No Escape (2015 film)

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No Escape
File:No Escape (2015 film) poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by John Erick Dowdle
Produced by Mitchel Litvak
David Lancaster
Drew Dowdle
Written by John Erick Dowdle
Drew Dowdle
Starring Owen Wilson
Lake Bell
Sterling Jerins
Claire Geare
Pierce Brosnan
Music by Marco Beltrami
Buck Sanders
Cinematography Léo Hinstin
Edited by Elliot Greenberg
Production
company
Bold Films
Brothers Dowdle
Distributed by The Weinstein Company
Release dates
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  • August 17, 2015 (2015-08-17) (Los Angeles premiere)
  • August 26, 2015 (2015-08-26) (United States)
Running time
103 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $5 million[2]
Box office $54.4 million[3]

No Escape is a 2015 American action thriller film directed by John Erick Dowdle, who co-wrote the screenplay with his brother, Drew Dowdle. The film stars Owen Wilson, Lake Bell, and Pierce Brosnan, and tells the story of an expat engineer trapped with his family in an unidentified South-East Asian country during a violent uprising.

The film was released on August 26, 2015.[4] It had special sneak previews in the Philippines on August 16 and 17, 2015, as well as multiple pre-screenings throughout the United States before its official release on August 26, 2015 by The Weinstein Company.

Plot

In an unidentified Southeast Asian country, most likely Cambodia, the Prime Minister closes a deal with a representative of Cardiff, an American company specializing in water systems. After the representative leaves, a group of armed rebels initiate a Coup d'état and assassinate the Prime Minister.

Seventeen hours earlier, Jack Dwyer (Owen Wilson), a new Cardiff employee, is flying to the country with his wife Annie (Lake Bell) and their daughters Lucy (Sterling Jerins) and Briegel "Beeze" Dwyer (Claire Geare). After landing, they run into a Briton named Hammond (Pierce Brosnan) who offers them a ride with him and his friend "Kenny Rogers" (Sahajak Boonthanakit), to the Imperial Lotus hotel, where many foreigners are staying. At the hotel, Jack learns that the phone lines, television and internet are down all over the city. He stops by the bar and chats with Hammond.

The next morning, Jack goes out to buy a newspaper, and inadvertently finds himself in the middle of a confrontation between armed demonstrators and riot police with upside-down shields. The two forces clash violently as Jack makes his escape. Eventually, the protesters gain the upper hand and begin murdering the police. Jack runs back to the hotel and witnesses the rebels executing an American tourist out front. A rebel soldier spots Jack, forcing Jack to quickly climb up a fire escape and enter the hotel through a window. The rebels break through the main hotel entrance and begin indiscriminately slaughtering the staff and guests.

Jack makes it back to his family's room, but learns that Lucy is swimming in the pool downstairs. Jack barely gets to Lucy in time before rebels pour onto the pool area. Meanwhile, a horrified Annie sees the rebels going from room to room, killing the occupants. She barely manages to keep them out of their room. As Jack returns with Lucy, he encounters a rebel in the stairwell, but Hammond saves him and tells him to get to the roof. Jack's family go up there and join some of the hotel's guests and staff, who have gathered and blocked the door. They find out that the rebels have seized most of the city and are protesting Western corporations that control the country's water supply. An approaching helicopter is then heard. Everyone's relief turns to horror as they realize it belongs to the rebels, who open fire on the innocents below. As Jack's family run for cover, the helicopter gets tangled in some electrical wires and crashes. The rebels break through the blocked door and begin to shoot the survivors as Jack and his family jump onto the roof of an office building next to the hotel. He looks back and sees the rebels holding up the "Welcome" banner from Cardiff with his photo on it, realizing he is a high-value target.

A tank targets the office building and fires into it indiscriminately. Jack's family hides under some debris as the rebels swarm the building and murder the employees. As Jack leaves their hiding place, he is spotted by a looting rebel and is forced to kill him. They find a map, take clothes from the dead office workers to disguise themselves as locals, and make their way to the American embassy on a stolen moped. On the way, they manage to ride through a crowd of rebel demonstrators; one man notices they are foreigners, but he says nothing. Upon arriving at the embassy, they find it overrun and deserted, and have to flee, but not before being seen by a group of rebels, including the leader from the hotel massacre.

