When George gave that slight look as Snake was introduced......yes, Solid Snake was based on Snake Pliskin and Kojima wanted Kurt Russel to voice him in MGS
I still remember maybe 30yrs ago not being able to sleep one night and I found my dad watching this in the livingroom. Sat down next to him and thus my love of dystopia was born, which we both shared. Rip old man. ✌
The girl in Chock Full O' Nuts was played by Season Hubley, who was Kurt Russell's wife at the time, and Maggie was played by Adrienne Barbeau, who was married to John Carpenter. The matte painting of New York from the opening scene was painted by a young James Cameron, who was on loan from Roger Corman. He said working on this movie is why it took him so long to make films in 2.35:1 Anamorphic, because lens distortion made compositing so difficult. That's why Aliens is the only movie in the series that's in 16:9. Funny that Kurt based his performance on Clint Eastwood, because his nemesis, Hauk, was played by Lee Van Cleef, who co-starred with Eastwood in For a Few Dollars More and The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly.
And all of Season Hubley’s best movies she plays a prostitute/sex worker: this film, HARDCORE (1979) and VICE SQUAD (1982). All awesome movies (I don’t know if Simone & George would like the last two as much as EFNY though).
Yeah, I didn't realize that was the same guy from Good Bad Ugly etc until this time around. Not sure why I never noticed that. Then when they read the thing about him doing an Eastwood impersonation, I thought, well, there's a connection to him.
Kurt Russell and John Carpenter had a really good discussion about this on the Big Trouble in Little China commentary. Kurt said that it was Backdraft that pushed him as a box office star. They talked a lot about their frustrations of box office hits during the 80s. Carpenter was told to cast someone bigger but Carpenter said if he had to do it again he would go with his boy Kurt. Glad Carpenter never changed. I can't see these movies not having Kurt Russell
I always loved Maggie's delivery when she knows Brain is dead, but still says his name with no emotion as though a part of herself died in that moment with him.
Metal Gear Solid is indeed a massive homage to this film and Snake/Big Boss in particular, so you are bang in the money there. Hideo Kojima loves this film. Also, the voice of the woman in the opening credits narration is Jamie Lee Curtis in an uncredited voiceover role. She also does the voice of the Liberty Island Security Control announcer when Snake is entering the debarkation area.
The dude Snake fights toward the end was played by professional wrestler Douglas "Ox" Baker. He was an upper mid-card heel for the NWA & AWA back in the 70s & 80s. The list of guys he worked in the 70s is basically a who's who of legendary pro wrestlers. Guys like Dusty Rhodes, Andre the Giant, Terry Funk, Pedro Morales, Verne Gagne, Bob Backlund, Larry Hennig & the Von Erich brothers. He even worked a few tours for New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW) where he wrestled the absolute legend that was Antonio Inoki. Also George, I think you'd be surprised how many gaming archetypes you know & love actually come from pro wrestling characters/gimmicks.
Donald Pleasence spent some time in a German POW prison camp in WWII, where he was imprisoned and tortured by the Nazis. He said he drew on some of those experiences for his portrayal of the captured President.
Prior to this movie, Kurt Russell was primarily known for being the fresh-faced bright-eyed small-town boy Dexter Riley in a slew of forgettable Disney movies. Seeing him as the one-eyed biker bandit Snake Plissken came as a shock to a lot of us 70's kids.
My heart leaps whenever I see the great Issac Hayes onscreen (The Duke) and then sinks when I realize none of young people have any idea who he is. He's a multi nominated and Grammy Award Winner - even Lifetime Achievement in music. The father of Hot Buttered Soul is probably best known as the voice of Chef from South Park.
Cabbie was played by Ernest Borgnine a great character actor who had a long career in Hollywood. He won an Oscar for starring in the film Marty a classic movie about an underdog type guy. When I was a kid, he was on Airwolf and reruns of his 60's tv show McHale's Navy and to guys of your generation him and his McHale's Navy co-star Tim Conway were the original Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy on Sponge Bob. He died in 2012 at the age 95 when asked once when he was in his 90's how he stayed so active and alert he whispered in the tv host ear "I Masturbate a lot". Man was a Gem.
In Tarantino's Once Upon A Time In Hollywood, DeCaprio and Pitt play Hollywood star and his long-time stuntman. This idea came to Quentin while shooting Death Proof in 2005. In-between camera set ups, he observed Kurt Russell sitting with his long-time stunt guy and friend Warlock. Quentin said Russell asked him before filming began if they could find anything stunt wise Warlock could do and Quentin said absolutely and obliged. But, clearly the unspoken thing being communicated was that Warlock was now years long down the road barely a physical resemblance proxy to Russell anymore and the end was near if not already on borrowed time and their decades old working relationship had just about reached its final curtain call. And Quentin instantly saw all the inherent melancholy and mining of old Hollywood lore potential in basing a whole movie on just two Hollywood arch types like them. When you watch Once Up on A Time, you see a lot of what inspired Tarantino from that first initial eureka moment of creative spark observing Russell and Warlock.
If you play Metal Gear Solid 2, the Snake connection is pretty much spelt out when Solid Snake assumes the alias Plissken. But it's obvious even from MGS1. Not just because of his name, appearance and demeanor but also the story of a one man drop into enemy territory where the agent is being played by his own superiors.
I came here to say the same thing. So many video games take references from great movies like this. Also, this was a failure at the box office because of all the other big movies that came out at the same time. When it came out on VHS it became a cult classic.
FINALLY. This is only one of the best dystopian future action movies ever. I’ve been watching this movie since I was a kid in the 80s. After watching a crappy VHS copy for years, DVD and hi-def were a blessing.
Snake Plissken is one of the all-time best anti-heroes. Mysterious, grizzled, and totally badass. Kurt Russell was largely known for doing squeaky-clean Disney films as a child actor, and the role of Snake Plissken really reintroduced him to the world as a serious actor who could do edgy mature roles. There is a sequel called Escape from L.A., but unfortunately it feels very formulaic and same-y with a lot of similar plot beats. But it is good to see Russell as Snake again, and the movie has some pointed social commentary to it.
21:45 - CABBIE OF NEW YORK - Portrayed by veteran American actor Ernest Borgnine whose career spanned over six decades. [RIP 2012 at 95]. In 1955 he won the Academy Award for Best Actor for portraying Marty Piletti in the film Marty. For his contributions to the film industry, he received a ‘motion pictures’ star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960.
Originally there was another, opening scene that showed the events that sent Snake to prison -- it's the aftermath of a heist set in a station of a coast-to-coast subway, with Snake, Brain, and another guy. The other guy is injured so Snake goes back to help him and gets captured, whereas Brain runs and escapes. The idea was to show Snake's good side. After it had been filmed, though, Carpenter rightly left it on the cutting room floor because, "Snake doesn't have a good side."
@@StMichael7 Search here on youtube for: Escape From New York Deleted Original Opening "Remastered" (Plus Alternate Takes) I kinda wish they'd kept it in the movie but I understand why leaving it out made Snake seem more cool and mysterious.
I am just happy you watched this, even though it didn’t win the poll. Such a great John Carpenter film, and it shows that Kurt Russell loved it, it remains an iconic work.
Theres a set story where apparently Kurt russell needed to take a leak in full costume. He went down a nearby alleyway where he scared two local homeless people who saw his patch, saw the guns he was carrying and backed off up the alley lol.
This is Kurt Russell's feature-length Clint Eastwood impression. Kurt Russell's feature-length John Wayne impression can be found in "Big Trouble In Little China."
Green lines... a lot of early mono CRT displays were green (and black) because green phosphor was cheap and showed better than white. Even on early colour monitors it often showed brighter than other colours. So it was used a lot in early wireframe graphics for games and other applications.
Fun fact... The green lines in this movie were not computer generated. They created a large block model of New York, painted it black, taped the block outlines with green UV reactive tape, lit the scene with only a blacklight, then moved the camera on a crane above the model to capture the footage. It cost them next to nothing to shoot it.
I know everyone brings up John Carpenter's other films like They Live! and Prince of Darkness for viewing, but a film of his that I love that a lot of people didn't realize was John Carpenter is Starman (1984) with Jeff Bridges and Karen Allen. Bridges was nominated for Best Actor but that was the year of Amadeus ruling the Oscars. Loved that movie!
I completely forgot about Starman! And that instantly made me think of The Last Starfighter! Pretty sure they came out about the same time. Nice, have a couple movies i can watch this weekend. If i can find them.
The first vector computer animation on film was Vertigo (1958), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) used vector lines on monitors, Alien (1979) used them for landscapes on monitors.
One thing to keep in mind when watching this movie is to remember how high the crime rate in America, and especially NY, had risen during the 70s up until when this movie was made, 1981, that turning NYC into a prison colony wasn't completely implausible (not very likely, but to most Americans Manhattan already seemed like a city full of murderers). To get an idea what NYC was like at that time (or the mood of that time), think JOKER, and watch TAXI DRIVER, DEATH WISH, MS. 45, or THE WARRIORS (but watch the theatrical version of THE WARRIORS, director cut sucks).
