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The 13 Most Captivating Prison Movies We've Ever Seen

The 13 Most Captivating Prison Movies We've Ever Seen

Yahoo2 days ago
These prison movies are captivating. Get it?
Some of the best movies are actually movies about life on the outside, where the prison represents the mental traps imposed on us by society, or our own fears.
Other prison movies are about very real prisons, built for the deserving and innocent alike.
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Here are 13 you'll find hard to escape.
An early entry in the subgenre of women behind bars prison movies, John Cromwell's Caged is about a married 19-year-old (Eleanor Parker) who is locked up after a botched bank robbery in which her husband is killed.
Hope Emerson plays sadistic prison maven, Evelyn Harper, in a story that reveals that prison may be the most corrupting influence of all.
The film was nominated for three Oscars.
Is it a prison movie? Or a war movie? We would say it's both — David Lean's The Bridge on the River Kwai is a movie that never does what you expect.
Set in a Japanese prison camp in Thailand, the film portrays a battle of wills between captured British P.O.W. Colonel Nicholson (Alec Guiness) and his captor, Colonel Saito (Sessue Hayakawa). Saito demands that Nicholson and his troops build a railroad bridge over the River Kwai, which leads to questions of ethics and honor, and how to maintain your humanity while in captivity.
It was the most successful movie at the box office in 1957, and deservedly won seven Oscars, including for Best Picture. It's one of those 1950s movies that is both a classic and a joy to watch.
One of the greatest prison movies, this Clint Eastwood film was the star's fifth and final collaboration with Dirty Harry director Don Siegel. In fascinating detail, it imagines the circumstances of a real-life escape from the supposedly escape-proof Alcatraz Island in 1962.
Eastwood plays the real-life prisoner Frank Morris, whose whereabouts have been unknown since that chilly night in the early '60s. He'll turn 98 this year, if he's still around.
The FBI's investigation into the escape remains open.
You knew this was coming, so we're putting it in this gallery nice and early.
One of the most beloved films of recent decades, and pulled from the same Stephen King story collection, Different Seasons, that also spawned Stand by Me and Apt Pupil, The Shawshank Redemption is a story of refusing to surrender your soul.
Tim Robbins stars as Andy Dufresne, a banker sentenced to consecutive life sentences in the killings of his wife and her lover. He befriends Ellis "Red" Redding (Morgan Freeman) — and hatches a plot to dig his way out, while hiding the hole in his cell wall behind a poster of Rita Hayworth.
It's one of the best prison movies and one of the best movies, period — IMDb ranks it No. 1 on its list of the Top 250 Movies of all.
Paul Newman is transfixing as the title character, a man of few words (and hardboiled egg gourmand) who refuses to bend to the cruelty of his Florida prison camp.
Strother Martin, as the captain of the camp, earned a place on the American Film Institute's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes for this monologue that begins, "What we've got here is failure to communicate."
Guns N Roses fans will also recognize it from the opening of the band's "Civil War."
The third film in a series of hit independent prison movies written and directed by Jamaa Fanaka, Penitentiary III is extremely worth watching for the Midnight Thud fight alone.
Oh, you don't know about the Midnight Thud? Thud is the toughest fighter in the prison, a powerful little person (played by Raymond Kessler, aka the WWE's Haiti Kid) who delivers one of the most captivating fight scenes ever committed to film when he faces off with our protagonist, Too Sweet (Leon Isaac Kennedy).
Also, this is the first of two films on this list to feature the great Danny Trejo. He plays See Veer.
Trejo is one of the murderer's row of stars who turns up in Con Air, a prison-on-a-plane movie in which Cameron Poe (played by Nicolas Cage, looking incredibly cool) takes on a whole plane full of felons when its Cyrus "The Virus" Grissom masterminds a hijacking.
This is one of those movies that — if you haven't watched it in a while — will have constantly saying, "He's in this, too?"
The cast includes John Cusack, Steve Buscemi, Ving Rhames, Dave Chappelle, and many, many more.
Some people argue that this doesn't belong on a list of prison movies because the characters are on a plane. But as anyone who's ever flown a middle seat in basic economy can attest, planes can be prisons.
Steve McQueen leads an all-star cast playing POWs who heroically escape from a Nazi prison camp in this classic, heavily fictionalized story of British POWs' escape from Stalag Luft III during World War II.
Among the concessions to commercialism: sprinkling three Americans into the action. Thanks goodness McQueen's Captain Virgil Hilts was there, or else who could have pulled off that spectacular motorcycle sequence (above)?