The family takes shelter in a Buddhist shrine garden nearby, and are protected by the old property caretaker. The rebels enter the compound and start searching for them. Jack attempts to steal a gun, and Annie comes out from hiding in order to draw attention away from Jack, while Lucy and Beeze hide. After discovering the gun is unloaded, Jack is beaten and restrained. As the group's leader prepares to rape Annie, Hammond and Kenny enter the garden and shoot most of the rebels except for the leader, who escapes. The two men take the family to a nearby brothel to hide. As they eat, Hammond explains that he and Kenny work for the British government. He and other agents talked the former government into making deals with companies like Cardiff. As these deals allowed the companies to "own" the government through debt, they angered the people, which led to the anarchic uprising. Hammond explains that their plan is to get to the nearby river, commandeer a boat, and sail across the border to Vietnam, where they will be given asylum.

Before they can enact their plan, the group is attacked by rebels, who kill Kenny and wound Hammond. Hammond sacrifices himself to take out a rebel truck following them. Near the riverbank, Annie and the kids hide as Jack finds a fisherman and trades his watch and shoes for a boat. At that moment, the leader who escaped earlier comes back with another group, captures Jack, and prepares to execute him. Lucy leaves her hiding place, distracting the group leader, whose shot hits Jack's shoulder. The leader then catches Lucy, puts a gun in her hand and one to her head and orders her to kill Jack. She refuses, but Jack encourages her to shoot him (in order to potentially save herself). Before Lucy can make a choice, Annie intervenes and hits the leader in the head, and then bludgeons him to death with an oar while Jack grabs the man's gun and kills the remaining rebels.

The family get into a boat and paddle downriver. They are spotted by a group of rebels, but keep paddling. Although the Vietnamese border patrol warns the family at gunpoint not to enter Vietnam, they take no action to actually stop them, and as soon as the boat crosses the border marker, the border patrol warn the rebels against attacking the family as they are now in Vietnamese waters and if the rebels shoot, they will consider it as an act of war. The family embraces each other, having finally reached the end of their ordeal. Later, in a hospital, Jack and Annie narrate to the kids the story of how Lucy was born, a story the two daughters asked to hear about throughout the movie.

Cast

  • Owen Wilson as Jack Dwyer, a new Cardiff employee (originally an American civil engineer) and Annie's husband.
  • Lake Bell as Annie Dwyer, Jack's wife.
  • Sterling Jerins as Lucy Dwyer, one of Jack and Annie's daughters.
  • Claire Geare as Briegel Dwyer, one of Jack and Annie's daughters, also known as "Beeze".
  • Pierce Brosnan as Hammond, a Briton who works as an operative for the British government.
  • Sahajak Boonthanakit as "Kenny Rogers", a local man who runs a Kenny Rogers-themed taxi service, but who is actually Hammond's partner.

Production

Development

In 2012, it was reported that Owen Wilson would star in an action film called The Coup, and the tone of the film was described as akin to Taken (2009), centering on an American family that moves to Southeast Asia and finds themselves "embroiled in a violent coup where rebels mercilessly attack the city".[5] Later, during the Cannes Film Festival, it was reported that Pierce Brosnan had joined the project, with his role being a "mysterious and ultimately heroic government operative", a nod to his role as James Bond.[6] John Erick Dowdle, known for several horror films, and who wrote the script with his brother, Drew Dowdle, was set to direct the film. The two brothers based the script on a near-miss of political upheaval when the Dowdle brothers and their father were going on a trip to Thailand. John explains, "Right before we got to Thailand, a coup overthrew the prime minister. There’d been no previous warning. There was a feeling of anxiety in the air. So I started thinking about that. If it went badly, what would I do?"[7] Michelle Monaghan had joined the cast, playing the wife of Wilson's character.[8]

In August 2013, it was reported that Bold Films would finance the film, replacing Crime Scene Pictures.[9] Later that year, it was reported that Lake Bell had replaced Monaghan, and her character was said to be named Annie Dwyer, and described as a beloved woman appearing to have the perfect family life. Principal photography began on October 31, 2013 in Chiang Mai, Thailand.[10]

Filming

It should be noted that, while the story may be thought to take place in Cambodia, since it has a border with Vietnam while Thailand does not, the plot is loosely based on events which took place in Thailand in 2006 about Thaksin, the former prime minister of Thailand. "No Escape " was filmed in Thailand, all the scenes and passers-by are Thai.

