arteries in 24 hours (Day). The explosives cannot be defused until within fifteen minutes before they go off, as a way of ensuring that Snake does not abandon his mission and escape, nor find another way to remove them. If he returns with the President and the tape in time for the summit, Hauk will save him. Snake promises to kill Hauk when he returns.

Snake covertly lands atop the World Trade Center in a glider and then locates the hijacked plane wreckage and the escape pod, but the President is gone. Snake tracks the President's life-monitor bracelet signal to the basement of an abandoned theater, only to find it on the wrist of an incoherent old coot (John Carpenter regular George "Buck" Flower). He meets a friendly inmate nicknamed "Cabbie" (Ernest Borgnine), who offers to help. Cabbie takes Snake to see Brain (Harry Dean Stanton), a savvy and well-educated inmate who has made the New York Public Library his personal fortress. Brain, who knows Snake from some heists they did in the past, tells Snake that a powerful gang leader, the self-proclaimed "Duke of New York" (Isaac Hayes), has the President and plans to lead a mass escape across the mined and heavily guarded 69th Street Bridge (the real Queensboro Bridge is the "59th" Street Bridge), using the President as a human shield and hostage. When the Duke unexpectedly arrives to get a diagram of the bridge's land mines, Snake forces Brain and his girlfriend Maggie (Adrienne Barbeau) to lead him back to The Duke's compound. Snake finds the President, but his rescue fails and he is captured.

While Snake is forced to fight with a giant power-house brute (played by professional wrestler Ox Baker), Brain and Maggie trick the Duke's men into letting them have access to the President. After killing the guards, they free the President and flee to Snake's glider. Meanwhile, Snake defeats his huge opponent, impressing the crowd. When the Duke learns the President has escaped with Brain, he is furious, and he rounds up his gang to chase them down. In the confusion, Snake slips away and manages to catch up with Brain, Maggie and the President at the glider, but during their attempted getaway, a gang of inmates push it off the building. Snake and the others soon find Cabbie, and Snake takes the wheel of his cab, heading for the bridge. When Cabbie reveals that he has the nuclear fusion tape (traded to him from an inmate who guarded the President and stole it), the President demands it, but Snake takes it.

With the Duke chasing in another car, Snake and the others drive over the mine-strewn bridge. After the cab hits a land mine, the cab is destroyed and Cabbie is killed. As the others flee on foot, Brain is killed by a mine and Maggie refuses to leave him. She attempts to hold off the Duke's car by firing at him with a handgun, and she succeeds in forcing Duke's car (a distinctive vehicle with ornate chandeliers mounted on either side of the car's hood) to crash, but he crashes into her, killing her, and he continues his pursuit on foot. Snake and the President reach the containment wall, and the guards raise the President on a rope. The Duke then attacks Snake, but the President shoots the Duke with a submachine gun, killing him (this is indicated to be done in revenge for the torture The Duke put him through). Snake is then lifted to safety, and the mini-explosives implanted in his body are deactivated with seconds to spare.

As the President prepares for a televised speech, he distractedly thanks Snake for saving him. Snake asks him how he feels about the numerous men and women who died saving his life, but the President only offers half-hearted regret that visibly disgusts Snake. The President's speech commences and he offers the content of the cassette to the summit. To the President's embarrassment, the tape has been switched for a cassette of the swing song "Bandstand Boogie" (the theme from "American Bandstand"), Cabbie's favorite song. After Snake is pardoned, he decides he will not kill Hauk at this time and leaves the prison, tearing apart the all-important nuclear fusion tape and smiling as he leaves.

