Watch prison escapes based on real events. Prison Break: Final Break (video)

15.06.2019

We present to your attention a selection of the 10 most incredible escapes from prisons and concentration camps, some of which even became the plot for a couple of Hollywood blockbusters!

Pascal Payet: escaped from prison three times by helicopter!

Pascal Payet, or Kalashnikov Pat, was imprisoned for murder during a robbery of a cash-in-transit vehicle. In 2001, he was sentenced to 30 years in prison and since then managed to escape from prison three times with the help of a helicopter! The last time, in 2007, a helicopter hijacked half an hour earlier from the Cannes resort, along with a pilot, landed on the roof of the prison, from which three of his seriously armed accomplices jumped out in search of Payet. He flew off the roof with masked accomplices. On the Mediterranean coast, they released the pilot and since then no one has heard anything about Pascal or his accomplices.


John Dillinger: escaped from prison with a fake gun made of wood and painted black with shoe polish

The legendary Johnny D, played incidentally by his namesake Johnny Depp in the recent Hollywood premiere, is an American bank robber of the 1930s who robbed at least a couple dozen banks and escaped prison twice. Dillinger spent some time in a prison in Michigan, Indiana, until he was paroled in 1933. After 4 months, he again went to prison - this time in Lima, Ohio, from where he was rescued by his armed gang, while killing the jailer, Sheriff Jesse Serber. Most of the gang was captured that same year in Tucson, Arizona, during a shootout at the Historic Congress Hotel. Dillinger was placed in Lake County Jail at Indian Crown Point. He was accused of attempting to kill police officer William O'Malley during a bank robbery in East Chicago, Indiana, carried out shortly after Dillinger's jailbreak.

On March 3, 1934, Johnny D escaped from Crown Point (a prison from which it was considered impossible to escape at the time), which was guarded by a huge number of police and military from their national guard. Newspapers immediately broke the news that Dillinger had escaped from prison with a fake pistol made of wood and painted black with shoe polish. With this gun, he forced the guard to open the door of his cell, and then took two hostages, gathered all the guards in his cell and locked them, and he calmly left the prison.


Alfie Hinds: escaped the law three times, once by simply locking guards in the closet

Alfie Hinds is a British man who has fled the law over and over again, a total of three times. For the fourth time, he was released from prison legally, having served his entire term. For Hinds, the glory of the famous thief was entrenched - by the way, his father actually died, being punished for an armed robbery. In 1953, Alfie Hines was arrested for a high-profile robbery of a jewelry store, from which $90,000 in proceeds were never returned. In court, he pleaded not guilty and was sentenced to 12 years in prison. After Alfie in some incomprehensible way escaped from behind closed doors and a 6-meter prison wall, the public dubbed him Guddini Hinds (in honor of the famous magician and illusionist). He led an honest life as a builder and decorator until, in 1956, Scotland Yard detectives finally tracked him down and sent him back to jail after 248 days of searching. After his arrest, Hinds turned the law against the authorities, accusing the jailers of illegal arrest and successfully used this incident to escape from the courthouse. When two guards led him to the toilet and removed his handcuffs so that he could do his business, he shoved them into the toilet and locked them from the outside with a padlock (the accomplices had previously built a wooden screw with a rod bent into a ring in the door, so that he could do it). Hinds was only captured at the airport a few hours later. He made his third escape from Helmsford Gaol. After that, he returned to Ireland, where he lived and worked as a car salesman for two years. Once again, he was captured when he was pulled over by a police officer for driving an unregistered car. This time, he also used his wits to find a loophole in the law - at that time, escaping from prison was not considered a misdemeanor, so he was not given an additional term. So Alfie Hinds was sentenced to 6 years in prison for robbing a jewelry store in 1953, plus he won a libel suit against the policeman who arrested him, and after his release he spent the rest of his life as a mini-celebrity, selling his story to the News of the World for $40,000.