Principal photography began on October 31, 2013, with Thai-based production company Living Films facilitating the shoot. "The producers of the film had a wide choice of countries in which they could have based this production," said Living Films founder and executive director Chris Lowenstein. "The fact that they chose Thailand is a great testament to the skills of the Thai crews and the resources that Thailand offers. We are delighted to help bring this project to the screen." Sierra/Affinity handled international sales of the film.[11] Brosnan joined the crew in December after finishing off his work on How to Make Love Like an Englishman, moving to Thailand where production was held, with his character reportedly called "Hammond".

On June 10, 2014, it was announced that the film would be released on March 6, 2015.[12] On February 6, 2015, it was announced that the film was retitled to No Escape, and its release was delayed to September 2, 2015.[13] It then again changed, this time to August 26, 2015.

The film was approved for release in Thailand after the film-makers agreed not to identify the country where it was filmed or to portray it negatively. Co-writer Drew Dowdle says, "'We worked very closely with the Thai government and there were a lot of things they wanted us to shy away from....So although the film shows a coup breaking out in a Southeast Asian city,...it never specified the country. We were very careful not to make it Thailand in the movie, so there was no Thai language used'", said Drew. "'None of the signage is Thai and most of the language that the native population is speaking is a combination of Laotian, hill-tribe languages and other languages,'". (The actors portraying inhabitants of the country are mostly Thai, and whenever they speak one at a time, it is Thai they use among themselves, a fact easily verified by anyone who understands Thai. The map shown very briefly at the beginning of the movie appears to indicate they are flying to a location in Cambodia, but the map has no actual names written on it. The vast majority of the signs in the movie all have Khmer writing on them, not Thai. However, a sticker shown during the first street riot scene contains a stylized logo in Thai writing.).

The film-makers were also instructed not to use images of the Thai monarchy and to "'never show the king or the colour yellow because that's the colour of the king'". John Dowdle, who directed the movie, says they were also told "'no Buddhas....don't do anything bad in front of a Buddha.'"[14]

Reception

Box office

As of November 12, 2015, No Escape has grossed $27.3 million in North America and $27.1 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $54.4 million, against a budget of $5 million.[3]

The film grossed $1.2 million on its opening day and $8.1 million in its opening weekend, finishing 4th at the box office.

Critical response

No Escape received mixed reviews from critics. Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 46%, based on 136 reviews, with an average rating of 4.9/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "No Escape's talented cast and taut B-movie thrills are unfortunately offset by its one-dimensional characters and uncomfortably retrograde worldview."[15] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 38 out of 100, based on 33 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[16] The film received an average "B+" CinemaScore from audiences, on an A+ to F scale.[17]

Movie Rehab said, "No Escape is a bright star in a sky of dumbed down, carbon-copy action-thrillers."[18] Toronto Star's Peter Howell questioned the film for its "lack of moral considerations", but overall praised it as being suspenseful and "great entertainment."[19]

Many of the negative reviews for No Escape have labelled the film as xenophobic for its depiction of Southeast Asians. One such review, written by Washington Post's Stephanie Merry, made the claim that that "every Asian character is either a ruthless murderer or anonymous collateral damage." Similarly, Seattle Times' Moira Macdonald criticized No Escape as offensive, and concluded: "Just like the Dwyer family, I found myself looking for escape; you might, too." Rogerebert.com's Peter Sobczynski also blasted No Escape for its "borderline xenophobia", but ultimately panned the film for John Erick Dowdle's film direction and "unintentionally comedic" slow motion scenes, summarizing: "Why [Wilson and Brosnan] would choose to appear in something so pandering, mean-spirited and manipulative is beyond my ability to compute but for whatever reason, the end result is that they have landed in one of the most unpleasant films of the year."[20][21][22][23]

Controversy

After trailers for the film were released a social uproar occurred in Cambodia over the use of upside down Khmer lettering on the police shields. The Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts has since prohibited the film from being shown in Cambodia. Sin Chanchaya, director of the Department of Film said that the decision to ban the film had come solely based on the trailer. Chanchaya said that the Ministry had approached the film producers to edit the lettering out of the film but they had not replied by the time of the decision.[24]

References

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  2. No Escape (2015) - Financial Information
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External links