Prison (1987 film)
Prison | |
---|---|
Theatrical release Poster | |
Directed by | Renny Harlin |
Produced by |
Charles Band Irwin Yablans |
Written by |
Irwin Yablans C. Courtney Joyner |
Starring | |
Music by |
Richard Band Christopher L. Stone |
Cinematography | Mac Ahlberg |
Edited by | Andy Horvitch |
Distributed by | Empire Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 102 minutes |
Country | United states |
Language | English |
Budget | $4,000,000[1] |
Box office | $354,704 (US)[1] |
Prison is a 1987 horror film starring Viggo Mortensen. It was filmed at the Old State Prison in Rawlins, Wyoming, with many of its residents on the cast and crew.
Plot
In 1964, inmate Charlie Forsythe swallowed 60,000 volts of electricity for a murder he did not commit.
When Creedmore Prison is reopened after thirty years, it has not been standing empty. Charlie Forsythe is back – still charged with electric heat. Waiting for Eaton Sharpe (Lane Smith) – the man who stood by as Forsythe rode the electric chair.
Forsythe quickly makes up for lost time as his vengeance rises to a fever pitch of violent fury. Burke (Viggo Mortensen) and the other inmates soon realize that they will all be slaughtered unless Forsythe is allowed to repay his long-standing debt. With the lives of Creedmore in the balance, Sharpe and Forsythe are finally brought face-to-rotting-face in a duel that will pit Forsythe's supernatural rage against Sharpe's bloodthirsty instinct for survival.
Cast
Prison Staff
- Chelsea Field as Katherine Walker
- Lane Smith as Warden Eaton Sharpe
- Arlen Dean Snyder as Captain Carl Horton
- Hal Landon Jr. as Wallace
- Matt Kanen as Johnson
Prisoners
- Viggo Mortensen as Burke/Charlie Forsythe
- 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 Jenkins as Hershey
- Kane Hodder as Charlie Forsythe
- Joseph Garcia as inmate getting hair cut
Production
The execution chamber shown in the film is actually the real Rawlins prison gas chamber. The chamber was never used for electrocutions in real life.
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.[1]
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.[2]
External links
- Prison at the Internet Movie Database
- Prison at AllMovie
- Prison at Rotten Tomatoes