Julian Shotard: escaped from prison by clinging to the bottom of the van that brought him to prison

In 2009, French arsonist Julian Chotard escaped from prison in a bold and brazen way. He managed to escape from a group of prisoners who had just arrived at Pentonville Prison in north London. While other prisoners were being passed inside, Shotard managed to duck behind a prison van that had just brought them from the Shersbrook Royal Courthouse (where Shotard was sentenced to seven years in prison). Julian successfully left the prison a few minutes later, clinging to the bottom of the same van. Later, he himself came to the police and surrendered to the authorities.

Frank Morris, Clarence and John Anglin are the only prisoners who managed to escape from Alcatraz.

Over the 29 years of functioning of the Alcatraz prison, there have been many attempts to escape from it. According to prison records, there were a total of 14 escape attempts involving 36 prisoners (two of them twice), 23 were caught, six were shot and killed during the escape, three were lost at sea and never heard from again. Their bodies were never found.

But on June 11, 1962, Frank Morris, with brothers John and Clarence Anglin, successfully completed one of the most intricate escape plans ever devised. Morris and the Anglins climbed up the ventilation shaft and through one of the chimneys to the roof. The trio then climbed down the roof and sailed off the island on rubber rafts. The next morning, the police searched Alcatraz for the fugitives, but were unsuccessful.



The head of the prison explained that the prisoners were not missed immediately due to the fact that they placed fake heads made from a mixture of soap, toilet paper and real hair on their beds, which fooled the prison staff conducting nightly inspections. Morris and the Anglin brothers subsequently disappeared without a trace and are still wanted by the FBI, although they are believed to have drowned in San Francisco Bay while trying to swim away from the island.

Billy Hayes: escaped from a Turkish prison and became a writer

Sentenced to 30 years in a Turkish prison for drug smuggling in 1970, the 22-year-old American was originally sentenced to four years and two months in a Turkish prison; a couple of weeks before the end of his term, he learned that the authorities had decided to sentence him to life in prison, so he decided that he had to run away. After 6 months of planning, he got into a fight with a security guard, stole his uniform, and taking with him $2,000 that his father had smuggled into prison in a photo album, Hayes stole a rowboat and made it to shore. Hoping to reach Greece, Hayes dyed his blond hair black and moved to the border. Barefoot, hungry and without a passport, he swam across the river and walked for miles. When Hayes finally ran into an armed soldier, Billy thought he had lost his chance for freedom, but the soldier began to yell at him in Greek, which meant that he had crossed the border after all. Hayes eventually returned safely to the United States, and then wrote an autobiographical book about his life in prison and the escape from there for the publication Midnight Express (Midnight Express).


Texas 7: Escaped from prison with maximum protection using an extremely elaborate plan

On December 13, 2000, seven inmates of the John Connally Unit, the most secure prison in Karnes County, Texas, escaped using an elaborate scheme. Using a few well-planned tricks, the seven perpetrators neutralized and locked up nine prison guards, four correctional officers, and three uninvolved inmates. The escape took place during the quietest period of the day, when surveillance of the maintenance site was kept to a minimum, during lunch and during the count. Most of these ploys involved one of the perpetrators calling out to someone while another hit the unsuspecting person from behind on the head. As soon as the victim was neutralized, the criminals took away a piece of clothing, tied it up and locked it in a transformer room. The attackers stole the clothes, credit cards, and identification cards of their victims. The group also posed as prison officials over the phone and made false calls to allay suspicion from the authorities. After that, three members of the group in stolen civilian clothes made their way to the back gate of the prison. They posed as electricians who were supposed to install video monitors. One guard in the gatehouse was disabled, after which the trio raided the guard tower and stole many weapons. Meanwhile, four other criminals called the guards of this very tower of the tower to distract them. Then they stole a staff pickup truck, which they drove to the back gate, picked up their comrades and left the prison. A year later, they were all tracked down and caught, which was facilitated by the TV show America's Most Wanted.


