"You may have escaped from New York, but this is L.A., vato."
August 23, 2000. A massive earthquake separates Los Angeles from mainland
America. The hardcore Christian President turns the new island into a
prison where anybody who doesn't fit into his idea of a perfect Christian nation
(kweers, atheists, drug users,dogs and cats who live together, etc.) is exiled
permanently. Logistically, that doesn't even make sense, but whatever.
Fast-forward to 2013 and the President's hot daughter is brainwashed via virtual
reality by a revolutionary leader who lives on the Island of Los Angeles. He has
her steal a top secret super weapon called the "Sword of Damocles" and
deliver it to him. So now it's up to the government to sneak a dude onto the
island to locate the President's daughter and return the weapon. That's where
soon to be transported to Manhattan, I mean, Los Angeles prisoner and ex-special
forces soldier "Snake" Plissken comes in. Yep, that's right. It's the same
fucking story as the original film,
except this time instead of Manhattan
it's L.A.
Surfing, playing basketball, hang gliding, walking on a treadmill...this movie
is definitely weird. A good way to briefly describe ESCAPE FROM L.A. is
there's a short scene where Snake is walking near a road and a car drives by
with a dude hanging out of the window shooting a gun while blaring Sugar
Ray. Yes, Sugar Ray. Snake then turns around to walk off. The
sound of thunder is heard while a bright light flashes from behind a
nearby bush. (It's almost like that awesome non-gun drive by two years
later in
DISTURBING BEHAVIOR
with the non-threatening dudes and that Sesame Street music blaring.)
All things considered, ESCAPE FROM L.A. isn't much worse than the already
overrated ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK. Cheesier yes, but laughing at it actually adds
the much needed entertainment the original lacked. Based purely on
entertainment, EFLA is barely passable. The story is weak, the look of the
whole thing is garbage, the entire movie is a night, zero nudity, zero gore,
zero blood, the action scenes are forgettable, the dialogue is rubbish.
Honestly, the biggest entertainment comes from the surprising cast and simply
laughing at...everything. Especially the story and the special effects.
Part 1 - Escape from New York (1981)