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  1. Escape from New York is a 1981 American independent science fiction action film co-written, co-scored and directed by John Carpenter, and starring Kurt Russell, Lee Van Cleef, Ernest Borgnine, Donald Pleasence, Isaac Hayes, Adrienne Barbeau and Harry Dean Stanton.

  2. Mar 1, 2019 · The Duke of New York appears to have an extensive vehicle collection, though nearly all the film's action takes place at night and we get a look at just a few of his cars.

    • Escape from New York Was Filmed in St. Louis Because of A Disaster.
    • The Movie Originally Started with A Bank Robbery.
    • "Snake Plissken" Was A Real person.
    • John Carpenter Had to Fight to Cast Kurt Russell.
    • James Cameron Was Part of Escape from New York's Crew.
    • Snake Plissken's Eyepatch Was Russell's idea.
    • The Crew Was Given Unprecedented Access to Liberty Island.
    • Carpenter Hired A Pro Wrestler to Fight Russell.
    • Jamie Lee Curtis May Have Made A Cameo in Escape from New York.
    • Donald Pleasence Wrote His Own backstory.

    Though the film takes place in New York City, director John Carpenter saidhe and his crew couldn’t film some of the more ambitious sequences there because it would have “tied up the whole city too much,” so they went looking for an alternate location, and found one in St. Louis, Missouri. Why St. Louis? Well, a few years prior to filming, a fire de...

    When we first meet Snake Plissken (Russell), he’s already a notorious prisoner and former war hero being given a shot at freedom. But Carpenter’s original plan was to show the audience how he landed in prison in the first place. Carpenter initially shot an elaborate opening sequence featuring Snake and an accomplice pulling a bank robbery, then fle...

    When writing the original script for the film, Carpenter was in search of a name for his main character, and it just so happened that a friend of a friend actually knew a personnamed “Snake Plissken,” who Carpenter described as “a kinda high school tough guy,” complete with a snake tattoo. It was too perfect to pass up. “Anybody with a snake tattoo...

    At the time of the film’s production, Kurt Russell was an actor best known for his work in Disney projects like The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes. He wasn’t an action star, but Carpenter thought he was the right choice to play Snake. The studio, on the other hand, wanted a star like Tommy Lee Jones or Chuck Norrisfor the part. Carpenter dismissed Norr...

    To pull off some of the film’s special effects, Carpenter turned to Roger Corman’s New World Pictures. For one particular sequence in which security forces drop food for the prisoners via helicopter, Carpenter needed matte paintings to simulate a New York skyline, since they weren’t actually shooting in New York. One of the artists who produced tho...

    One of the most iconic things about the film is Plissken’s eyepatch, and apparently that wasn’t in the script. According to Russell, he suggested itto Carpenter, who immediately likened the idea to a favorite Western hero. “I said to John, ‘I think it’d be cool to wear an eyepatch.’ I think a lot of guys would have gone, ‘Well, I don’t know …’ but ...

    Though much of the film was shot elsewhere, Carpenter did secure one key piece of New York City iconography for on-location shooting: Liberty Island, for the sequence in which a helicopter flies by the Statue of Liberty and the film establishes that it’s now a headquarters for security forces. According to Carpenter, the City of New York granted hi...

    For the sequence in which Snake has to fight a fellow prisoner, gladiator-style, Carpenter hired actual pro wrestler Ox Baker, who was so rough and real when rehearsing the fight scenes that Russell’s stuntman only gave him one piece of advice: “Good luck.” Russell had the last laugh, though, because he had to hit Baker in the back of the neck with...

    Three years prior to Escape From New York, Carpenter directed his breakout hit: the slasher film Halloween, which also proved to be the breakout film for star Jamie Lee Curtis. If Halloween hadn’t worked out, it’s doubtful Carpenter ever would have made Escape From New York, so he called upon his Halloween star to participate when it finally happen...

    Jamie Lee Curtis wasn’t the only Halloween star to appear in the film. Carpenter also called upon Donald Pleasence—who leant some star credibility to Halloween as Dr. Loomis—to play the President of the United States. So why does an American president have Pleasence’s British accent? The film never explains it, but Pleasence himself apparently did....

  3. 1977 Lincoln Continental Stretched Limousine. 1975 Mercury Marquis. 1972 Mercury Montego. 1971 Pontiac. 1978 Pontiac Catalina. 1971 Toyota Corolla. Powered by JustWatch. See all comments about this movie and its vehicles.

  4. Dec 5, 2006 · 1974 Checker Taxicab [A11] in Escape from New York, Movie, 1981. Class: Cars, Sedan — Model origin: Vehicle used by a character or in a car chase.

  5. Feb 13, 2023 · John Carpenter's "Escape from New York" is an '80s action classic, and one of Kurt Russell's most iconic roles. Here are some behind the scenes details.

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  7. Jul 9, 2021 · Set in a grim future where the island of Manhattan has been converted into a giant maximum security prison, the film featured Kurt Russell in a career-defining role as Snake Plissken, a one-eyed...

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