Rat Hell Prisoners: The Most Famous (and Successful) Escape During the American Civil War

Alfred Wetzler and Rudolf Vrba: Escaped from Auschwitz and later compiled a life-saving report on the Nazi camp

Wetzler was a Slovak Jew, and one of the few Jews who managed to escape from the Auschwitz concentration camp during the Holocaust. Wetzler fled with a fellow Jew named Rudolf Vrba. With the help of the camp dungeon at 2 pm on Friday, April 7, 1944 - Easter Eve - the two men hid inside a wooden pile that was intended to build the "Mexico" section for the new arrivals. She was behind the barbed wire of Birkenau's inner perimeter, but the guards on the outer perimeter remained vigilant all day. Other prisoners laid planks around the sunken area to hide the men, then sprayed the area with sharp Russian tobacco soaked in gasoline to fool the dogs. Wetzler and Vrba hid for 4 nights so they wouldn't be caught again.

On April 10, wearing the Dutch suits, coats, and boots they took from the camp, they moved south, running parallel to the Sola River and reaching the Polish border with Slovakia after 133 kilometers. They found their way thanks to a page torn from a children's atlas that Vrba found in a warehouse.


Wetzler and Vrba later became famous for a report in which they described the interior of the Auschwitz camp - the layout of the camp site, the design of the gas chambers, crematoria and, most convincingly, the Cyclone gas canister label. These 32 pages were the first detailed report on Auschwitz that reached the West and was regarded by the Allies as credible. This report is said to have saved 120,000 lives.


Dieter Dengler: one of the few soldiers who managed to escape from a POW camp during the Vietnam War


In addition to him, such an escape was also possible for Captain Charles Fredrik Clasmann, who was shot and captured to later escape with 6 other camp residents, five of whom were never found, and Nick Rowe, who escaped from the Congressional Vietnam camp and wrote a book about it. About "Five Years to Freedom"

The escape stories are so disturbing and dangerous that they are all worthy of Hollywood adaptations (and some have already received them). Perhaps that's why we don't care that these criminals are bank robbers, murderers, or worse. History is important to us, the great escape, the day when a man who thought he would never be free again escaped ... even if only for a short time.

A 49-year-old criminal named Choi Gap Bok was arrested on September 12, 2012. Six days later, he successfully escaped from his cell at a police station in the South Korean city of Daegu. On the morning of the sixth day, Gap Bok asked for a cream. When the three guards fell asleep, the prisoner smeared himself with cream and slipped out of the food opening at the bottom of the grate. Gap Bok was only 164 cm tall and studied yoga for over 20 years. The food opening was 15 centimeters high and 45 wide. To buy some time and fool the guards, Gap Bok covered the pillows with a blanket. Upon discovering the loss, the police and journalists were shocked. By the way, 22 years earlier, Gap Bok escaped from the bus with the escort on the way to prison. He just slipped through the bars on the bus windows. After escaping in 2012, he tried to steal a car, but the police set up roadblocks and Gap Bok had to flee to the mountains. Although he was pursued by helicopters, dogs and people, he moved only at night, so he could not be caught. He ended up robbing the hut and left an apology note inside that was signed "Falsely accused thief Choi Gap Bok". When the note was discovered, it was no longer difficult to track him down. He was caught a couple of days later and transferred to a prison where the food openings were much smaller.

Pascal Payet is a French bank robber and murderer who gained notoriety for his part in escapes using stolen helicopters. And not one, not two, but three. After his arrest in 1999, Payet was sent to prison in the French village of Luyin. In 2001, he made his first escape with Frederic Impocco using a stolen helicopter. He spent a couple of years at large, but in 2003 he hijacked another helicopter, returned to Luyin and helped the remaining members of his gang escape: Frank Perletto, Michel Valero and Eric Alboreo. A daring venture led to his capture, and this time he was placed under the strictest surveillance. He was not only put in solitary confinement, but was also transferred from prison to prison every 6 months. Despite precautions, on July 14, 2007, Bastille Day, four accomplices hijacked another helicopter, put it on the roof of the prison, and Payet was once again free. However, he did not have time to enjoy it much, because a couple of months later he was caught in Spain. At the moment, it is not known in which prison Payet is serving his sentence, and the French authorities do not plan to share this information.

