Zack Snyder has signed on to write and direct a new version of Escape From New York, giving StudioCanal and The Picture Company fresh momentum on a John Carpenter property that has spent years moving through stalled Hollywood development.
The new package is expected to be presented to studios and streaming buyers in the coming weeks, with a theatrical release plan attached. Andrew Rona and Alex Heineman will produce through The Picture Company’s StudioCanal deal. Snyder will produce with Deborah Snyder and Wesley Coller through Stone Quarry. Carpenter, who co-wrote and directed the 1981 original, is attached as an executive producer.
The original film starred Kurt Russell as Snake Plissken, a former soldier turned outlaw forced to rescue the U.S. president after Air Force One crashes inside Manhattan, which has been turned into a sealed prison. The film’s grimy production design, Carpenter’s electronic score and Russell’s stripped-down performance helped turn Snake into one of genre cinema’s defining antiheroes.
Snyder’s version is being described as a reimagining rather than a direct sequel. Plot and casting details remain under wraps, leaving the role of Snake as the central question. The filmmaker is said to be aiming for a rougher, dirtier approach built around practical effects and real locations, closer in spirit to his 2004 Dawn of the Dead remake than to the digital scale of his DC films or Rebel Moon.
The project’s history explains the cautious reaction among genre fans. Hollywood has tried to restart Escape From New York for nearly two decades, with Len Wiseman, Brett Ratner, Breck Eisner, Robert Rodriguez, Leigh Whannell and Radio Silence each linked to earlier versions. Radio Silence previously said it viewed Carpenter’s film as “untouchable” and planned a continuation rather than a straight remake before that effort faded.
Snyder’s hiring will likely split opinion. Supporters point to his flair for muscular action, heightened worlds and cult-friendly visual design. Skeptics question how his operatic style will fit a lean, cynical film built on urban decay, political distrust and Snake’s laconic menace. StudioCanal’s bet is clear: pair a famous filmmaker with a familiar title, then sell a new Escape From New York as a theatrical event in a market still hungry for recognizable genre properties.





















































