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FREE ESSAY ON ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK

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ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK

In the opening sequence of John Carpenter's Escape From New York, an anonymous narrator
sets the tone of 
desperation and hopelessness with the line once you go in, you never come out. The
narrator is referring to the 
only rule in the maximum security prison built on Manhattan Island. The prison, which was
built in 1981 as a 
reaction to the crime rate going up 400 percent, has no guards. It's every man for
himself. The once busy 
streets of New York city are now nearly deserted, decayed, and run by criminals. The hell
on Earth is so 
unbearable that some attempt to break out of the prison, on a raft, in an almost Escape
From Alcatraz fashion in the opening scene. The plot thickens as a group of terrorists
hijack the President's 
plane and crash it in New York. The President is now somewhere in the New York prison and
holds an important
tape containing a speech that could prevent another world war. Snake Plissken, a tough,
renowned war hero and 
recent inmate of the prison, is the government's only hope to save the world. Snake must
capture the President
within 24 hours so the President can present the tape at a peace summit the next day. In
exchange for his good 
deed, the government promises to pardon him for every crime he has ever committed. The
only catch is the two 
capsules implanted in his head. If he doesn't complete the mission in 24 hours the
capsules will explode.
Along the journey, Snake meets a rainbow of characters. He runs into Cabbie, who has
driven the same taxi
for 30 years in New York. He represents the nostalgia of the once great Big Apple. Snake
fights the evil Duke of
New York to capture the President. The Duke is the typical bad guy clad in lavish gold
chains and surrounded by a
group of dimwitted followers. Snake befriends Brain, a timid reserved genius and Maggie,
his 
beautiful girlfriend. Their love affair adds a humanistic touch to the cold insensitive
surroundings. In the midst
of escaping from the prison, Brain dies on a bridge. Maggie refuses to go on with Snake
and calmly awaits her 
own impending death on the bridge.
Dismal tragedy doesn't dominate the movie, however. Elements of humor are found in scenes
such as the 
prisoners' song and dance rendition of the Broadway tune Everybody's Coming to New York
and the recurring 
line mentioned to Snake by each person he meets: I thought you were dead.
In addition to humor, several strong themes are found in the film. Escape From New York
can be easily 
compared to a mythic epic journey despite Snake's anti-hero I don't give a damn
qualities. The gods (the 
government) sends Snake on a journey to capture the President. Difficult obstacles hinder
his quest. At one 
point, he must fight a giant with clubs (baseball bats with spikes attached) and a shield
(a trashcan lid). Escape
From New York can also be compared to a Western with a futuristic twist. The good guys
(Snake) and the bad 
guys (the Duke and his gang) are clearly defined. Old fashioned pistols are replaced with
explosives and machine
guns. The most obvious theme, however, is its attempt to address today's social problems.
If the crime rate
actually rose dramatically, what would America do about it? Would they take such drastic
measures and put all
the misfits of society on an island to die to avoid the risk of repeat offenders? The
issue of America's 
diminishing trust in fair honest government and its leaders is also raised. When Snake is
told that the President
is missing he nonchalantly says, So? Get a new one. This movie attempts to enlighten the
viewer about these 
issues in addition to entertaining them.
Many critics have complained that this movie leaves too many questions unanswered, but I
find Carpenter's
use your imagination approach to the movie refreshing. In the final scene, Snake asks the
President how he 
feels about the lives lost in the attempt to rescue him (the President). The President,
who is about to go the air,
impatiently responds this country appreciates their sacrifice. Snake walks away
dissatisfied with the 
President's halfhearted answer as the President plays the tape containing the important
speech on air. The
theme from American Bandstand is played instead. Snake had switched the tape earlier.
Will there be a world
war because the speech was not delivered? No answer is given. The viewer can only wonder
what happens next.

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