In one of the most egregious escape cases in US history, six prisoners on death row have escaped from a supposedly "impregnable" prison. They just left through the main doors. Led by notorious assassins James and Linwood Briley, the six men planned their escape for months. After studying the schedule and habits of the guards, they found the perfect moment. The escape began on May 31, 1984, when the prisoners attacked and overpowered the guards as they made their rounds. Having changed into the uniform of the guards and put on their helmets, the prisoners moved towards the exit. To distract the other guards, they covered the TV with a sheet, put it on a gurney, and announced that they were taking the bomb out of the suicide block. To heighten the effect, one of the prisoners sprayed a fire extinguisher as they were already out the door. Their disappearance was noticed only after half an hour.

On December 13, 2000, seven inmates shocked everyone by escaping from a maximum security prison in Texas. At around 11:20 am, the prisoners started attacking civil servants, guards and inmates. While one distracted the victim, the second attacked her from behind. They took clothes, identification cards and money, after which they tied the victims, gagged them and hid them. In disguise, the three prisoners went to the observation tower, posing as video surveillance specialists. Meanwhile, the remaining four prisoners called the tower to divert the attention of the guards. Three disguised prisoners attacked the watchtower guards and stole weapons. The four inmates meanwhile stole a prison truck, met the trio at the main gate, and so the Texas Seven drove off into the sunset. Instead of lying low, they went all out and robbed several stores. Police officer Aubrey Hawkins was killed during one of the robberies. A month later, the Texas 7 was caught and the leader, George Rivas, was charged with Aubrey's murder and executed in 2012.

Henri Charrière was a French criminal with a butterfly tattoo on his chest. In October 1931, he was charged with murder and sentenced to 30 years in prison and 10 years hard labor. He spent some time in a prison in France, after which he was transferred to the Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni prison in Guiana. He escaped from this prison in 1933 with two other prisoners, but they were caught after a shipwreck. Sharière fled again and was taken in by an Indian tribe, with whom he stayed for several months. When he left the tribe, he was recaptured and taken to Devil's Island, where he spent two years in solitary confinement. Conditions on the island were terrible, prisoner violence was rampant, and tropical diseases could kill anyone. He repeatedly tried to escape, but each time he was caught and severely punished. After 11 years in prison, Charrière finally managed to escape. He filled a couple of sacks with coconuts and jumped off the cliff into the water. Using sacks of coconuts as a lifeline, he roamed the sea for three days before being washed up on land. He was caught and sentenced to prison in Venezuela, and a year later he was released and given citizenship. The stories of Sharière's escapes are described in his autobiographical book Papillon (Moth).

In 1987, one of the robberies ended unsuccessfully for Richard Lee McNair. He killed a man named Jerry Teese and shot another man four more times, but he survived. He was found and sentenced to two life sentences and 30 years for robbery. But immediately on the day of his arrest, McNair slipped out of his handcuffs with lip balm and fled the station. He was caught trying to hide in a tree, but the branch broke off and he fell to the ground. He was taken to the prison, where he began to dig an escape tunnel, but did not have time to finish, as he was transferred to another prison. In 1992, he escaped from a prison in North Dakota through a ventilation shaft, and this time he enjoyed ten months of freedom. Although McNair had already proven his audacity, it was his third escape attempt that made him a legend. In April 2006, McNair hid in a mail container and sent himself out of jail. The package arrived at its destination 75 minutes later, and McNair cut himself out of the box. He fled to Canada, where he hid for a year. In October 2007, he was arrested while driving a stolen pickup truck. He is currently serving his sentence in a maximum security prison in Florida, where he has little chance of escaping.