Development

Carpenter originally wrote the screenplay for "Escape from New York" in 1976, in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal. Carpenter said, "The whole feeling of the nation was one of real cynicism about the President. I wrote the screenplay and no studio wanted to make it" because, according to Carpenter, "it was too violent, too scary, too weird." [cite news | last = Yakir | first = Dan | coauthors = | title = 'Escape' Gives Us Liberty | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = New York Times | date = October 4, 1980 | url = http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/press/nypost801014.html | accessdate = 2007-03-10 ] He has also been inspired by the film "Death Wish" which was very popular at the time. He did not agree with this film's philosophy but liked how it conveyed "the sense of New York as a kind of jungle, and I wanted to make a science fiction film along these lines". [cite news | last = Maronie | first = Samuel J. | coauthors = | title = On the Set with "Escape from New York" | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Starlog | date = April 1981 | url = http://www.sphosting.com/theefnypage/pressontheset.htm | accessdate = 2007-03-10 ]

Casting

Avco-Embassy Pictures, the film's financial backer, preferred either Charles Bronson or Tommy Lee Jones to play the role of "Snake" Plissken to Carpenter's choice of Kurt Russell, who was trying to overcome his "lightweight" screen image which arose from his roles in several Disney comedies. Carpenter refused to cast Bronson on the grounds that he was too old, and because he worried that he could lose directorial control over the picture with an experienced actor. At the time, Russell described his character as "a mercenary, and his style of fighting is a combination of Bruce Lee, The Exterminator, and Darth Vader, with Eastwood's vocal-ness." [cite news | last = Hogan | first = Richard | coauthors = | title = Kurt Russell Rides a New Wave in "Escape" Film | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Circus magazine | date = 1980 | url=http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/press/circus1980.html | accessdate = 2007-03-10 ] All that matters to Snake, according to the actor, is "the next 60 seconds. Living for exactly that next minute is all there is."cite news | last = Goldberg
first = Lee | coauthors = | title = Kurt Russell — Two-Fisted Hero
work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Starlog | date = July 1986
url = | accessdate =
]

Pre-production

Carpenter had just made "Dark Star" but no one wanted to hire him as a director, so he assumed that he would make it in Hollywood as a screenwriter. The filmmaker went on to do other films with the intention of making "Escape" later. After the success of "Halloween", Avco-Embassy signed him and producer Debra Hill to a two-picture deal. The first film from this contract was "The Fog". Initially, the second film that he was going to make to finish the contract was "The Philadelphia Experiment", but because of script-writing problems, Carpenter rejected it in favor of this project. However, Carpenter felt that something was missing and recalls, "This was basically a straight action film. And at one point, I realized it really doesn't have this kind of crazy humor that people from New York would expect to see."cite news | last = Swires
first = Steve | coauthors = | title = John Carpenter | work = | pages =
language = | publisher = Starlog | date = July 1981 | url =
accessdate =
] He brought in Nick Castle, a friend from his film school days at University of Southern California who also played "The Shape" in "Halloween". Castle invented the Cabbie character and came up with the film's ending. [cite news|title=Launch of a giddy fantasy a director reaches for the stars with computer aid|author=Ryan, Desmond|work=The Philadelphia Inquirer|date=1984-07-14|page=D01]

The film's setting proved to be a potential problem for Carpenter, who needed to create a decaying, semi-destroyed version of New York City on only a shoe-string budget. He and the film's production designer, Joe Alves rejected shooting on location in New York City because it would be too hard to make it look like a destroyed city. Carpenter suggested shooting on a movie back lot but Alves nixed that idea "because the texture of a real street is not like a back lot."cite news | last = Beeler
first = Michael | coauthors = | title = "Escape from N.Y.": Filming the Original | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Cinefantastique
date = | url = | accessdate =
] They sent Barry Bernardi, their location manager (and also associate producer), "on a sort of all-expense-paid trip across the country looking for the worst city in America," producer Debra Hill remembers.