John Carpenter and Kurt Russell have worked together five times, and you forgot to list one of the ones you've already seen. They first worked together on a movie you mentioned in the trivia section, Elvis, in which Russell plays Elvis. They then reteamed for this in 1981, before making their most famous collaboration, The Thing, in 1982. The one you forgot is their fourth film together, Big Trouble in Little China. Finally, as you learned, they reteamed for the Escape from New York sequel Escape From L.A. in 1996. Personally, while I think it would be fun to see Escape from L.A. on the channel, it should be noted in advance that it is definitely not as cool as this one. Carpenter and Russell had vague ideas about making a third and final film, Escape From Earth, but it never happened. Funny story about that: in 2001, Carpenter was developing his last big-budget theatrical film, Ghosts of Mars, which was panned by critics and unsuccessful at the box office. In it, a group of police officers arrive at a mining colony on Mars expecting to give testimony but find it deserted, and one of the only people they can turn to for answers is an escaped felon. In the finished movie, the role is played by Ice Cube, but there was a rumor that the character was initially going to be Snake, and the studio forced them to change it. Also, in 2012, the sci-fi action movie Lockout, starring Guy Pearce, featured a story very similar to this unmade third movie, which many people noted when the trailer dropped. Carpenter agreed, suing screenwriter Luc Besson and his production company for plagiarism, a case which he won in 2016. The current layout of IMDb is quite annoying. It prioritizes the department in which the person has the most recent credit. Since John Carpenter worked on the music for a streaming television show recently, it lists that first. It also only shows a few departments before hiding the rest, so when you go to his page, it says (Music Department) (Writer) (Composer) in ovals and then there is a grouped oval that says (Director | Actor | Producer | Editor...). You have to click on Director in that group bubble to open that, and then you still have to click at the bottom of that list of credits to "expand all." Anyway, Carpenter's first film was actually Dark Star in 1974 (a dry run for the concept that would become Alien in 1979, by the same writers), followed by Assault on Precinct 13 in 1976 before directing Halloween in 1979. Of his remaining major films (a list which includes Precinct 13), I agree with the Patrons that They Live, Prince of Darkness, and In the Mouth of Madness are the three most exciting possibilities. If you thought Escape From New York had a great concept, They Live has another winner (and, much like Snake Plissken inspired Solid Snake and the three guys from Big Trouble in Little China inspired character designs for Mortal Kombat, there's a line of dialogue that made it into another video game in They Live). I would also consider The Fog, Precinct 13, Christine, and Starman for the channel.
The three guys from Big Trouble in Little China are a direct lift of three assassin characters from an early seventies Japanese Lone Wolf & Cub movie. Footage from that and another movie in the series were re-edited and dubbed into English, and released in theaters by Roger Corman's company under the title Shogun Assassin in the early eighties. It's probably the Shogun Assassin version that John Carpenter saw, and he put the very similar character designs in Big Trouble.. All just a long-winded way of saying, he probably can't lay claim to inspiring Mortal Kombat.
Such a great movie. You can imagine how impressed a 13 year old me was in 1980. Prior to this, Kurt Russel was known as a Disney child actor. This was obviously a big departure for him.
This has been a favorite for YEARS. Just an excellent, dystopian adventure. Some amazing stars in this. My favorite part - everyone thinks Snake is dead. :D 'Chock-full-o-Nuts' was a NY coffee shop chain that then also became a brand you could buy in stores.
I agree, simple idea, high concept, gets straight into it. 3 Legends in this Donald Pleasence as the President, Ernest Borgnine as the Cabby and Harry Dean Stanton as Brain. Its an incredible cast of great character actors.
Ernest Borgnine who played Cabbie, is probably new on your radar, but a beloved actor for six decades, as well as, it seems, a genuinely good dude in real life! A few years before he died, at the age of 91 he was asked on TV what the secret to his longevity was, and he replied, "I masturbate a lot!" He's in a lot of classic movies, and played a variety of characters, but in real life, seemed to be a very friendly and lovable character with a sense of humor, that was very fun loving and easy to get along with, and always had a big smile on his face, and was always open for a laugh and a good time. Ernie was a real one!
31:14 - THE DUKE OF NEW YORK - Portrayed by Isaac Hayes [RIP 2008 at 65]. He was known mainly for ‘The Theme from Shaft’. However, in 1997, he became known to many as the character ‘Chef’, when he joined the founding cast of the TV series, South Park, In 1999, the song ‘’Chocolate Salty Balls’ performed by Chef from the series, reached no.1 on the UK singles chart.
I remember reading Kojima was inspired by this film and a number of other films (including The Terminator) when creating the Metal Gear series. Solid Snake was undoubtedly inspired by the Snake character in this movie.
The Terminator is probably the major inspiration for his “Snatcher” game, where robots kill and replace humans. Hell one of the earliest Metal Gear games has Micheal Bean on the cover as Snake like the art is just a traced frame from the Terminator.
Glad you saw how influential this film has been. As for green graphics, that's not a style thing, it's a technology limitation. Before color, we had only green phosphor, which is why the theme for "The Matrix" was green.
Escape from New York was actually Escape from St, Louis, as the majority of the film was made in my hometown. As a kid, I remember when they were filming and I lived about 2 miles from where the Brooklyn Bridge scenes were filmed (it's actually called the Chain of Rocks Bridge). The majority of the exterior shots were filmed in East St. Louis, which had been devastated by a fire which made it a perfect filming location (sadly, it still looks like it did in the movie). Whenever I have friends from out of town, I take them on a tour of all the filming locations, most of which are in much better shape than they were in this movie, although at the time they made this movie most were as they appear in the film.
The Fox Theater (where the burlesque show is being performed) and Union Station (where the gladiator fight was held) were both renovated in the 80's and are both really nice places to visit.
For the green lines in the computer simulation, it was what computers used at the time, so they used it for the movies (not the other way around.) Old tank, helicopter and mecha games were first person view that just had green lines on the black screen to silhouette everything.
Yes, Chock Full o' Nuts is a real coffee brand that had luuncheonettes in various cities. Not sure how many are left these days. But you can still buy the coffee.
just so we have a complete list Jamie Lee Curtis (narration): main character in Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween H20, Halloween Resurrection, Halloween (2018), Halloween Kills, Halloween Ends Donald Pleasence (President): main character in Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween 4, Halloween 5, Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers Tom Atkins (Rehm): main character in Halloween III
It's a .45. With a silencer and a ridiculous and pointless scope.😂 The MAC 10 was a staple of 80s action movies. In real life it was a pretty niche weapon. High cyclic rate ( with practice you could get three quick bursts and you're empty), lousy ergonomics, and accuracy that earned it the nickname of the "phone boorh gun". It's main practical use was to "take out a room full of surprised Colonels". The Gun That Made The 80s Roar
Chock Full O' Nuts was a nut shop thst so!d shelled nuts, but when the Great Depression hit it started serving coffee and sandwiches (cream cheese and chopped nuts on raisin bread). They still sell the coffee brand today, especially in America. In fact, I'd argue it's one of the better home coffee brands when it comes to flavor.
Kurt Russel wasn't the only bad ass cast in this film. Lee Van Cleef ( who actually played in a number of Clint Eastwood movies) and Adrienne Barbeau (THE 80s scream queen) also fit the bill.
The head on the Statue of Liberty on the poster is just something the advertising company made up. It's not in the film. However, it inspired the Statue of Liberty's head which did appear in the movie Cloverfield!
The actor who plays the part of " BRAIN " , was also in : ALIEN - Red Dawn - Pretty In Pink. And other movies. And Brains Squeeze Maggy was in a Stephen King film : CREEPSHOW
8:40 - BUM WITH POTUS'S BRACELET - Portrayed by George Buck Flower [RIP June 2004 at 66]. Often played a homeless street bum because of his gruff appearance. Director John Carpenter gave Flower a cameo role in several films he made throughout the 1980s including 'The Fog', (1980) 'Starman' (1984), and 'They Live' (1988). Flower also portrayed 'Red', the bum awoken from sleeping on the public bench in 'Back To The Future' (1985).
@@bobbombar6711 checked IMDb, the (as I call him)"Klaus Kinski lookalike" is one Frank Doubleday. Biehn was not in this movie. Strangely enough, for a long time I thought the "Chock Full O'Nuts" girl was Linda Hamilton/Sarah Connor. Maybe SciFi writers are right, logging on internet moves us across neighboring universes, causing Mandela Effect,🤨😉.
The tops of both of the Twin Towers were covered in all kinds of things including a giant antenna, piping, equipment and an observation area. It was not flat at all and would be impossible to land on.
Adrienne Barbeau who played Maggie was married to John Carpenter and was in several of his movies. She was also the voice for the chess computer in The Thing.