In 1943, German POW camp inmate Roger "Big X" Bushell planned one of the most famous escapes in history. The plan to free 200 prisoners of war was to dig three hundred-meter tunnels at the same time, which were nicknamed Tom, Dick and Harry. The Stalag Luft III camp was not the most typical POW camp. Here the prisoners played basketball, volleyball, fencing and gardening. They read books, put on plays every second week, and received a decent education. But a prison is a prison, and with so many tools, it's no wonder someone tried to escape. 600 prisoners began digging the tunnels in 1943. Squadron Leader Bob Nelson came up with an air pump that allowed prisoners to work safely underground. While work was underway on the tunnels, the prisoners bribed the German guards, and they brought them civilian clothes, documents, German uniforms and maps. Work on Dick was stopped when the Germans erected a building right on the spot where the exit was planned. In September 1943, Tom was discovered and Harry became the last hope. The escape began on a moonless night on March 24, 1945. Oddly enough, the entrance to the tunnel froze over, delaying the escape by nearly two hours. Because of this and the new guard, only 10 prisoners per hour could descend into the tunnel, so the escape progressed slowly. Of the 200 prisoners, only 76 managed to escape. The 77th was caught when he fled to the forest. Of the 76 who escaped, 73 were caught. Hitler ordered everyone to be executed, but in the end, 17 were allowed to return to Stalag Luft III, and three were sent to a concentration camp. The rest were executed. Of the three who managed to escape, two ended up on a Swedish ship, and one made it through France to the British consulate in Spain. Based on this story, a famous film starring Stephen McQueen was shot.

It was considered impossible to escape from Maze prison - it was called the most escape-proof prison in Europe. However, on September 25, 1983, the largest prison break in British history took place here. Of course, as with other successful escape cases, the prisoners began to plan for it months in advance. Two inmates, Bobby "Big Bob" Storey and Henry Kelly, worked as orderlies, which allowed them to examine the prison for security weaknesses. Both of them were members of the IRA, and the organization helped them to bring six pistols into the prison. All that remained was to wait. At 2:30 p.m., the escape began. The prisoners used the carried weapons to attack the jailers and prevent them from raising the alarm. The guards were taken hostage, someone was stabbed, someone was shot in the stomach, and one of the guards survived after a gunshot wound to the head. In 20 minutes, the prisoners took full control of their block, but they had to wait for transport. At 3:25 p.m., a food truck arrived. The driver and another guard were taken hostage, and 37 prisoners climbed into the truck, taking the guards' uniforms and weapons with them. At the main gate of the prison, the prisoners took several more hostages. Officer James Ferris tried to raise the alarm, but was caught up and stabbed three times. The soldier on the tower reported what was happening to the combat team while the others tried to block the gate with their vehicles. The prisoners opened fire on them, then seized one of the officers along with the car and sent it to the gate. Unfortunately for the prisoners, the IRA auxiliaries were five minutes late and they had to steal the cars themselves and run for their lives. A total of 35 prisoners escaped, only one was caught.

On June 11, 1962, one of the most infamous prison breaks in US history took place. Not only were the fugitives not caught, the scale of their escape shocked prison guards, local police, and the FBI. About six months before the escape, brothers John and Clarence Anglin, along with Frank Morris (all three bank robbers), found several blades on the prison floor. With these blades, they began to expand the ventilation shafts in their cells (they even built a homemade drill from a vacuum cleaner engine). At the same time, they purchased 50 raincoats from their cellmates to build a raft on which they could cross the icy San Francisco Bay. They also made papier-mâché their own heads to confuse the guards - they even glued real hair to them, which they got from the prison hairdresser. On the night of the escape, they laid their heads on the beds and slipped out through the dug tunnels. Three prisoners descended from the roof of Alcatraz along a 15-meter wall, inflated a makeshift raft and lowered it into the water. The false heads were discovered by the guards only in the morning, and they immediately began searching. Although the remains of the raft, oars and personal belongings of the prisoners were fished out of the water, the FBI (after 17 years of investigation) ruled that the three men most likely drowned during the escape. However, in 2012, the Anglin family stated that the brothers had survived. The family claimed to have received phone calls and even a Christmas card from John Anglin, and a close friend allegedly saw the brothers in Brazil and even took pictures.

