The Dominator reviews
Escape From L.A.
Distributed by
Pioneer LDCE
Producer:
Debra Hill and Kurt Russell
Screenplay:
John Carpenter, Debra Hill and Kurt Russell
Music:
Shirley Walker and John Carpenter
Cast:
Snake Plissken: Kurt Russell (Escape From New York, Executive Decision )
Utopia: A.J. Langer (Arcade, Wes Craven's People Under The Stairs, My So-Called Life (TV) )
Map to the Stars Eddie: Steve Buscemi (Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Fargo )
Cuervo Jones: George Corraface (Christopher Columbus: The Discovery )
Malloy: Stacy Keach (Mike Hammer (TV), Jesus of Nazareth (TV) )
Brazen: Michelle Forbes (Kalifornia, Swimming with Sharks )
President: Cliff Robertson (633 Squadron, PT 109, Renaissance Man )
Hershe: Pam Grier (Nico - Above The Law, The Big Bird Cage, Roots (TV) )
Taslima: Valeria Golino (Rain Man, Four Rooms, Leaving Las Vegas, Hot Shots! )
Pipeline: Peter Fonda (Easy Rider, Love And A .45 )
Surgeon General of Beverly Hills: Bruce Campbell (Evil Dead trilogy, Congo, The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. (TV) )
Skinhead: Robert Carradine (The Long Riders, Revenge of the Nerds I-IV )
John Carpenter's Escape From L.A.
is the sequel to 1981's Escape
From New York , with Kurt Russell reprising the role of Snake
Plissken.
The film begins in 1998 where a 9.6 earthquake hits the city of Los Angeles,
tearing it to pieces to such an extent that it separates the city from the
rest of the USA. Cliff Robertson plays the God-fearing Senator who
predicts the quake, and upon it happening is sworn in as President for a
life-long term in office. After the quake is over, security posts are placed
around the coast of the USA close to the separated city which is now the place
where all offenders and non-desirables are exiled for a lifetime. Once you're
out, there's no way back in.
Now it is the year 2013, and the President's daughter, Utopia, played by the
babelicious A.J. Langer , has rebelled against her father, stolen a top
secret prototype unit from the Benford Space Defence Lab during a tour for
government officials, then highjacked Air Force Three demanding the surrender
of her corrupt father's presidency, before leaving in the escape pod which was
bound for L.A.
After her sister's suicide, Utopia withdrew from life and spent days at a time
in a Virtual Reality simulator, making tapes of her experiences. She wiped all
of them bar a five-second sequence involving Cuervo Jones, a Peruvian terrorist
and member of the Shining Path, who runs the gang to end all gangs in L.A.
Jones convinced Utopia to steal the black box, and it needs to be retrieved
considering that the original rescue team sent in all perished, bar one.
"Hell of a team" , muses Snake.
Snake has been reluctantly recruited to take on Jones, and retrive the doomsday
device and the President's daughter. However, whereas in the original he had
close to 24 hours to complete his mission before a fatal disease kicked in, this
time he has only 10 hours. Failure to comply or complete the mission will result
in the Plutoxin Seven Virus being fully absorbed into his bloodstream causing a
painful death for Snake.
"You better hope I don't make it back" , promises Snake to Molloy,
Brazen and the President.
Let's get one thing out of the way first, this film came under heavy criticism
for being just a re-run of the first film, and in essence it does, with Lee
Van Cleef 's original role now taken by Stacy Keach , and Michelle
Forbes , who appeared in the David Duchovny/Brad Pitt thriller
Kalifornia , as his sidekick, but each of the new actors in the film have
their role to play, however brief, and each make it memorable.
Such actors include: Steve Buscemi as "Map To The Stars Eddie", Snake's
biggest help in getting through his task; Pam Grier , star of the 70's
Blaxploitation films as Hershe; Valeria Golino who takes a trip with
Snake to see the Surgeon General of Beverly Hills, possibly the worst plastic
surgeon in the world, played with menace by an unrecognisable Bruce
Campbell . Rounding out the extras is Peter Fonda as Pipeline, the
best surfer in town who teaches Snake how to surf along Wilshire Boulevard
when the tsunami approaches.
The picture of this release is very good indeed, bringing the crisp layout of
John Carpenter's vision to life, much sharper than any video release could,
although there was a number of "sparklies" on my review copy, on parts of side
two including the first couple of scenes, and the final scene which brought the
mark down by one.
The sound quality is fantastic though with directional effects benefitting
from the Dolby Surround set-up. If you only have your front speakers built
into the television set, you're missing out - it's time to upgrade!
After John Carpenter's first film, Dark Star , shot in Academy
4:3 ratio, every film since has been shot in 2.35:1 Panavision. Carpenter's
vision is such that nothing other than the original ratio will do. Anything
less is not so much a compromise, but an impossibility. Put simply, this and
his other films cannot be viewed in anything else than the original widescreen
ratio. This film has been released in a widescreen video, but for the best in
picture clarity, you owe it to yourself to buy this laserdisc.
Click on this title for a review of John Carpenter's Halloween
and John Carpenter's Escape From From New York on PAL LD,
plus
John Carpenter's Escape From New York
and
Dark Star on DVD.
Film: 4/5
Picture: 4/5
Sound: 5/5
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 1997.
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DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TXW32R4 32" widescreen TV
connected to either a Creative Dxr2 DVD-ROM player or Microsoft Xbox and
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