Prison (1987 film)
Prison is a 1987 horror film directed by Renny Harlin and starring Viggo Mortensen, Tom Everett, Kane Hodder, Lane Smith, and Tommy Lister. It was filmed at the Old State Prison in Rawlins, Wyoming, with many residents on the cast and crew.
Prison | |
---|---|
Directed by | Renny Harlin |
Written by | Irwin Yablans C. Courtney Joyner |
Produced by | Charles Band Irwin Yablans |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Mac Ahlberg |
Edited by | Andy Horvitch |
Music by | Richard Band Christopher L. Stone |
Distributed by | Empire Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 102 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1–4 million[1][2] |
Box office | $354,704 (US)[2] |
Plot
In 1956, inmate Charlie Forsythe of Creedmore Prison was executed via electric chair for a murder he did not commit.
When Creedmore Prison is reopened after thirty years, Charlie Forsythe returns from the afterlife to exact revenge on Ethan Sharpe (Lane Smith) – the officer who stood by as Forsythe was executed.
Inmate Burke (Viggo Mortensen) and all other inmates soon realize that they will all be slaughtered unless Forsythe is allowed to repay his long-standing debt.
Cast
Prison staff
- Chelsea Field as Katherine Walker
- Lane Smith as Warden Ethan Sharpe
- Arlen Dean Snyder as Captain Carl Horton
- Hal Landon Jr. as Wallace
- Matt Kane as Johnson
Prisoners
- Viggo Mortensen as Burke
- Lincoln Kilpatrick as Cresus
- Tom Everett as Rabbitt
- Ivan Kane as Joe 'Lasagna' Lazano
- André DeShields as Sandor
- Tommy Lister as Tiny
- Stephen Little as 'Rhino' Reynolds
- Mickey Yablans as Brian Young
- Larry "Flash" Jenkins as Hershey
- Kane Hodder as Charlie Forsythe
- Joseph Garcia as inmate getting hair cut
Production
The film was shot on location at the former Wyoming State Penitentiary now known as the Wyoming Frontier Prison in Rawlins, Wyoming. The facility had been vacant since its closure in 1981 after the construction of a new State Penitentiary, and was made freely available for film production after producer Irwin Yablans approached the State during a search for abandoned prison facilities as the setting for a prison horror movie.
Because the facility was slated for demolition, little regard was given for its preservation, and the production crew was offered free license to make permanent, oftentimes destructive modifications as necessary. This included drilling a large passage through the prison's reinforced concrete perimeter wall, which was mocked up as a vehicle gate for the film.
A majority of the extras portraying prisoners were real-life inmates of the Wyoming State Penitentiary, including former stuntman Stephen E. Little, who was serving a sentence of manslaughter at the time. His SAG membership dues were paid and current, and he was cast in a speaking role as "Rhino."
The execution chamber shown in the film is the Penitentiary's original gas chamber, which replaced hanging after 1936 as the legal method of execution for condemned criminals in the State. The chamber was never used for electrocutions in reality.
Release
The film was given a limited theatrical release in the United States by the Eden Distributing Company in March 1988. It grossed $354,704 at the box office.[2]
The film was released in 1988 on VHS by New World Pictures. It had originally been released on DVD overseas, but not in the United States, save for bootlegs. However, on February 19, 2013, Shout! Factory released the first official Blu-ray Disc and DVD and the first through their new subdivision Scream Factory.[3]
References
- "Never Sleep Again The Elm Street Legacy". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2020-04-30.
- "Prison". The Numbers. Retrieved 2011-07-23.
- "'Prison: Collector's Edition' Blu-ray Detailed | High-Def Digest".
External links
- Prison at IMDb
- Prison at AllMovie
- Prison at Box Office Mojo
- Prison at Rotten Tomatoes