Summary

  • Escape From Earth was planned as the third Snake Plissken movie, but it never happened due to the lukewarm reception and financial disappointment of Escape From L.A.
  • John Carpenter envisioned Escape From Earth as a space adventure with Snake Plissken in a space capsule, promising lots of special effects.
  • Kurt Russell's love for the character of Snake Plissken wasn't enough to save plans for Escape From Earth, as the announcement of a remake of Escape From New York essentially killed any hope for its realization.

Escape From Earth was John Carpenter's planned third Snake Plissken movie starring Kurt Russell but it was doomed before it even started. Snake made his debut in the cult 1981 sci-fi Escape From New York which served as Russell's breakthrough as an action star. It saw his outlaw character forced to infiltrate New York — which had been turned into a prison in the movie's bleak future — to rescue the kidnapped President. Russell's love for the character and the movie's delayed popularity led to a belated sequel, Escape From L.A. The duo also planned a third entry, Escape From Earth.

The ending of John Carpenter's movie Escape From L.A. saw Plissken use a satellite weapon to wipe out the planet's technology. This set the stage for the third adventure, with Carpenter telling Fandom: "Escape from Earth was kind of Snake Plissken in a space capsule, flying interstellar. So there’d be a lot of special effects in it." Escape From L.A. has earned a cult following since 1996 but received lukewarm reviews. It also only grossed around half of its $50 million budget back (via Box Office Mojo), killing plans for Escape From Earth instantly.

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Was John Carpenter's Ghosts Of Mars Supposed To Be A Snake Movie?

A Proper Escape From New York Remake Is In The Works

Custom image of Snake Plissken in Escape from New York and Ghosts of Mars

For many years, Carpenter's 2001 sci-fi horror Ghosts Of Mars was reported by various outlets to be a repurposed version of Escape From Earth, with Ice Cube's "Desolation" Williams replacing Kurt Russell's Snake Plissken. Ghosts Of Mars' story sees a Mars police officer forced to defend a jail from miners possessed by the bloodthirsty spirits of Martian warriors; she turns to Cube's infamous convict for help.

This rumor was so widespread it was commonly reported as fact, despite neither Carpenter nor anybody involved with the film confirming it. While the similarities between Desolation and Snake are plain to see, Carpenter later confirmed Ghosts Of Mars was never Escape From Earth, stating “No, but that’s a good story. I like that.”

A remake of Escape From New York has been in development hell for nearly 20 years but appears to finally be moving ahead with Scream 5 helmers Tyler Gillett and Matt Bettinelli-Olpin. Whatever dim hope remained that Escape From Earth could still happen with John Carpenter and Kurt Russell returning has essentially been killed with the remake's announcement, though Carpenter is attached to the latter as executive producer.

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Will Kurt Russell Appear In Escape From New York's Remake?

Would Russell Be Interested In Returning If Not Playing Snake?

Russell has stated in various interviews - such as this IGN chat - he feels too old to play Snake again, and always envisioned the outlaw as a younger man. While no casting has been confirmed for Escape From New York's reboot, it's doubtful Russell will reprise Snake. That said, there are plenty of other roles he could inhabit.

In the original, Western star Lee Van Cleef played New York's Police Commissioner Hauk, who forced Snake to take the rescue mission. Having Clint Eastwood's former nemesis play such a role loaned Van Cleef's role a meta subtext, and having Russell play a similar character in the remake could do the same.

Russell is also the right age to play a new take on Escape From New York's President - assuming the remake follows the same basic premise. Given how much Snake Plissken means to Russell, he would probably opt out of any kind of appearance. Escape From Earth sounds like it had the potential to be a fitting trilogy capper. However, alongside his Creature From The Black Lagoon remake or helming Shane Black's screenplay for Shadow Company, it's destined to be another unmade Carpenter movie that could have been great.

Escape From New York
R

John Carpenter takes on the role of writer, composer, and director in Escape from New York, a post-apocalyptic sci-fi film where a large portion of New York City is converted into the biggest prison in the world, with all criminals in the United States sentenced there. When the President is kidnapped and taken abruptly into the heart of the prison, the government will turn to former soldier turned convict Snake Plissken to rescue him within twenty-four hours in exchange for a full pardon of his crimes.

Release Date
July 10, 1981
Director
John Carpenter
Cast
Isaac Hayes , Donald Pleasance , Kurt Russell , Lee Van Cleef , Harry Dean Stanton , Adrienne Barbeau
Runtime
99 minutes
Writers
Nick Castle , John Carpenter
Budget
$6 million
Studio(s)
Embassy Pictures
Sequel(s)
Escape from LA