Bernardi suggested East St. Louis, Illinois, because it was filled with old buildings "that exist in New York now, and [that] have that seedy run-down quality" that the team was looking for. [cite news | last = Maronie | first = Samuel J. | coauthors = | title = From "Forbidden Planet" to "Escape from New York": A candid conversation with SFX & production designer Joe Alves | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Starlog | date = May 1981 | url = http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/press/starlog8105.html | accessdate = 2007-03-10 ] East St. Louis, sitting across the Mississippi River from the more prosperous St. Louis, Missouri, had entire neighborhoods burned out in 1976 during a massive urban fire. Hill said in an interview, "block after block was burnt-out rubble. In some places there was absolutely nothing, so that you could see three and four blocks away." As well, Alves found an old bridge to double for the "69th St. Bridge". The filmmaker purchased the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge for one dollar from the government and then gave it back to them for a dollar, "so that they wouldn't have any liability," Hill remembers. Locations across the river in St. Louis, Missouri were also used, including Union Station and the Fox Theater, both of which have since been renovated. [cite news|title=Show Me the movies|work=St. Louis Post-Dispatch|date=2005-04-17|author=Williams, Joe|page=C1]

Production

Carpenter and his crew persuaded the city to shut off the electricity to ten blocks at a time at night. He shot most of the film in the summers of 1979 and 1980. It was a tough and demanding shoot for the filmmaker as he recalls. "We'd finish shooting at about 6 am and I'd just be going to sleep at 7 when the sun would be coming up. I'd wake up around 5 or 6 pm, depending on whether or not we had dailies, and by the time I got going, the Sun would be setting. So for about two and a half months I never saw daylight, which was really strange."

The gladiatorial fight to the death scene between Snake and Slag (played by professional wrestler Ox Baker) was filmed in the Grand Hall at St. Louis Union Station. In addition to shooting on location in St. Louis, Carpenter also shot parts of the film in Los Angeles. Various interior scenes were shot on a soundstage; the final scenes were shot at the Sepulveda Dam, in Sherman Oaks. New York also served as a location, as did Atlanta, in order to utilize their then futuristic-looking rapid-transit system. [cite news|title=St. Louis Q&A|work=St. Louis Post-Dispatch|author=Berger, Jerry|date=1995-02-05|page=17]

When it came to shooting in New York City Carpenter managed to persuade the city officials to grant access to Liberty Island. "We were the first film company in history allowed to shoot on Liberty Island at the Statue of Liberty at night. They let us have the whole island to ourselves. We were lucky. It wasn't easy to get that initial permission. They'd had a bombing three months earlier and were worried about trouble."cite news | last = Osborne | first = Robert | coauthors = | title = On Location | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Hollywood Reporter | date = October 24, 1980 | url = http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/press/reporter801024.html | accessdate = 2007-03-10 ]

Carpenter was interested in creating two distinct looks for the movie. "One is the police state, high tech, lots of neon, a United States dominated by underground computers. That was easy to shoot compared to the Manhattan Island prison sequences which had few lights, mainly torch lights, like feudal England."

Certain matte paintings were rendered by James Cameron who was at the time a special effects artist with Roger Corman's New World Pictures.

As Snake pilots the glider into the city there are three screens on his control panel displaying wireframe animations of the landing target on the World Trade Center and surrounding buildings. What appears on those screens was not computer generated. Carpenter wanted hi-tech computer graphics which were very expensive at the time, even for such a simple animation. To get the animation he wanted the effects crew filmed the miniature model set of New York City they used for other scenes under black light with reflective tape placed along every edge of the model buildings. Only the tape shows up and appears to be a 3D wireframe animation. [cite video|title=Escape from New York (Special Edition)|year=2003|people=Atkins, Tom; Barbeau, Adrienne]