A lot of the streets were filmed in st. Louis' warehouse district where they had massive fires a few years before. The ring combatant was portrayed by wrestler Ox Baker who was in reality a very nice man
My all-time favorite Kurt Russell film. Saw it several times on the big screen. Like a rollercoaster ride where you are paranoid throughout. I was gripping the arm rest tightly, on the edge of my seat. I did not relax until after the end credits. The tension and fear was so well done, my brain shut down and forgot that I’ve seen the movie many times before. I jumped each time that guy ran across the doorway behind him! I yelled F@$k! every time he dropped his radio! The legendary Ernest Borgnine as Cabbie. The leader of a bunch of misfits in the comedy series McHale’s Navy. He played memorable heavies in earlier films. In Demetrius and the Gladiators, Borgnine was terrifying as the Gladiator overseer. Hey George, he was probably a role model for ‘Gladiator 2’.
I was 17 when this came out. The perfect age for it! The Summer of 1981 gave me the 2 Coolest movie heroes of all time! Snake Plissken & Indiana Jones. In fact the night I saw Escape From New York I also went to see Raiders for my 3rd time in a 70MM print on a screen that wrapped around you. You had to turn your head from side to side to see the whole movie. This was in Canada. For the rest of the 80s & 90s Kurt Russell & Harrison Ford would make all my of favorite movies of all time. Mel Gibson was my 3rd for making my favorite movies of all time from the 80s & 90s.
The President stopped Snakes ascension up the wall so the Duke would stand still to take a shot at Snake, making him a sitting duck for the President on the mounted gun.
John Carpenter's influence on modern media cannot be understated. From _Halloween_ to _Escape from New York_ to _The Thing_ - the dude has created some of the coolest movies ever. Absolutely loved growing up with his stuff. Heck, _Prince of Darkness_ nearly inspired to go into studying quantum physics. Although some people complain about the sequel to this, I think it's just so gonzo that it works... and is the perfect middle finger to Hollywood XD
Kurt Russell was a Disney studios child actor/teen actor. This was his first job as an action hero and completely changed the course of his career. The “I thought you were dead,” line may come from the John Wayne movie ‘Big Jake.’ All through that movie people are saying to Big Jake/John Wayne: “I thought you were dead.”
"Mister, I wanted a vanilla twist." Assault on Precinct 13 is also straight forward and AWESOME. I believe the Peter Pan boy was also one of the head gang leaders.
25:05 - PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES - Portrayed by veteran English film actor, Donald Pleasence [RIP Feb 1995 @ 75] Roles spanning his 50-yr career include The Forger, The Great Escape (1963), Ernst Stavro Blofeld, You Only Live Twice (1967), Baron Danglars, The Count of Monte Cristo (1975), Dr. Loomis, five Halloween movies (1978-89). Austin Powers’ Dr. Evil is a parody of his performance as Blofeld.
Kurt playing Snake as Clint. Based on the fact that the police commisioner on Liberty Island station is Lee Van Cleef. Who starred with Clint Eastwood in his westerns such as The ood The Bad and The Ugly. It was fun.
The Duke is Soul Music legend Issac Hayes, who at this time was best known for the Theme From Shaft, but would go on to be the voice of Chef on South Park. Maggie is played by Adrienne Barbeau, who was married to John Carpenter at the time & is also known for his movie The Fog, as well as Wes Craven's Swamp Thing & George Romero's Creepshow, amongst other things. You probably recognize Donald Pleasence (The President) as Dr Lomis from Halloween. It always struck me as odd that Carpenter cast a Brit as the US President. Hauk, the head of the police is veteran character actor Lee Van Cleef who is best know as the heavy in many classic westerns, most notably Sergio Leone's The Good The Bad & The Ugly & For a Few Dollars More. Some other great Dystopian movies to check out are Planet of the Apes (1968), Soylent Green (1973) & Rollerball (1975) .
My favourite (non Solid Snake) fact about this film: At 6:18 that's not a computer generated model, they didn't have the tech for that at the SF studio at the time: it's an actual physical model with lines drawn on and a black-light. I think that’s so neat! EDIT: glad that got into the trivia at the end of the video. Great vid, 10/10
Miss ADRIENNE BARBEAU (who plays the "Maggie" character, here) was a well-recognized actress in the 1970s (she did a lot of episodic TV and had a primary role in the TV series "Maude" (a spin-off from the legendary: All In The Family, written/co-created by: Norman Lear. Among MANY other things, All In The Family established the first notoriety got: Rob Reiner (son of legendary comedian: Carl Reiner), as an actor, before he took up directing film. [This Is: Spinal Tap; Stand By Me -to name just two of his works!)). Barbeau was, also, something of a sex symbol of the '70s. She, later, starred in the (weak and sloppy) first, attempted, film adaptation of: Swamp Thing. ...But she, also, "redeemed herself" (actually: her performance in Swamp Thing may be one of the FEW acceptable things ABOUT it!🤷) to Comic Book fans/"nerd universe" because she voiced: CATWOMAN [Selina Kyle] in: the MOST PERFECT rendition of 'The Bat,' ever: Paul Dini and Bruce Timm's MASTERWORK: BATMAN: The Animated Series (in the early '90s!)! 🤘🤘🔥🔥🔥🔥 ...As with the other "voice legends" who populate Dini & Timm's BATMAN series and make these legendary characters LIVE!: Kevin Conroy [as: Batman.Bruce Wayne]. Mark Hamill [as" The Joker], Arleen Sorkin [as: Harley Quinn (Dini and Timm, in fact, INVENTED/CREATED the "Harley Quinn"character! and she FIRST (and AT first: ONLY!) appeared in: BATMAN: T.A.S.!)]; along with them: Barbeau's Catwoman/Selina Kyle is THE DEFINITIVE version of the character and the HIGHEST echelon of performance and perfection AT said! Forever! [So: Lay some respect on this woman! 🔥] (And ALL of the aformentioned talents!). Adrienne Barbeau and John Carpenter were, actually, married ("half secretly" you might say. They weren't, literally, "keeping it a secret," but: they stayed out of "Hollywood circles" and "the spotlight," lived outside the confines of "that world.") at the time of this film. Carpenter was the first to cast her in film roles. Her character's partner, the "Brain" character is portrayed by TRULY LEGENDARY character actor: HARRY DEAN STANTON! Stanton is unknown to the vast movie viewing public, by name (most of such people, anyway!) ...outside of. say. the populace of: Coen Brother fans and Avoid Lynch fans (for example!)🤷. .... However: YOU MIGHT recognize him from his cameo in: The Avengers (Yes: the first movie!). He has a small cameo in the scene where Hulk crashes to earth and transforms back to Bruce Banner (after Loki releases his "detention cell" from the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier (and it crashes to Earth)). Yes: THAT is Harry (THE) Dean Stanton! He is, also, recognized from his role in: Alien (the original movie). Oddly, he appears to have gotten that role by annoucnicng to Ridley, when he first showed-up to read for it, that: He hates Science Fiction and monster movies! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣- Which makes THAT: legendary, as well! 😛😛😂😂 🤘🤘 ...You may ALSO recognize the actor who plays: the lost President in Escape From New York. The actor is Donald Pleasance, celebrated stage and screen presence. YOU might recall him from his role as "the asylum doctor" (sorry: I don't know thee, actual, scripted character name 🤷), in Carpenter's: Halloween. As far as I'm aware, that is where Pleasance and Carpenter developed a relationship and Pleasance worked with Carpenter quite a bit, from that point on. Another thing which demonstrates your two's SCANT experience with films, in the sense of: "time"/"expanse" is that you do not recognize famed actor: Ernest Borgnine, as "the taxi driver!" Borgnine has had tons and tons of parts and played leads, as well (both in films and on television!). ...Movies such as: From Here To Eternity, The Dirty Dozen, Marty (I believe, Borgnine's first starring role), Bad Day At Black Rock [starring the legendary: Spencer Tracy!),... he's in those (and many more!) ....Borgnine is an undeniable presence. ...also: The 🤷🤷🤷"warden"???..."Commandant of the Prison"🤷, who sends Snake Plissken (yes: THAT is the correct spelling of that character's name!) into N.Y., to perform the rescue: "Hauk" is played by another legendary screen actor and overall figure: Lee Van Cleef. ...Essentially, inarguably, best recognized for his role in the CLASSIC: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly as: "Angel Eyes"/The Bad! Van Cleef has a load of roles (I would be hard-pressed to decide, off-the-top-of-my-head, whether Stanton or Van Cleef would have more roles to their name!!) and he has primarily concentrated on: westerns and crime fiction movies. Lee Van Cleef has played great villains as well as some leading man types. [see, for instance: Death Rides A Horse, or: Sabata or Sabata Returns, if you are already famukar with him in the Sergio Leone movies (he appears in 2 of Eastwood's "triolgy" ...but plays a different character in each.).]. Van Cleef's best role, outside of: The Good, The Bad And The Ugly; may, well, be: the role he plays in: BARQUERO. Definitely worth seeing! -Oh! (one more!): "The Duke" is played, NOT by a legnedary actor, but: a Legendary MUSICIAN! (sadly, later, swallowed by the cult of "sc*en*ology"🙄🙄🤦 🤦🤦-creepier than ANYTHING in: Escape From New York, by FAR!🤬🤬)!! Isaac Hays!: Likely if you know his name it's from one of the following 2 things (or both! 🤷): His composition & performance of the soundtrack and (particularly) the THEME for the film: Shaft! [in 1971]; OR from voicing the "Chef" character, on "South Park." Hays was one of the house song-writers for the, TRULY and ABSOLUTELY (and FRAGRANTLY DESERVEDLY!!!!!) LEGENDARY: STAX Records! [based in: Memphis,TN]. He and his, then song-writing partner: David Porter composed loads of the Soul and R&B classics which came out of STAX. "Hold On, I'm Comin;" "Soul Man" (just to name a few! - Both of THOSE, originally, recorded by the duo: Sam & Dave._ Hays also had a multi-decade solo career and was a multi-istrumentalist, composer and arranger. Besides "Shaft" he has stuff like:"Hyperbolicsyllabicsesquedalymistic" 🤘🤘 Both the albums: Hot Buttered Soul and Black Moses are AS essential to own as: Shaft! [the film soundtrack]. Absolutely. ... Hays was an imposing presence in many ways. ...but I would argue: PRIMARILY: MUSICALLY! 🤘🤘🔥
John Carpenter has a real style of just getting the story to your eyes and ears.. I would recommend THE FOG, THEY LIVE and PRINCE OF DARKNESS as great additions to the John Carpenter box!
