The Escapists is a strategy single player game featuring prisoners that are facing their crimes results by getting locked up in the prison. The players has to survive and complete their time in a setting where they are behind the bars. This pixelated game enables the players to use their creativity and strategy and escape the prison. The Escapists is a unique prison sandbox experience with lots of items to craft and combine in your daring quest for freedom. Life in prison will keep you on your toes with the strict rules that you’ll have to break. The Escapists provides the opportunity of experiencing a light-hearted insight into everyday prison life. As is the case with all inmates, the main objective is escape! While under the careful watch of the guards, go about your daily duties clandestinely secreting useful objects from under your captors’ noses.
The Escapists: Prison Escape is the game about the role of a prisoner trying to escape from a total of six prisons. The range of each level varies from easy to hard making the game more interesting to play with. Initially launched in 2015, the game was subsequently released in on all major gaming platforms including mobile devices.
Features:
The features of key-mapping are available in the game Escapists that improves the gaming skills using keys easily. There are over 300 customizations made to play with ease and fun. The game has over 10 prisons out of which the players have to dodge and escape using their gaming skills.
Multi-storeyed prisons are available where the designs are made with great efforts. The players up to four players can play in a cooperative mode and also versus multiplayer. Other features include a drop-in, drop-out, online multiplayer or split-screen multiplayer is also available.
Additional levels are available on purchase via a DLC patch. All in total there are 5 DLCs to Escapists: Prison Escape.
Gameplay:
Overall, Escapists: Prison Escape is a fun game to play and the fact that it is readily available across several platforms, ensures that anyone interested in it can have access to it.
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The Escapist | |
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Directed by | Rupert Wyatt |
Produced by | Adrian Sturges Alan Moloney |
Written by | Rupert Wyatt Daniel Hardy |
Starring | |
Music by | Benjamin Wallfisch |
Cinematography | Philipp Blaubach |
Edited by | Joe Walker |
Distributed by | Vertigo Films IFC Films |
| |
102 minutes | |
Countries | United Kingdom Republic of Ireland |
Language | English |
Box office | $388,174[1] |
The Escapist is a 2008 drama thriller starring Brian Cox, Joseph Fiennes, Liam Cunningham, Seu Jorge, Dominic Cooper, Steven Mackintosh, Stephen Farrelly and Damian Lewis. It is directed and co-written by Rupert Wyatt, and premiered at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival to considerable acclaim. An Irish-UK co-production, the film was produced by Alan Moloney of Parallel Films and Adrian Sturges of Picture Farm.
The film runs two narratives simultaneously, preparation of the escape and the escape itself.
Frank Perry (Brian Cox) is a lifer and has long accepted that he will never see the outside again. When Perry receives his first letter in fourteen years that his cherished daughter is a drug addict and near death following an overdose, he starts to think about escaping. He plans an escape with help from Lenny Drake (Joseph Fiennes), Brodie (Liam Cunningham) and Viv Batista (Seu Jorge). But when Perry's new cellmate James Lacey (Dominic Cooper) gets noticed by Tony (the brother of the powerful inmate Rizza), things get more complicated and lead to Tony's death. When Perry receives the bad news that his daughter has died his plans change.
Perry nears freedom, as he climbs towards a London Underground exit. The story snaps back to within the prison where Perry is offering himself to be killed by Rizza for failing to bring Lacey to him for punishment. The escape scenes were Perry's hallucinations as he was dying, and he sacrificed himself to cause distraction, allowing the other prisoners to escape.
The role of Frank Perry was written specifically for Brian Cox.[2]
In an interview with Trevor Groth, Wyatt said 'The structure of the film's plot was inspired by a well known short story written in the 19th century by Ambrose Bierce called An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge.'
Much of The Escapist was shot in Dublin's Kilmainham Gaol. A scene near the end is shot in the bascule chamber beneath Tower Bridge in London; it is exactly the same location where Wyatt's brother-in-law Boris Starling set the climax of his 2006 novel Visibility. The Kingsway tramway subway also features in the film.
The film is noted for featuring not only Irish WWE wrestler Sheamus (billed under his real name, Stephen Farrelly) in a main role but also future UFC star Conor McGregor as an extra playing a prisoner.[3]
The film features Leonard Cohen's version of 'The Partisan' and British band Coldplay who wrote an eponymous song for the film which features on the end credits and on their bestselling album Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends as a hidden track.[4]
The film received a rating of 66% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 44 reviews. The site's consensus: 'A tense, smart prison break movie, The Escapist is a sharp debut from director Rupert Wyatt'.[5]
The North American box office total for the film was $13,439 with an additional $374,735 internationally for a worldwide total of $388,174.[1]
In 2015, it was announced that Liam Neeson will star in a remake with Wyatt as a producer.[6]