Reception

"Escape from New York" grossed $25.2 million in American theaters in summer 1981 with a comparable gross in the international market, resulting in a $50 million box office, a revenue-production ratio of almost 7:1. The film received generally positive reviews. It received a rating of 83% on Rotten Tomatoes. "Newsweek" magazine commented on Carpenter, saying, " [He has a] deeply ingrained B-movie sensibility - which is both his strength and limitation. He does clean work, but settles for too little. He uses Russell well, however." [cite news | last = | first = | coauthors = | title = A Helluva Town | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Newsweek | date = July 27, 1981 | url = http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/press/newsweek810727.html | accessdate = 2007-05-30 ] In "Time" magazine, Richard Corliss wrote, "John Carpenter is offering this summer's moviegoers a rare opportunity: to escape from the air-conditioned torpor of ordinary entertainment into the hothouse humidity of their own paranoia. It's a trip worth taking." [cite news | last = Corliss | first = Richard | coauthors = | title = Bad Apples | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Time | date = July 13, 1981 | url = http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/press/time810713.html | accessdate = 2007-05-30 ] Vincent Canby, in his review for the "New York Times", wrote, " [The film] is not to be analyzed too solemnly, though. It's a toughly told, very tall tale, one of the best escape (and escapist) movies of the season." [cite news | last = Canby | first = Vincent | coauthors = | title = "Escape from New York" | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = New York Times | date = July 10, 1981 | url = http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/press/nytimes810710.html | accessdate = 2007-05-30 ] However, in his review for the "Chicago Reader", Dave Kehr, wrote "it fails to satisfy–it gives us too little of too much." [cite news | last = Kehr | first = Dave | coauthors = | title = "Escape from New York" | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Chicago Reader | date = | url = http://onfilm.chicagoreader.com/movies/capsules/3169_ESCAPE_FROM_NEW_YORK | accessdate = 2008-01-29 ]

Cyberpunk pioneer William Gibson credits the film as an influence on his novel "Neuromancer". "I was intrigued by the exchange in one of the opening scenes where the Warden says to Snake 'you flew the Gullfire over Leningrad didn't you?' It turns out to be just a throwaway line, but for a moment it worked like the best SF where a casual reference can imply a lot."cite news
last = McCaffery | first = Larry | coauthors = | title = Storming the Reality Studio: A Casebook of Cyberpunk and Postmodern Science Fiction
work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Duke University Press
date = 1992 | url = http://project.cyberpunk.ru/idb/gibson_interview.html
accessdate = 2008-01-11
] Popular videogame director Hideo Kojima has referred to the movie frequently as an influence on his work, in particular the "Metal Gear" series. The character Solid Snake is strongly based on Snake Plissken. In "Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty" Snake actually uses the alias "Pliskin" to hide his real identity during the game. [SEAL: I'm not an enemy. Calm down. My name is S... My name is Pliskin. Iroquois Pliskin, Lieutenant Junior Grade. ("Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty", Konami, 2001)] J.J. Abrams, producer of the 2008 film "Cloverfield", mentioned that a scene in his film, which shows the head of the Statue of Liberty crashing into a New York street, was inspired by the poster for "Escape from New York". [cite news|title=Commentary: Filmmakers enjoy laying waste to New York|work=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|author=Eberson, Sharon|date=2008-01-04]

Media

oundtrack

Infobox Album
Name = Escape from New York (Original Film Soundtrack)
Type = Soundtrack
Artist = John Carpenter
Alan Howarth


Released = April 25, 2000
Recorded = 1981
Genre = Soundtrack
Length = 57:17
Label = Silva Records
Producer = John Carpenter
Reviews = *Allmusic rating|4.5|5 [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:fbfpxq9kldde link]

* SoundtrackNet rating|4|4 [http://www.soundtrack.net/albums/database/?id=2367 link]
Last album =
This album =
Next album =
A soundtrack album, produced by Carpenter, was released in 1981 on Milan Records and was re-released in 1991 by Varese Sarabande. It featured 13 tracks and ran just over 37 minutes in length. In 2000, an expanded and remastered edition was released by Silva Records. [cite web|url=http://www.soundtrack.net/albums/database/?id=2367|title=SoundtrackNet : Escape From New York Soundtrack|accessdate=2007-06-07]

tracklist
collapsed = yes
headline =
"Escape from New York" (Original Film Soundtrack) – track listing