@George The first use of green vector graphics i can think of is 2001: a Space Odyssey. During the space station docking scene you can see one of the cockpit monitors using these. The scene then zooms in on that screen. That was in 1968.
What a great movie! The 80s were such a strange time for movies. To those of us who were born before the 1970s, Kurt Russel was a Disney child star. Seeing him make his escape through action films was hilarious!
Some great, great performers in this one. Issac Hayes ('The Duke') was the composer of the theme song for "Shaft" (1971). Yeah, he was the voice of 'Chef' in Southpark. There's a hilarious scene in "I'm Gonna Git You Sucka" (1988) where he's singing (a different song) in the car, and one of the Wayans Bros' characters says, "..I can't stand your f'ing singing." IGGYS is to the "Blacksploitaion" genre what "Mars Attacks" is to Sci-Fi, and "Big Trouble in Little China" is to those of us who love Hong Kong kung fu film. Harry Dean Stanton ('Brain') is a 'counter-culture' legend. Was part of Clint Eastwood's posse in "Kelley's Heroes", and had a major role as 'Bud' in "Repo Man". And 'Hauk' was played by Lee Van Cleef. The 'bad guy' from Eastwood's 'spaghetti westerns'.
This was filmed in the St. Louis area. Union Station, the area they used for the arena was renovated shortly after this was filmed. For the street locations they simply went across the river to east St. Louis. It was so run down they had to do very little set dressing.
For the graphics of the city, John Carpenter said that CG model of the city effect was so easy to do, you could literally recreate it in your living room. To answer your question about what happened in New York, the novelization gives the best explanation: the city had been hit by a gas attack, which lead to the city being evacuated and quite a few deaths. Since it was impossible to recolonize the island, they walled it off and used it as the prison. The exteriors of New York City seen in this film actually wasn't New York. It was filmed in St. Louis, as the area was worn down in the way that Carpenter wanted. The Liberty City Island was filmed in Los Angeles at an abandoned dam (which has been used in several TV and movie productions over the years, including the closing credits of Buckaroo Banzai), with the only part film in New York was the shot of the Statue of Liberty and a hidden cut used to make it look like one long tracking shot.
Beside being a legendary movie there are so many iconic actors in this movie it's worth pointing out: Kurt Russell - one of the most underrated actors ever. Ernest Borgnine (Cabbie) won the Best Actor Oscar for Marty 1955 - Lee Van Cleef (Hauk) is Angel Eyes or "The Bad" In The Good The Bad and They Ugly - Harry Dean Stanton (Brain) is one of the best character actors ever with credits like Repo Man and Alien - Isaac Hayes is probably best known for the theme song from the movie Shaft - Donald Pleasance has been in so many movies since the '50s - Adrienne Barbeau is, well, Adrienne Barbeau - and most of them probably all joined onto this movie thinking their careers were on the downside, and 'hey it's a job', not realizing it would become a classic.
When George gave that slight look as Snake was introduced......yes, Solid Snake was based on Snake Pliskin and Kojima wanted Kurt Russel to voice him in MGS
I dont know why but the name Solid Snake was always sound funny when i hear it.
Like the AVGN said once "They should've call him Erect Cock"
Iroquois Pliskin. Lieutenant Junior Grade
Like Solid Snake, but without the loooong expositions talking between the action.
Hayter made it his own but he was sort of doing an impression of Russels performance here.
Not only that… but in MGS2 Pliskin is mentioned by name
"so badass, he''s too dangerous to be free"....wow never have I heard a more perfect tagline for Snake
I still remember maybe 30yrs ago not being able to sleep one night and I found my dad watching this in the livingroom. Sat down next to him and thus my love of dystopia was born, which we both shared. Rip old man. ✌
The girl in Chock Full O' Nuts was played by Season Hubley, who was Kurt Russell's wife at the time, and Maggie was played by Adrienne Barbeau, who was married to John Carpenter.
The matte painting of New York from the opening scene was painted by a young James Cameron, who was on loan from Roger Corman. He said working on this movie is why it took him so long to make films in 2.35:1 Anamorphic, because lens distortion made compositing so difficult. That's why Aliens is the only movie in the series that's in 16:9.
Funny that Kurt based his performance on Clint Eastwood, because his nemesis, Hauk, was played by Lee Van Cleef, who co-starred with Eastwood in For a Few Dollars More and The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly.
And all of Season Hubley’s best movies she plays a prostitute/sex worker: this film, HARDCORE (1979) and VICE SQUAD (1982). All awesome movies (I don’t know if Simone & George would like the last two as much as EFNY though).
And Russell made damn sure Hubley got a higher billing than even Harry Dean Stanton.
Yeah, I didn't realize that was the same guy from Good Bad Ugly etc until this time around. Not sure why I never noticed that. Then when they read the thing about him doing an Eastwood impersonation, I thought, well, there's a connection to him.
This movie made Kurt a star. He was known mostly for Disney movies prior to this. His career skyrocketed from here.
Kurt Russell and John Carpenter had a really good discussion about this on the Big Trouble in Little China commentary. Kurt said that it was Backdraft that pushed him as a box office star. They talked a lot about their frustrations of box office hits during the 80s. Carpenter was told to cast someone bigger but Carpenter said if he had to do it again he would go with his boy Kurt. Glad Carpenter never changed. I can't see these movies not having Kurt Russell
@@MrHeat187imo and im sure alot will agree Kurt Russel was mega star in the 80's
@@BigBoss-zi5ss Russel was a star, but he was not at the top tier. His filmography and the box office returns of his films confirm that.
I always loved Maggie's delivery when she knows Brain is dead, but still says his name with no emotion as though a part of herself died in that moment with him.
Metal Gear Solid is indeed a massive homage to this film and Snake/Big Boss in particular, so you are bang in the money there. Hideo Kojima loves this film.
Also, the voice of the woman in the opening credits narration is Jamie Lee Curtis in an uncredited voiceover role. She also does the voice of the Liberty Island Security Control announcer when Snake is entering the debarkation area.
...and in MGS2, theres a character called Iroquois Pliskin, & Iroquois is a type of snake! 😁
@@cutthr0atjakeNo iroquois is not a snake that's a group of native Americans. They believe in a mythical horned snake.
Snake Pliskin should have been wearing the bandana, so he could have infinite bullets.
The dude Snake fights toward the end was played by professional wrestler Douglas "Ox" Baker. He was an upper mid-card heel for the NWA & AWA back in the 70s & 80s. The list of guys he worked in the 70s is basically a who's who of legendary pro wrestlers. Guys like Dusty Rhodes, Andre the Giant, Terry Funk, Pedro Morales, Verne Gagne, Bob Backlund, Larry Hennig & the Von Erich brothers. He even worked a few tours for New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW) where he wrestled the absolute legend that was Antonio Inoki. Also George, I think you'd be surprised how many gaming archetypes you know & love actually come from pro wrestling characters/gimmicks.
Donald Pleasence spent some time in a German POW prison camp in WWII, where he was imprisoned and tortured by the Nazis. He said he drew on some of those experiences for his portrayal of the captured President.
Wow,what a life-l had no idea Pleasance had such a background.
Didn't Pleasence also play 'The Forger' in "The Great Escape" (1963) among so many other roles? Great 'character actor'.
@@panamafloyd1469 Yes. He also played Ernst Stavro Blofeld in James Bond
RIP Donald Pleasence, Ernest Borgnine, Frank Doubleday, George Buck Flower, Harry Dean Stanton, Isaac Hayes, Lee Van Cleef and Ox Baker.
That's an upsettingly long list
Prior to this movie, Kurt Russell was primarily known for being the fresh-faced bright-eyed small-town boy Dexter Riley in a slew of forgettable Disney movies.
Seeing him as the one-eyed biker bandit Snake Plissken came as a shock to a lot of us 70's kids.
