Escape from LA

Escape from LA

In the early 21st century, an American presidential candidate wins a highly unorthodox election by leveraging a national disaster. As the front man for an extreme moralizing movement, he oversees the implementation of sweeping neo-puritanical directives to enforce his sect’s moral vision nationwide. Federal law enforcement is tasked with prosecuting Americans whose speech and actions were tolerated before the election. Citizens guilty of no crime are stripped of their rights and assets without due process and are exiled from society for retroactive violations of the new moral precepts. The government uses an engineered virus purported to be lethal, but which turns out to be a slightly enhanced version of the flu, to coerce citizens.

Meanwhile, mass immigration has overrun American cities, especially Los Angeles, with a plague of poverty and crime. Despite the construction of a wall on part of the southern border, a full-scale third world invasion of America looms.

LA Tent City

But enough current events.

Let’s talk about John Carpenter’s 1996 Escape from New York sequel/remake/parody, Escape from LA.

LA Tent City 2

For an Escape from LA plot synopsis, reread the beginning of this post. Then add a find-the-MacGuffin plot crossed with a prison break caper and plentiful Western influences. Or just watch Escape from New York, because both plots are almost exactly the same.

Now best known as a notorious whipping boy of Pop Cult hipsters who deride its lack of originality and bad CG, Escape from LA may deserve a reevaluation. Counterculture dissidents in particular may find a few pearls of wisdom in the trash heap.

Be it known that the rest of this post will include spoilers. This movie is 25 years old. You probably already know the plot anyway, whether or not you’ve seen it.

When the daughter of America’s autocratic president absconds with a weapon capable of EMPing any location on Earth back to the stone age, the feds bring in outlaw “Snake” Plissken. The government compels Snake’s cooperation by infecting him with a virus they say will kill him in a matter of hours. Only if he infiltrates the penal colony of Los Angeles–rendered an island by a 9.6 magnitude earthquake, retrieves the weapon, and executes the president’s seditious daughter, will they give him the cure.

The movie’s setup, as shown in the opening infodump, goes pretty much as you’d expect from a pre-Ground Zero flick written by libertine Boomers and produced in Hollywood. The president who forces Snake into service is a spittle-flecked Christian fundamentalist. Installed as dictator for life, he turns the US into a fascist theocracy where strict morality is enforced by law. No more free love, street drugs, or rock ‘n’ roll. Bummer, man.

When the movie started on that footing, I expected the rest of it to be a running commentary on how intolerant and square those uptight Christians were. You know–the Moral Majority types who’d already faded to irrelevance when Escape from LA came out in 1996. It’s mind-boggling now, but that was near the end of Bill Clinton’s first term. He and his wife had already remade Washington in their image by then, cementing the real bifactional establishment that rules us now.

But still, better keep an eye on those Christians! If they get power back, they might make laws based on their morals, which means no more fun!

It’s the old lie you used to hear constantly from Pop Cultists, usually of the Boomer-to-Gen X variety. “You can’t legislate morality, man! Everybody’s gotta be free, bro! Like, who are you to tell me what’s right and wrong? Good and evil are, like subjective.”

And the Christians that these proto-coomers saw as the main opposition to getting their rocks off warned, “Unless you can objectively define the good, freedom has no meaning. When you live to indulge every appetite, you’re not free. You’re a slave to your vices. By removing the shared Christian understandings of right and wrong from public life, you’re stripping freedom of all its content and making it easier for real tyrants to oppress you. Your worship of freedom will end in the loss of your liberty.”

Now go online, turn on your TV, or better, look outside.

LA Tent City 3

It’s not a militant Christian theocracy restricting your right to assembly, compelling you to consume specific companies’ products, and destroying your livelihood if you disagree with them.

Granted, a lot of Christian organizations are going along with the first two tyrannies. But only to the extent that their members have adulterated ancient Christian doctrine with the same Modernist heresy that’s driving the current madness.

The Boomer libertines have been had. If a fascist dictatorship had seized power despite their warnings and instituted the same oppression, the coomers could at least have the comfort of saying, “We told you so.”

But no. It’s their guys who’ve turned America into a de facto one-party state. They supported candidates who voted for open borders. Now California really is the tyrannical hellhole portrayed in Carpenter’s 1996 movie. And it was his Hollywood Boomer buddies who made it that way.

And watching Escape from LA, you catch hints that Carpenter was smart enough to see which way the wind was blowing. He may deserve credit for having the self-awareness to realize he and his generation got conned.

