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No Escape is a 1953 American film noir crime film directed by Charles Bennett starring Lew Ayres, Sonny Tufts and Marjorie Steele. [2] [3] Bennett called the film "dreadful! I had a ten day shooting schedule." [1]
I Escaped from the Gestapo, a 1943 American drama also known as No Escape; No Escape, a British thriller; No Escape, an American film noir; No Escape, an American science-fiction film; No Escape, an American action thriller film; No Escape, an American horror film; No Escape, a British television series; Quicksand: No Escape, a 1992 American ...
The English version was published in February 1952 as No Picnic on Mount Kenya (William Kimber, London), with the subtitle The Story of Three P.O.W.s' Escape to Adventure. [3] [9] "No expedition on the mountain was ever a picnic" Vivienne de Watteville had written in her book Speak to the Earth (1935) about her 1929 visit to Mount Kenya. [10]
Hayward's casting was announced in January 1953. He was originally going to England to make No Escape but that film was actually made in Hollywood. [4] It was Hayward's first film in England since The Lady and the Bandit. [5] In March 1953 as filming was being completed the title was changed from The Saint's Queen to The Saint's Return. [6]
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 unnamed country in Southeast Asia during a violent uprising.
No Escape was released on VHS and Laserdisc in 1994, the VHS was re-released on April 14, 1998. The DVD was released by HBO on July 29, 1998. Columbia TriStar also released the film on DVD, VHS and Laserdisc in other countries from 1995–2003, while Sony Pictures Home Entertainment re-released the DVDs in 2005–2017.
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There is No Escape, also known as The Dark Road and The Thurston Story, is a 1948 British drama film from Hammer Films. It was Michael Ripper's first appearance in a Hammer Film. [2] The film was based on the career of criminal Stanley Thurston, who appeared in the cast as a character based on himself.