"Forgettable??" You're talking about the original MCU! The Medfield College Universe! Kurt Russell is the only actor to appear in both MCUs.😂
Came here to say exactly this.
blasphemy! those movies were great.
- source, my childhood memories.
@@dr.burtgummerfan439 ESCAPE was Kurt Russell's move to DC - Dark Carpenter. 🙂
@@dubbleplusgood Found the boomers. 🙂
My heart leaps whenever I see the great Issac Hayes onscreen (The Duke) and then sinks when I realize none of young people have any idea who he is. He's a multi nominated and Grammy Award Winner - even Lifetime Achievement in music. The father of Hot Buttered Soul is probably best known as the voice of Chef from South Park.
He is a complicated man......
He's also a cuckoo for cocoa puffs scientologist
@@salvadorlopezsalas8766 But no one understands him but his woman ...
Some people think this was his first film role not playing himself, but it was actually Three Tough Guys followed by Truck Turner both from 1974.
@@salvadorlopezsalas8766 but no one understands him but his woman...lol
Cabbie was played by Ernest Borgnine a great character actor who had a long career in Hollywood. He won an Oscar for starring in the film Marty a classic movie about an underdog type guy. When I was a kid, he was on Airwolf and reruns of his 60's tv show McHale's Navy and to guys of your generation him and his McHale's Navy co-star Tim Conway were the original Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy on Sponge Bob.
He died in 2012 at the age 95 when asked once when he was in his 90's how he stayed so active and alert he whispered in the tv host ear "I Masturbate a lot". Man was a Gem.
omg airwolf
He was also in From Here to Eternity (a classic WWII movie w/Burt Lancaster, Frank Sinatra, etc.) and the cult classic Willard
Also great in Convoy, Emperor of the North and has a small part in Gattica.
I can never forgive him for his betrayal in The Black Hole...
Earnest Borgnine was a staple actor of my childhood. Airwolf, Escape from New York, and even Marty was the stuff I grew up on!
The one of the greatest things about this movie is the fact that Kurt Russels stunt double was called Dick Warlock.
Dick Warlock also played Michael Myers in Halloween 2.
He changed his surname from Leming to Warlock. I assume he thought nobody would hire a stuntman/stunt coordinator named Leming.
In Tarantino's Once Upon A Time In Hollywood, DeCaprio and Pitt play Hollywood star and his long-time stuntman. This idea came to Quentin while shooting Death Proof in 2005. In-between camera set ups, he observed Kurt Russell sitting with his long-time stunt guy and friend Warlock. Quentin said Russell asked him before filming began if they could find anything stunt wise Warlock could do and Quentin said absolutely and obliged. But, clearly the unspoken thing being communicated was that Warlock was now years long down the road barely a physical resemblance proxy to Russell anymore and the end was near if not already on borrowed time and their decades old working relationship had just about reached its final curtain call. And Quentin instantly saw all the inherent melancholy and mining of old Hollywood lore potential in basing a whole movie on just two Hollywood arch types like them. When you watch Once Up on A Time, you see a lot of what inspired Tarantino from that first initial eureka moment of creative spark observing Russell and Warlock.
@@PuppyMonsters I reckon he would have got heaps of work.
Hey, we need a stunt guy to run off a cliff
I know just the man! 😁
If you play Metal Gear Solid 2, the Snake connection is pretty much spelt out when Solid Snake assumes the alias Plissken. But it's obvious even from MGS1. Not just because of his name, appearance and demeanor but also the story of a one man drop into enemy territory where the agent is being played by his own superiors.
Yes, this movie is Kojima's favorite.
I came here to say the same thing. So many video games take references from great movies like this.
Also, this was a failure at the box office because of all the other big movies that came out at the same time. When it came out on VHS it became a cult classic.
"Snake?.....Snaaaaake!!!"
FINALLY. This is only one of the best dystopian future action movies ever. I’ve been watching this movie since I was a kid in the 80s. After watching a crappy VHS copy for years, DVD and hi-def were a blessing.
Snake Plissken is one of the all-time best anti-heroes. Mysterious, grizzled, and totally badass. Kurt Russell was largely known for doing squeaky-clean Disney films as a child actor, and the role of Snake Plissken really reintroduced him to the world as a serious actor who could do edgy mature roles.
There is a sequel called Escape from L.A., but unfortunately it feels very formulaic and same-y with a lot of similar plot beats. But it is good to see Russell as Snake again, and the movie has some pointed social commentary to it.
If only they were able to make the 3rd supposedly sequel escape from earth
The intro of the "The Duke" (Isaac Hayes) in his decked out pimp mobile with the background music playing is my favorite scene.
The cabbie, Ernest Borgnine, won the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1955 for a film called Marty.
I love how they introduce a character coded as the love interest and then have her dragged away by C.H.U.D.s a minute later.
Ernest Borgnine played the cabbie. If you want to see another great Borgnine performance, check out the original Poseidon Adventure.
21:45 - CABBIE OF NEW YORK - Portrayed by veteran American actor Ernest Borgnine whose career spanned over six decades. [RIP 2012 at 95]. In 1955 he won the Academy Award for Best Actor for portraying Marty Piletti in the film Marty. For his contributions to the film industry, he received a ‘motion pictures’ star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960.
Originally there was another, opening scene that showed the events that sent Snake to prison -- it's the aftermath of a heist set in a station of a coast-to-coast subway, with Snake, Brain, and another guy. The other guy is injured so Snake goes back to help him and gets captured, whereas Brain runs and escapes. The idea was to show Snake's good side. After it had been filmed, though, Carpenter rightly left it on the cutting room floor because, "Snake doesn't have a good side."
that scene is easily found on youtube
@@fredfredburger5150But under what title or name did you find that version?
@@StMichael7 Search here on youtube for: Escape From New York Deleted Original Opening "Remastered" (Plus Alternate Takes)
I kinda wish they'd kept it in the movie but I understand why leaving it out made Snake seem more cool and mysterious.
Brain wasn't in the scene. His betrayal was during an older job.
I am just happy you watched this, even though it didn’t win the poll. Such a great John Carpenter film, and it shows that Kurt Russell loved it, it remains an iconic work.
Escape From New York, The Thing, Big Trouble in Little China = my early childhood development
Theres a set story where apparently Kurt russell needed to take a leak in full costume.
He went down a nearby alleyway where he scared two local homeless people who saw his patch, saw the guns he was carrying and backed off up the alley lol.
Snake's opponent in the gladiator combat scene is the famous pro-wrestler Ox Baker.
Ducked into the comments to say this very thing. Not much for bumping, Ox, but damn he could piss off a crowd.
World Famous Heart Puncher
@@theevilbeard "Ox...the natives are getting restless." -Ernie Ladd
This is Kurt Russell's feature-length Clint Eastwood impression. Kurt Russell's feature-length John Wayne impression can be found in "Big Trouble In Little China."
And like John Wayne, everyone had heard he was dead.
Green lines... a lot of early mono CRT displays were green (and black) because green phosphor was cheap and showed better than white. Even on early colour monitors it often showed brighter than other colours. So it was used a lot in early wireframe graphics for games and other applications.
Fun fact... The green lines in this movie were not computer generated. They created a large block model of New York, painted it black, taped the block outlines with green UV reactive tape, lit the scene with only a blacklight, then moved the camera on a crane above the model to capture the footage.
It cost them next to nothing to shoot it.
@@dubiumguy Beat me to it by 2 day's even though the video was only published 24 mins ago. I guess Patreon gives you the competitive advantage
@@dubiumguy If you watched the video to the end you would've known that they addressed this.
I know everyone brings up John Carpenter's other films like They Live! and Prince of Darkness for viewing, but a film of his that I love that a lot of people didn't realize was John Carpenter is Starman (1984) with Jeff Bridges and Karen Allen. Bridges was nominated for Best Actor but that was the year of Amadeus ruling the Oscars. Loved that movie!
Starman is an all time favorite of mine also, would love for George and Simone to watch it.
don't forget memoirs of an invisible man is a carpenter movie too
Starman is great it doesn't get enough love unfortunately
Re-watched about a month ago on VHS. Well worth checking out for those who have not seen it.
I completely forgot about Starman! And that instantly made me think of The Last Starfighter! Pretty sure they came out about the same time. Nice, have a couple movies i can watch this weekend. If i can find them.
The first vector computer animation on film was Vertigo (1958), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) used vector lines on monitors, Alien (1979) used them for landscapes on monitors.
One thing to keep in mind when watching this movie is to remember how high the crime rate in America, and especially NY, had risen during the 70s up until when this movie was made, 1981, that turning NYC into a prison colony wasn't completely implausible (not very likely, but to most Americans Manhattan already seemed like a city full of murderers). To get an idea what NYC was like at that time (or the mood of that time), think JOKER, and watch TAXI DRIVER, DEATH WISH, MS. 45, or THE WARRIORS (but watch the theatrical version of THE WARRIORS, director cut sucks).