And now, a prison movie from the other Steve McQueen — the masterful British director whose film 12 Years a Slave won the Best Picture Oscar in 2014.
His directorial debut, however, was Hunger, in which his frequent collaborator, Michael Fassbender, plays Bobby Sands, a real-life member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army who led an IRA hunger strike and took part in a no-wash protest behind bars.
Hunger is a brutal, hypnotic film that skillfully captures the day-to-day dehumanization of the prisoners.
Another grim prison saga that was also the directorial debut of a great filmmaker, Clemency stars Alfre Woodard as a prison ward trying to unemotionally do her job — which includes overseeing the death of a young inmate, Anthony Woods (Aldis Hodge) who maintains his innocence.
Many death-penalty films lecture their audiences (who may have already opposed the death penalty), but Clemency writer-director Chinonye Chukwu does not: She just lays out the facts of the situation, with as much restraint as Woodard's warden — until emotions eventually make their inevitable break.
This is a wise, patient film that sidesteps preaching and Hollywood hokum in favor of a very chilling, very human story.
On the lighter side, The Longest Yard is a sports movie crossed with a prison movie... and a comedy. The film stars Burt Reynolds as a hard-driving, hard-hitting now-incarcerated former NFL quarterback who is tasked by a nasty warden with assembling a team of prisoners to play against the guards.
How do you think that works out?
Edward Norton stars as a savage white supremacist, Derek Vinyard, who realizes in prison that all of his beliefs are misguided.
'In one deeply allegorical scene, he learns that a Black fellow inmate, Lamont (Guy Torry) received a harsher sentence (six years) for stealing a TV than he received for killing two Black men (three years).
In another crucial scene, he learns that the prisons Aryan Brotherhood is just using white supremacy as a facade to manipulate hopeless, uneducated people and wrest power for its leaders.
A very different look at prison life, released in the same year as The Longest Yard. We aren't going to claim this low-budget Roger Corman production, also known as Renegade Girls, is a great film. But it is the debut of a very great filmmaker: writer-director Jonathan Demme would go on to make Silence of the Lambs, one of the best films of all time, and to repay Corman for his confidence by casting him in the role of FBI Director Hayden Burke.
Silence of the Lambs was also shot but Demme's go-to cinematographer, Tak Fujimoto, who also shot Caged Heat.
Caged Heat is a cheap exploitation flick, sure, but it contains some Demme hallmarks: strong female protagonists, a strong sense of empathy for the characters, and social consciousness.
A 1975 New York Times story on the rise of "trashy" midnight movies concluded that it "does not set new standards of cheapness, violence or grossness, as most midnight movies seem determined to do. It is a film about women in prison that offers little more than some zippy music, a lot of bosom shots and a perverted prison doctor."
High praise from the paper of record.
Maybe the best example of the women-in-prison subgenre, The Big Bird Cage is a follow-up, but not a sequel, to 1971's The Big Doll House. It's most notable for a cast that includes the great Pam Grier, as well as horror icon Sid Haig as a radical named Django. Both Grier and Haig also starred in The Big Doll House, though they played different characters.
Shot in the U.S. and the Philippines, The Big Bird Cage documents the liberation of a prison camp where women are kept barefoot and scantily clad as they're subjected to hard labor.
Even without ever hearing him talk about it, we're confident Quentin Tarantino has some big opinions on this one. Like Caged Heat, it came from the wonderful Roger Corman's New World Pictures, because of course it did.
You may also like this list of the 15 Movie Con Artists We Fall for Every Time. Some of them end up in prison.
You might also like this list of Gen X Movie Stars Gone Too Soon.
Main image: A promotional image from The Big Bird Cage. New World Pictures.
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Gen Z men are still obsessed with Pokémon cards—using ‘boy math' to argue that they'll beat Nvidia stock and the S&P 500. But there's a catch
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Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Gen Z men are still obsessed with Pokémon cards—using ‘boy math' to argue that they'll beat Nvidia stock and the S&P 500. But there's a catch

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Saturday Morning Webtoons: THE LONE NECROMANCER and THE PRIMAL HUNTER
Saturday Morning Webtoons: THE LONE NECROMANCER and THE PRIMAL HUNTER

Geek Girl Authority

time3 hours ago

  • Geek Girl Authority

Saturday Morning Webtoons: THE LONE NECROMANCER and THE PRIMAL HUNTER

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Forbes

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  • Forbes

‘Front Mission 3: Remake' Switch Review: Wanzers On A Budget

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