all_writing = John Carpenter

title1 = Main Title
length1 = 3:53
title2 = Bank Robbery
length2 = 3:30
title3 = Prison Introduction
length3 = 0:20
title4 = Over the Wall/Airforce One
length4 = 2:22
title5 = He's Still Alive/Romero
length5 = 2:12
title6 = 'Snake' Plissken
length6 = 1:41
title7 = Orientation
length7 = 1:47
title8 = Tell Him
length8 = 1:46
title9 = Engulfed Cathedral [Debussy]
length9 = 3:31
title10 = Across the Roof
length10 = 1:14
title11 = Descent into New York
length11 = 3:37
title12 = Back to the Pod [Version #1]
length12 = 1:34
title13 = Everyone's Coming to New York
length13 = 2:24
title14 = Don't Go Down There!
length14 = 0:19
title15 = Back to the Pod /The Crazies Come Out [Version #2]
length15 = 2:09
title16 = I Heard You Were Dead!
length16 = 0:09
title17 = Arrival at the Library
length17 = 1:06
title18 = You Are the Duke of New York
length18 = 0:16
title19 = Duke Arrives/Barricade
length19 = 3:35
title20 = President at the Train
length20 = 2:28
title21 = Who Are You?
length21 = 0:27
title22 = Police Action
length22 = 2:27
title23 = Romero and the President
length23 = 1:43
title24 = President Is Gone
length24 = 1:53
title25 = 69th Street Bridge
length25 = 2:43
title26 = Over the Wall
length26 = 3:42
title27 = The Name Is Plissken
length27 = 0:25
title28 = Snake Shake End Credits
length28 = 3:58

DVD releases

"Escape from New York" was released on DVD twice by MGM, and once by Momentum Pictures. One MGM release is a barebones edition containing just the theatrical trailer. Another version is the Collector's Edition, a two-disc set featuring a remastered transfer with a 5.1 audio track, two commentaries (one by John Carpenter and Kurt Russell, another by producer Debra Hill and Joe Alves), a making-of featurette, the first issue of a comic book series titled "John Carpenter's Snake Plissken Chronicles", and a ten-minute deleted opening sequence.cite journal| last = Netherby| first = Jennifer| title = Escape to a special edition| journal = Video Business| volume = 23| issue = 34| pages = 8| date = 2003-08-25| publisher = Reed Business Information]

MGM's special edition of the 1981 film was not released until 2003 because the original negative had disappeared. The workprint containing deleted scenes finally turned up in a Midwestern storage facility, formerly used as a salt mine. The excised scenes feature Snake Plissken robbing a bank, introducing the character of Plissken and establishing a backstory. Director John Carpenter decided to add the original scenes into the special edition release as an extra only: "After we screened the rough cut, we realized that the movie didn't really start until Snake got to New York. It wasn't necessary to show what sent him there."cite journal| last = Hulse| first = Ed| title = A newfound "Escape"| journal = Video Business| volume = 23| issue = 47| pages = 33| date = 2003-11-24| publisher = Reed Business Information| id = ISSN: 0279-571X] The film has also been released on the UMD format for Sony's Playstation Portable. [cite web|accessdate=2008-08-28|url=http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=4592016|title= Escape From New York (UMD Video For PSP) |publisher=Wal-Mart ]

Novelization

In 1981, Bantam Books published a movie tie-in novelization written by Mike McQuay that adopts a lean, humorous style reminiscent of the film. The novel is significant because it includes scenes that were cut out of the film, such as the Federal Reserve Depository robbery that results in Snake's incarceration. The novel also provides motivation and backstory to Snake and Hauk — both disillusioned war veterans — deepening their relationship that was only hinted at it in the film. The novel explains how Snake lost his eye during the Battle for Leningrad in World War III, how Hauk became warden of New York, and Hauk's quest to find his crazy son who lives somewhere in the prison. The novel also fleshes out the world that these characters exist in, at times presenting a future even bleaker than the one depicted in the film. The book explains that the west coast is a no-man's land, and the country's population is gradually being driven crazy by nerve gas as a result of World War III.cite book| last =McQuay| first =Mike| title ="Escape from New York"| publisher =Bantam Books| date =May 1981| location =| pages =| isbn =0-553-25375-1]