John Carpenter and Kurt Russell have worked together five times, and you forgot to list one of the ones you've already seen. They first worked together on a movie you mentioned in the trivia section, Elvis, in which Russell plays Elvis. They then reteamed for this in 1981, before making their most famous collaboration, The Thing, in 1982. The one you forgot is their fourth film together, Big Trouble in Little China. Finally, as you learned, they reteamed for the Escape from New York sequel Escape From L.A. in 1996. Personally, while I think it would be fun to see Escape from L.A. on the channel, it should be noted in advance that it is definitely not as cool as this one.
Carpenter and Russell had vague ideas about making a third and final film, Escape From Earth, but it never happened. Funny story about that: in 2001, Carpenter was developing his last big-budget theatrical film, Ghosts of Mars, which was panned by critics and unsuccessful at the box office. In it, a group of police officers arrive at a mining colony on Mars expecting to give testimony but find it deserted, and one of the only people they can turn to for answers is an escaped felon. In the finished movie, the role is played by Ice Cube, but there was a rumor that the character was initially going to be Snake, and the studio forced them to change it. Also, in 2012, the sci-fi action movie Lockout, starring Guy Pearce, featured a story very similar to this unmade third movie, which many people noted when the trailer dropped. Carpenter agreed, suing screenwriter Luc Besson and his production company for plagiarism, a case which he won in 2016.
The current layout of IMDb is quite annoying. It prioritizes the department in which the person has the most recent credit. Since John Carpenter worked on the music for a streaming television show recently, it lists that first. It also only shows a few departments before hiding the rest, so when you go to his page, it says (Music Department) (Writer) (Composer) in ovals and then there is a grouped oval that says (Director | Actor | Producer | Editor...). You have to click on Director in that group bubble to open that, and then you still have to click at the bottom of that list of credits to "expand all."
Anyway, Carpenter's first film was actually Dark Star in 1974 (a dry run for the concept that would become Alien in 1979, by the same writers), followed by Assault on Precinct 13 in 1976 before directing Halloween in 1979. Of his remaining major films (a list which includes Precinct 13), I agree with the Patrons that They Live, Prince of Darkness, and In the Mouth of Madness are the three most exciting possibilities. If you thought Escape From New York had a great concept, They Live has another winner (and, much like Snake Plissken inspired Solid Snake and the three guys from Big Trouble in Little China inspired character designs for Mortal Kombat, there's a line of dialogue that made it into another video game in They Live). I would also consider The Fog, Precinct 13, Christine, and Starman for the channel.
My ADHD kicked in halfway through that novel of a comment, but I still liked it because it was a great, informative comment through that point lol
it was just a cheap unnecessary remake yea, but i liked the end of EFLA more.
Hard to see how Dark Star had anything to do with Alien except being in space.
O'Bannon was a horror writer who appeared in the film IIRC.
@@Cheepchipsable O'Bannon helped write both and developed Alien based on the dissatisfaction as to how the idea turned out the first time.
The three guys from Big Trouble in Little China are a direct lift of three assassin characters from an early seventies Japanese Lone Wolf & Cub movie. Footage from that and another movie in the series were re-edited and dubbed into English, and released in theaters by Roger Corman's company under the title Shogun Assassin in the early eighties. It's probably the Shogun Assassin version that John Carpenter saw, and he put the very similar character designs in Big Trouble.. All just a long-winded way of saying, he probably can't lay claim to inspiring Mortal Kombat.
Such a great movie. You can imagine how impressed a 13 year old me was in 1980. Prior to this, Kurt Russel was known as a Disney child actor. This was obviously a big departure for him.
" The Duke" is Chef from South Park 😂
Imagine if he received Snake Plissken with "Hello, Children!"...
@@juandesalgado hahahaha
Chcolate Salty Balls
The green lines were common in early computer visualization because the first CRTs were green. So when you saw green outlines you knew "computer".
This has been a favorite for YEARS. Just an excellent, dystopian adventure. Some amazing stars in this.
My favorite part - everyone thinks Snake is dead. :D
'Chock-full-o-Nuts' was a NY coffee shop chain that then also became a brand you could buy in stores.
I agree, simple idea, high concept, gets straight into it. 3 Legends in this Donald Pleasence as the President, Ernest Borgnine as the Cabby and Harry Dean Stanton as Brain. Its an incredible cast of great character actors.
Ernest Borgnine who played Cabbie, is probably new on your radar, but a beloved actor for six decades, as well as, it seems, a genuinely good dude in real life! A few years before he died, at the age of 91 he was asked on TV what the secret to his longevity was, and he replied, "I masturbate a lot!" He's in a lot of classic movies, and played a variety of characters, but in real life, seemed to be a very friendly and lovable character with a sense of humor, that was very fun loving and easy to get along with, and always had a big smile on his face, and was always open for a laugh and a good time. Ernie was a real one!
Don't forget Airwolf
George: I have a vision of Mad Max Fury Road.
The movie: The voice of Chef from South Park shows up.
Hello, there Snake
@@augustineirigoyen4400 How about a nice salisbury steak?
And then he breaks into 'suck on my chocolate balls'. 😮
Hello Childrens......
Say everybody have you seen my balls, they're big and salty and brown
Also, yes, Zangief from Street Fighter was based off that dude in the arena.
31:14 - THE DUKE OF NEW YORK - Portrayed by Isaac Hayes [RIP 2008 at 65]. He was known mainly for ‘The Theme from Shaft’. However, in 1997, he became known to many as the character ‘Chef’, when he joined the founding cast of the TV series, South Park, In 1999, the song ‘’Chocolate Salty Balls’ performed by Chef from the series, reached no.1 on the UK singles chart.
I remember reading Kojima was inspired by this film and a number of other films (including The Terminator) when creating the Metal Gear series. Solid Snake was undoubtedly inspired by the Snake character in this movie.
The Terminator is probably the major inspiration for his “Snatcher” game, where robots kill and replace humans. Hell one of the earliest Metal Gear games has Micheal Bean on the cover as Snake like the art is just a traced frame from the Terminator.
@@kaybaumann4989 snatcher is basically blade runner the game. There are numerous other influences like terminator, as you said.
Glad you saw how influential this film has been. As for green graphics, that's not a style thing, it's a technology limitation. Before color, we had only green phosphor, which is why the theme for "The Matrix" was green.
Escape from New York was actually Escape from St, Louis, as the majority of the film was made in my hometown. As a kid, I remember when they were filming and I lived about 2 miles from where the Brooklyn Bridge scenes were filmed (it's actually called the Chain of Rocks Bridge). The majority of the exterior shots were filmed in East St. Louis, which had been devastated by a fire which made it a perfect filming location (sadly, it still looks like it did in the movie). Whenever I have friends from out of town, I take them on a tour of all the filming locations, most of which are in much better shape than they were in this movie, although at the time they made this movie most were as they appear in the film.
The Fox Theater (where the burlesque show is being performed) and Union Station (where the gladiator fight was held) were both renovated in the 80's and are both really nice places to visit.
5:35 Solid Snake is absolutely based on Snake Plissken. In MGS2, he even introduces himself as 'Iroquois Plissken'.
For the green lines in the computer simulation, it was what computers used at the time, so they used it for the movies (not the other way around.) Old tank, helicopter and mecha games were first person view that just had green lines on the black screen to silhouette everything.
The cab driver was Ernest Borgnine, super famous actor. Also Harry (Brain) was Harry Dean Stanton, who has been in a ton of things.
Yes, Chock Full o' Nuts is a real coffee brand that had luuncheonettes in various cities. Not sure how many are left these days. But you can still buy the coffee.
Guy in the ring was Ox Baker, a real 70's wrestler. he died 1n 2014 aged 80
John Carpenter lived westerns. In the John Wayne movie "Big Jake", people keep telling him "I thought you were dead".
just so we have a complete list
Jamie Lee Curtis (narration): main character in Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween H20, Halloween Resurrection, Halloween (2018), Halloween Kills, Halloween Ends
Donald Pleasence (President): main character in Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween 4, Halloween 5, Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers
Tom Atkins (Rehm): main character in Halloween III
Snake's gun is a MAC-10, probably a 9mm version with 32-round mags. Not infinite ammo, but he had a couple of extras.
It's a .45. With a silencer and a ridiculous and pointless scope.😂 The MAC 10 was a staple of 80s action movies. In real life it was a pretty niche weapon. High cyclic rate ( with practice you could get three quick bursts and you're empty), lousy ergonomics, and accuracy that earned it the nickname of the "phone boorh gun". It's main practical use was to "take out a room full of surprised Colonels". The Gun That Made The 80s Roar
Chock Full O' Nuts was a nut shop thst so!d shelled nuts, but when the Great Depression hit it started serving coffee and sandwiches (cream cheese and chopped nuts on raisin bread). They still sell the coffee brand today, especially in America. In fact, I'd argue it's one of the better home coffee brands when it comes to flavor.
Solid Snake literally gives himself the codename Plissken in metal gear sold 2
Kurt Russel wasn't the only bad ass cast in this film. Lee Van Cleef ( who actually played in a number of Clint Eastwood movies) and Adrienne Barbeau (THE 80s scream queen) also fit the bill.
the inspiration for Snake and Ocelot in the same movie.