  • The president’s moral directives include outlawing fornication, but also smoking, wearing fur, and eating red meat.
  • A self-identified Muslim character who waxes poetic about how LA is really a multicultural paradise of total freedom is shot to death immediately after delivering these lines.
  • The inmates of LA Island really are immoral criminal degenerates like the president says.
  • Among these moral criminals are a gang of skinheads, who are the first people in the movie Snake kills.
  • Main villain Cuervo Jones, a poor man’s Che Guevara, claims he wants to liberate the third world from US hegemony, but he’s really a thug with delusions of grandeur and no sense of loyalty.
  • Said villain seduces the president’s daughter to his cause through online gaming.
  • Everyone–even the inmates of LA-carries an iPod-like device (though optical-based) that ends up destroying civilization.
  • Transsexual character played for laughs. Is dispatched in a perfunctory manner.
  • When he gains control of the EMP weapon, Snake is warned that using it will erase the last 500 years of history–though not explicitly stated, this is the period since the Protestant Reformation. Snake chooses to EMP the world.

The verdict: Is Escape from LA secretly based? Provisionally, and perhaps unintentionally, yeah. Kind of.

Should you watch it? This movie might be worth throwing on in the background while you’re building a Gunpla or something, but you can watch the same plot unfold for free in the news.

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10 Comments

  1. Malchus

    Broke: You can’t legislate morality.
    Woke: You can and should legislate morality.
    Bespoke: You must necessarily legislate morality, as all laws are based in a moral code. The only question is on whose morality the legislation will be based.

    It does provide a small bit of catharsis that the chosen politicians and ideologies of the Boomer anarchists are instituting the very dictatorships that emerged from Alan Moore’s fever dreams. It’s a dollop of whipped cream on the cockroach sundae the WEF is forcing on us.

  2. D Cal

    President Adam was the name of the theocratic president in ESCAPE FROM LA. What few viewers caught when they first viewed the movie was that President Adam’s actions were not those of a man in control. As anyone with a Mensa-level IQ would have told you, Occam’s razor dictated that Adam’s unnamed opponent was still in control behind the scenes—and had Snake not sent mankind to the Dark Ages, Adam and his perfumed generals in the fundamentalist-converged armed forces would have been arrested for treason.

    https://assets.change.org/photos/3/up/qu/ypuPQUfsYAIGZwQ-800×450-noPad.jpg?1559094914

    • My suspicion upon watching the whole movie is that the Christian aspect of the American dictatorship was a sop to get the script past studio execs. The laundry list of no-nos reads the same as the blatantly secularist utopia from Demolition Man. Seems like Carpenter started with a similar concept and slapped a halfhearted Christian veneer on it.

      The neo Nazis Snake runs afoul of are another tell. If America is run by right-wing fascists, why are the skinheads in prison instead of on the national police force?

      • D Cal

        Did you mean to respond to Malchus? I appreciate your insights either way.

  3. Andrew Phillips

    I think there’s a bitter irony, which the progressives are too tone deaf to detect, that every dystopian Christian theocracy they imagine actually functions like a rebranded Mahometan diabolocracy, and that their imaginary fascist dystopias that are all eerily reminiscent of actual communism. The other thing I notice about all of them is that the Church somehow doesn’t exist in any way, shape, or form, unless the Church or churchmen are cast as the villain. I think that alone marks any and all of them as bogus.

    • Now here we are, and the Taliban looks more normal and relatable than our current ruling class.

      • Andrew Phillips

        That’s ironically comforting, given their new “Texas == Taliban” talking point. As a
        prolife Texan, that scurrilous nonsense annoys me. On the other hand, we can predict what the Taliban will do. They are profoundly evil, but they are at least consistent. They persecute the Church, but at least they don’t feign orthodoxy while they do it.

  4. Knowing Carpenter, I suspect you give him too much credit. “Halloween” was all about, according to Carpenter himself, the dangers of repressed sexuality, and he has directed pro-abortion episodes of television shows. He is a typical Hollywood leftist who’s just better at his job than most of that ilk.

    I don’t think it was a sop to get past the sensors. I think Carpenter was simply too blind to see the obvious contradictions.

    • John Carpenter is politically a basic boomer liberal. He doesn’t offer anything interesting in that respect. That is why They Live had messages about getting married and having kids be propaganda from Them, even though there is no propaganda stating to do that in modern culture. In fact, it is very much the opposite.

      Then there is the complete nonsense that is Prince of Darkness which might be the worst narrative he’s written next to Ghosts of Mars. The theology is so rote boomer it is incredible. How people like this piece of crap, yet dog his ’90s work, is beyond me. A few cool effects and scenes do not make up for how stupid it all is and how the idiot ball is so blatantly obvious at all times.

      On the other hand, when his stories focus on the weird or classical western motifs, he shines the best. He doesn’t try to subvert those, and that is his strength. It is only a shame he stopped doing that after Vampires.

      If Escape from LA has those themes, he probably meant them to be in his typical boomer filter, but because it was the ’90s he obviously had to update them. The obvious answer to why the above is in the movie is simply that he didn’t think about the implications of what he was writing, just as he didn’t when he wrote Prince of Darkness. He just thought it was edgy.

      • Exactly. Carpenter wasn’t being prescient. He was trying to be edgy and didn’t put a lot of thought into how little sense it made.

        This is not to say that Carpenter is worthless. “The Thing” is a truly amazing movie.

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