Remake

Scottish actor Gerard Butler was close to signing a deal where he would play Snake Plissken in a remake of Carpenter's movie. Neal Moritz was to produce and Ken Nolan was to write the screenplay which would combine an original story for Plissken with the story from the 1981 movie, although Carpenter has hinted that the film might be a prequel. [cite news | last = Epstein | first = Daniel Robert | coauthors = | title = John Carpenter | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = SuicideGirls.com | date = March 20, 2007 | url = http://suicidegirls.com/interviews/John+Carpenter/ | accessdate = 2007-03-23 ]

New Line Cinema acquired the rights to the film from co-rights holder StudioCanal, who will control the European rights, and Carpenter, who will serve as an executive producer and said, "Snake is one of my fondest creations. Kurt Russell did an incredible job, and it would be fun to see someone else try." [cite news
last = Kit | first = Borys | coauthors = | title = New Line cuffs 'Escape' redo | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Hollywood Reporter
date = March 16, 2007 | url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/film/news/e3i880911115a741b4126f3d582f7183c25
accessdate = 2007-03-16
] Russell has also commented on the remake and on the casting of Butler as Plissken, saying, "I "will" say that when I was told who was going to play Snake Plissken, my initial reaction was 'Oh, man!' [Russell winces] . I do think that character was quintessentially one thing. And that is, American." [cite news | last = Nashawaty | first = Chris | coauthors =
title = Remake the Snake? | work = | pages = | language = | publisher = Entertainment Weekly | date = March 20, 2007 | url= http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20015465,00.html | accessdate = 2007-03-23
] Len Wiseman was attached to direct but he dropped out of the project and rumors were that Brett Ratner would helm the film. [cite news
last = Billington | first = Alex | coauthors = | title = Brett Ratner is NOT Directing the Escape from New York Remake?! UPDATED — Gerard Butler Out Too!
work = | pages = | language = | publisher = First Showing | date = October 29, 2007 | url= http://www.firstshowing.net/2007/10/29/brett-ratner-is-not-directing-the-escape-from-new-york-remake/ | accessdate = 2007-11-05
] Since Ratner has not formally committed to the new project, the identity of the director is as yet unclear. The studio has brought Jonathan Mostow in to rewrite, with an option to direct. In addition, Gerard Butler has bowed out of his role claiming "creative differences".

References

External links

*
*
*
* [http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/themovies/ny/ny.html Escape from New York at Official John Carpenter's Website]


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  • Escape from New York (película de 2009) — Este artículo o sección se refiere o está relacionado con una producción cinematográfica futura o en desarrollo. La información de este artículo puede cambiar frecuentemente. Por favor, no agregues datos especulativos y recuerda colocar… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Escape From New York —    Voir New York 1997 …   Dictionnaire mondial des Films

  • John Carpenter's Escape from New York — Filmdaten Deutscher Titel: Die Klapperschlange Originaltitel: John Carpenter s Escape from New York Produktionsland: UK, USA Erscheinungsjahr: 1981 Länge: 95 Minuten Originalsprache …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Escape from New York — …   Википедия

  • New york 1997 — Pour les articles homonymes, voir New York (homonymie). New York 1997 Titre original John Carpenter s Escape from New York Réalisation John Carpenter Scénario John Carpenter Nick Castle …   Wikipédia en Français

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  • Theme from New York, New York — Song by Liza Minnelli from the album New York, New York Released June 21, 1977 Genre Traditional pop Length 3:16 …   Wikipedia

  • New York Public Library Main Branch — New York Public Library U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S. National Historic Landmark …   Wikipedia

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