Lee Van Cleef is also the inspiration for a certain bounty hunter in Star Wars
Lee Van Cleef played an aging ninja master in the 1984 series "The Master" during the ninja craze in the US then.
Very true.
Chock Full O Nuts was "the heavenly coffee, a better coffee a millionaire's money can't buy"
Another great often overlooked Kurt Russell film: Breakdown 👌😁
Absolutely! He is great as an everyday guy forced into a desperate situation when trying to find his kidnapped wife. great movie!
I still think one of Kurt Russell's most underrated films with him in an action role is SOLDIER. Really good premise .
The head on the Statue of Liberty on the poster is just something the advertising company made up. It's not in the film. However, it inspired the Statue of Liberty's head which did appear in the movie Cloverfield!
The actor who plays the part of " BRAIN " , was also in : ALIEN - Red Dawn - Pretty In Pink. And other movies. And Brains Squeeze Maggy was in a Stephen King film : CREEPSHOW
lets not forget cannonball run and the fog as notable appearances too
She was in Swamp Thing, The Fog(1980), cannon ball run, the TV series Maude, many things
@@bluebird3281 yeah, i jwasnt gonna list everything just a couple
8:40 - BUM WITH POTUS'S BRACELET - Portrayed by George Buck Flower [RIP June 2004 at 66]. Often played a homeless street bum because of his gruff appearance. Director John Carpenter gave Flower a cameo role in several films he made throughout the 1980s including 'The Fog', (1980) 'Starman' (1984), and 'They Live' (1988). Flower also portrayed 'Red', the bum awoken from sleeping on the public bench in 'Back To The Future' (1985).
Directors Humor: The "Peter Pan" character named Romero.
The man who gave snake the injection - Cronenberg.😅
The Peter pan guy : Michel bein aka Kyle Reece
@@bobbombar6711 checked IMDb, the (as I call him)"Klaus Kinski lookalike" is one Frank Doubleday. Biehn was not in this movie. Strangely enough, for a long time I thought the "Chock Full O'Nuts" girl was Linda Hamilton/Sarah Connor. Maybe SciFi writers are right, logging on internet moves us across neighboring universes, causing Mandela Effect,🤨😉.
1971 The Andromeda Strain. Hand drawn 2D drawings. Simulating a 3d animated wire frame of the Wildfire complex. Showing floors and central core.
The matte paitings in this movie were done by none other than James Cameron, in one of his earliest jobs on film.
The tops of both of the Twin Towers were covered in all kinds of things including a giant antenna, piping, equipment and an observation area. It was not flat at all and would be impossible to land on.
Adrienne Barbeau who played Maggie was married to John Carpenter and was in several of his movies. She was also the voice for the chess computer in The Thing.
And the president was the doctor in : Halloween 🎃. And do you notice the actor from : The Good , The Bad & The Ugly
A lot of the streets were filmed in st. Louis' warehouse district where they had massive fires a few years before. The ring combatant was portrayed by wrestler Ox Baker who was in reality a very nice man
Isaac Hayes (The Duke) was huge as American singer, songwriter, composer in his time.
And voiced Chef in South Park. Thought for sure George would have picked up on that.
My all-time favorite Kurt Russell film. Saw it several times on the big screen. Like a rollercoaster ride where you are paranoid throughout. I was gripping the arm rest tightly, on the edge of my seat. I did not relax until after the end credits. The tension and fear was so well done, my brain shut down and forgot that I’ve seen the movie many times before. I jumped each time that guy ran across the doorway behind him! I yelled F@$k! every time he dropped his radio! The legendary Ernest Borgnine as Cabbie. The leader of a bunch of misfits in the comedy series McHale’s Navy. He played memorable heavies in earlier films. In Demetrius and the Gladiators, Borgnine was terrifying as the Gladiator overseer. Hey George, he was probably a role model for ‘Gladiator 2’.
The entire concept of MGS is basically "what if snake pliskin had james bond's job. plus mechs. and nanomachines"
Escape from New York was filmed not too far from me in St. Louis. They probably had to clean he streets up some before they could film.
I was 17 when this came out. The perfect age for it! The Summer of 1981 gave me the 2 Coolest movie heroes of all time! Snake Plissken & Indiana Jones. In fact the night I saw Escape From New York I also went to see Raiders for my 3rd time in a 70MM print on a screen that wrapped around you. You had to turn your head from side to side to see the whole movie. This was in Canada. For the rest of the 80s & 90s Kurt Russell & Harrison Ford would make all my of favorite movies of all time. Mel Gibson was my 3rd for making my favorite movies of all time from the 80s & 90s.
The President stopped Snakes ascension up the wall so the Duke would stand still to take a shot at Snake, making him a sitting duck for the President on the mounted gun.
Old computer had green and black screen without any other color. That's why the map look like this.
ua-cam.com/video/FAwbJtU_pm8/v-deo.html
John Carpenter's influence on modern media cannot be understated. From _Halloween_ to _Escape from New York_ to _The Thing_ - the dude has created some of the coolest movies ever. Absolutely loved growing up with his stuff. Heck, _Prince of Darkness_ nearly inspired to go into studying quantum physics.
Although some people complain about the sequel to this, I think it's just so gonzo that it works... and is the perfect middle finger to Hollywood XD
Great fun as always S & G.... With this film Kurt was no longer a Disney kid as he did many Disney fun films in the 70s...
Kurt Russell was a Disney studios child actor/teen actor. This was his first job as an action hero and completely changed the course of his career.
The “I thought you were dead,” line may come from the John Wayne movie ‘Big Jake.’ All through that movie people are saying to Big Jake/John Wayne: “I thought you were dead.”
The Score, the Worldbuilding and BadAss Kurt Russell ... absolut Classic
An absolute frickin classic :)
"Mister, I wanted a vanilla twist." Assault on Precinct 13 is also straight forward and AWESOME. I believe the Peter Pan boy was also one of the head gang leaders.
25:05 - PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES - Portrayed by veteran English film actor, Donald Pleasence [RIP Feb 1995 @ 75] Roles spanning his 50-yr career include The Forger, The Great Escape (1963), Ernst Stavro Blofeld, You Only Live Twice (1967), Baron Danglars, The Count of Monte Cristo (1975), Dr. Loomis, five Halloween movies (1978-89). Austin Powers’ Dr. Evil is a parody of his performance as Blofeld.
Kurt playing Snake as Clint. Based on the fact that the police commisioner on Liberty Island station is Lee Van Cleef. Who starred with Clint Eastwood in his westerns such as The ood The Bad and The Ugly. It was fun.
The Duke is Soul Music legend Issac Hayes, who at this time was best known for the Theme From Shaft, but would go on to be the voice of Chef on South Park.
Maggie is played by Adrienne Barbeau, who was married to John Carpenter at the time & is also known for his movie The Fog, as well as Wes Craven's Swamp Thing & George Romero's Creepshow, amongst other things.
You probably recognize Donald Pleasence (The President) as Dr Lomis from Halloween. It always struck me as odd that Carpenter cast a Brit as the US President.
Hauk, the head of the police is veteran character actor Lee Van Cleef who is best know as the heavy in many classic westerns, most notably Sergio Leone's The Good The Bad & The Ugly & For a Few Dollars More.
Some other great Dystopian movies to check out are Planet of the Apes (1968), Soylent Green (1973) & Rollerball (1975) .
My favourite (non Solid Snake) fact about this film: At 6:18 that's not a computer generated model, they didn't have the tech for that at the SF studio at the time: it's an actual physical model with lines drawn on and a black-light. I think that’s so neat!
EDIT: glad that got into the trivia at the end of the video. Great vid, 10/10
This is one of my favorite movies. I love the world they build, the atmosphere, the music, and Kurt Russel's Clint Eastwood impression.
The woman Snake meets up with when the people were coming up from the sewers was Kurt Russel’s wife at the time.
Yep, and their son Whip is one of the commandos in “Executive Decision.”
Kurt's son with Season Hubley is named Boston and was not in Executive Decision
@@laurelg9586 How do you know that and not know that Whip was her brother, not her son, and that he did have a role in ED?
Miss ADRIENNE BARBEAU (who plays the "Maggie" character, here) was a well-recognized actress in the 1970s (she did a lot of episodic TV and had a primary role in the TV series "Maude" (a spin-off from the legendary: All In The Family, written/co-created by: Norman Lear. Among MANY other things, All In The Family established the first notoriety got: Rob Reiner (son of legendary comedian: Carl Reiner), as an actor, before he took up directing film. [This Is: Spinal Tap; Stand By Me -to name just two of his works!)).
Barbeau was, also, something of a sex symbol of the '70s.
She, later, starred in the (weak and sloppy) first, attempted, film adaptation of: Swamp Thing.
...But she, also, "redeemed herself" (actually: her performance in Swamp Thing may be one of the FEW acceptable things ABOUT it!🤷) to Comic Book fans/"nerd universe" because she voiced: CATWOMAN [Selina Kyle] in: the MOST PERFECT rendition of 'The Bat,' ever: Paul Dini and Bruce Timm's MASTERWORK:
BATMAN: The Animated Series (in the early '90s!)! 🤘🤘🔥🔥🔥🔥
...As with the other "voice legends" who populate Dini & Timm's BATMAN series and make these legendary characters LIVE!: Kevin Conroy [as: Batman.Bruce Wayne]. Mark Hamill [as" The Joker], Arleen Sorkin [as: Harley Quinn (Dini and Timm, in fact, INVENTED/CREATED the "Harley Quinn"character! and she FIRST (and AT first: ONLY!) appeared in: BATMAN: T.A.S.!)];
along with them: Barbeau's Catwoman/Selina Kyle is THE DEFINITIVE version of the character and the HIGHEST echelon of performance and perfection AT said!
Forever! [So: Lay some respect on this woman! 🔥] (And ALL of the aformentioned talents!).
Adrienne Barbeau and John Carpenter were, actually, married ("half secretly" you might say. They weren't, literally, "keeping it a secret," but: they stayed out of "Hollywood circles" and "the spotlight," lived outside the confines of "that world.") at the time of this film.
Carpenter was the first to cast her in film roles.
Her character's partner, the "Brain" character is portrayed by TRULY LEGENDARY character actor: HARRY DEAN STANTON!
Stanton is unknown to the vast movie viewing public, by name (most of such people, anyway!) ...outside of. say. the populace of: Coen Brother fans and Avoid Lynch fans (for example!)🤷. ....
However: YOU MIGHT recognize him from his cameo in: The Avengers (Yes: the first movie!). He has a small cameo in the scene where Hulk crashes to earth and transforms back to Bruce Banner (after Loki releases his "detention cell" from the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier (and it crashes to Earth)). Yes: THAT is Harry (THE) Dean Stanton!
He is, also, recognized from his role in: Alien (the original movie). Oddly, he appears to have gotten that role by annoucnicng to Ridley, when he first showed-up to read for it, that: He hates Science Fiction and monster movies! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣- Which makes THAT: legendary, as well! 😛😛😂😂 🤘🤘
...You may ALSO recognize the actor who plays: the lost President in Escape From New York. The actor is Donald Pleasance, celebrated stage and screen presence.
YOU might recall him from his role as "the asylum doctor" (sorry: I don't know thee, actual, scripted character name 🤷), in Carpenter's: Halloween.
As far as I'm aware, that is where Pleasance and Carpenter developed a relationship and Pleasance worked with Carpenter quite a bit, from that point on.
Another thing which demonstrates your two's SCANT experience with films, in the sense of: "time"/"expanse" is that you do not recognize famed actor:
Ernest Borgnine, as "the taxi driver!"
Borgnine has had tons and tons of parts and played leads, as well (both in films and on television!).
...Movies such as: From Here To Eternity, The Dirty Dozen, Marty (I believe, Borgnine's first starring role), Bad Day At Black Rock [starring the legendary: Spencer Tracy!),... he's in those (and many more!)
....Borgnine is an undeniable presence.
...also: The 🤷🤷🤷"warden"???..."Commandant of the Prison"🤷, who sends Snake Plissken (yes: THAT is the correct spelling of that character's name!) into N.Y., to perform the rescue: "Hauk"
is played by another legendary screen actor and overall figure:
Lee Van Cleef.
...Essentially, inarguably, best recognized for his role in the CLASSIC:
The Good, The Bad & The Ugly as: "Angel Eyes"/The Bad!
Van Cleef has a load of roles (I would be hard-pressed to decide, off-the-top-of-my-head, whether Stanton or Van Cleef would have more roles to their name!!)
and he has primarily concentrated on: westerns and crime fiction movies.
Lee Van Cleef has played great villains as well as some leading man types. [see, for instance: Death Rides A Horse, or: Sabata or Sabata Returns, if you are already famukar with him in the Sergio Leone movies (he appears in 2 of Eastwood's "triolgy" ...but plays a different character in each.).].
Van Cleef's best role, outside of: The Good, The Bad And The Ugly; may, well, be: the role he plays in: BARQUERO. Definitely worth seeing!
-Oh! (one more!): "The Duke" is played, NOT by a legnedary actor, but: a Legendary MUSICIAN! (sadly, later, swallowed by the cult of "sc*en*ology"🙄🙄🤦 🤦🤦-creepier than ANYTHING in: Escape From New York, by FAR!🤬🤬)!!
Isaac Hays!:
Likely if you know his name it's from one of the following 2 things (or both! 🤷): His composition & performance of the soundtrack and (particularly) the THEME for the film: Shaft! [in 1971]; OR from voicing the "Chef" character, on "South Park."
Hays was one of the house song-writers for the, TRULY and ABSOLUTELY (and FRAGRANTLY DESERVEDLY!!!!!) LEGENDARY: STAX Records! [based in: Memphis,TN].
He and his, then song-writing partner: David Porter composed loads of the Soul and R&B classics which came out of STAX. "Hold On, I'm Comin;" "Soul Man" (just to name a few! - Both of THOSE, originally, recorded by the duo: Sam & Dave._
Hays also had a multi-decade solo career and was a multi-istrumentalist, composer and arranger.
Besides "Shaft" he has stuff like:"Hyperbolicsyllabicsesquedalymistic" 🤘🤘
Both the albums: Hot Buttered Soul and Black Moses are AS essential to own as: Shaft! [the film soundtrack]. Absolutely.
...
Hays was an imposing presence in many ways. ...but I would argue: PRIMARILY: MUSICALLY! 🤘🤘🔥
John Carpenter has a real style of just getting the story to your eyes and ears.. I would recommend THE FOG, THEY LIVE and PRINCE OF DARKNESS as great additions to the John Carpenter box!
@George
The first use of green vector graphics i can think of is 2001: a Space Odyssey.
During the space station docking scene you can see one of the cockpit monitors using these.
The scene then zooms in on that screen.
That was in 1968.
16:14 This matte painting (the buildings in the background) was painted by James Cameron on glass and fixed to the shot. Very cool.
What a great movie! The 80s were such a strange time for movies. To those of us who were born before the 1970s, Kurt Russel was a Disney child star. Seeing him make his escape through action films was hilarious!
Some great, great performers in this one. Issac Hayes ('The Duke') was the composer of the theme song for "Shaft" (1971). Yeah, he was the voice of 'Chef' in Southpark. There's a hilarious scene in "I'm Gonna Git You Sucka" (1988) where he's singing (a different song) in the car, and one of the Wayans Bros' characters says, "..I can't stand your f'ing singing." IGGYS is to the "Blacksploitaion" genre what "Mars Attacks" is to Sci-Fi, and "Big Trouble in Little China" is to those of us who love Hong Kong kung fu film. Harry Dean Stanton ('Brain') is a 'counter-culture' legend. Was part of Clint Eastwood's posse in "Kelley's Heroes", and had a major role as 'Bud' in "Repo Man". And 'Hauk' was played by Lee Van Cleef. The 'bad guy' from Eastwood's 'spaghetti westerns'.
“Kurt Russell is just so natural as an action hero.” The studios didn’t think so because he was a squeaky clean Disney movie star before this.
Of course Solid Snake is inspires by Snake Plinskin. In MS2 Snake takes the name of Iroquis Plinsken.
Pro wrestler Ox Baker was Snake's opponent in the ring fight. Baker was actually very intelligent and personable outside the ring.
This was filmed in the St. Louis area. Union Station, the area they used for the arena was renovated shortly after this was filmed.
For the street locations they simply went across the river to east St. Louis. It was so run down they had to do very little set dressing.
For the graphics of the city, John Carpenter said that CG model of the city effect was so easy to do, you could literally recreate it in your living room.
To answer your question about what happened in New York, the novelization gives the best explanation: the city had been hit by a gas attack, which lead to the city being evacuated and quite a few deaths. Since it was impossible to recolonize the island, they walled it off and used it as the prison.
The exteriors of New York City seen in this film actually wasn't New York. It was filmed in St. Louis, as the area was worn down in the way that Carpenter wanted. The Liberty City Island was filmed in Los Angeles at an abandoned dam (which has been used in several TV and movie productions over the years, including the closing credits of Buckaroo Banzai), with the only part film in New York was the shot of the Statue of Liberty and a hidden cut used to make it look like one long tracking shot.
Beside being a legendary movie there are so many iconic actors in this movie it's worth pointing out: Kurt Russell - one of the most underrated actors ever. Ernest Borgnine (Cabbie) won the Best Actor Oscar for Marty 1955 - Lee Van Cleef (Hauk) is Angel Eyes or "The Bad" In The Good The Bad and They Ugly - Harry Dean Stanton (Brain) is one of the best character actors ever with credits like Repo Man and Alien - Isaac Hayes is probably best known for the theme song from the movie Shaft - Donald Pleasance has been in so many movies since the '50s - Adrienne Barbeau is, well, Adrienne Barbeau - and most of them probably all joined onto this movie thinking their careers were on the downside, and 'hey it's a job', not realizing it would become a classic.