Today, Mexican drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzmán is perhaps one of the most infamous people in the world. Enemy of the People Number One topped the ratings of both the FBI and Forbes, all thanks to the influence of his Sinaloa drug cartel. In 1993, he was arrested and sentenced to 20 years in a Mexican prison. He immediately began planning his escape, offering bribes to security guards, police, and laborers, many of whom he hired. On January 19, 2001, a guard simply opened Guzmán's cell, he hid in a dirty laundry cart, and was taken straight out the main entrance. Laborer Javier Camberos (who was later imprisoned for facilitating the escape) took Guzmán away from prison in the trunk of a car. El Chapo was recaptured in 2014, but only served a year. On July 11, 2015, Guzmán disappeared from his cell. At a depth of three meters below his cell, the guards discovered a tunnel one and a half kilometers long, 1.7 meters high and almost a meter wide. They also found a motorcycle that appears to have driven El Chapo through the tunnel. On January 8, 2016, he was again caught and returned to prison. His daughter, Rosa Isila Guzmán Ortiz, recently revealed that her father crossed the Mexican border twice in 2015 to visit his family in California.

Revisiting the series ten years later, I can note that its ability to hook and not let go is still valid: having started watching the first series, I could not do anything else seriously until I sipped the entire first season. But one thing is not to let go, and the other is the jambs that I began to see ten years later. Since there are plenty of positive reviews here, I will reflect the cons that caught my eye. -I understand that Chicago is located in a relatively northern region and even near a huge lake, but this is not a reason to change the weather to please the plot. In a series where they broke the wall behind the toilet bowl, a heat was arranged in the cell. On the same day, in the morning, the doctor told Scofield that it was supposedly the hottest April day in recent memory. But towards the end of the season, the authors of the series arrange winter so that the main characters begin to walk in jackets, which is convenient for the plot. At the same time, the action of the first season covers a little over a month. -More than once it is mentioned that Abruzzi is the boss of the mafia. It is worth watching the series "The Sopranos" (The Sopranos) to understand that SO with a mafia boss, even if he is in prison, his own people will never be treated. If the word boss is used for a red word, then it is clear that he is not the last person in the family, therefore, at least the captain, who has a lot of people under his command, who certainly should take care not only of him, but also of his relatives on freedom. In general, the mafia side, in my opinion, failed. - I don't think it's worth talking about politics, because the Americans see this matter from a different angle. Yes, and here it is just a decoration, which no one even bothered to show as it should. But it should be borne in mind that after the election, a politician does not at all cease to depend on the sponsor, and the objectionable (even the president) is displaced by banal impeachment. -About the escape plan. Wouldn't it be easier for the younger one to get a job as a guard-warden in prison, since the brothers were already on the run? Outside, planning and implementing such a movement is much easier. I never understood how long the elder sat and waited for the execution of the sentence (usually it lasts several years), but it took clearly more time to develop the serial plan than if Scofield had infiltrated and thought through everything along the way. -Where did the obligatory inspection of the prisoner after the date, which flashed once after visiting Michael's "wife" go? The second time she brought him the keys, he tucked them into his sock without worrying. After all, they had to undress him and find them during the search. These are the questions that popped up in front of me as I watched the first season. But they do not cancel the pleasure received from what they saw.

On February 23, 1992, an attempt was made to escape from the Kresty pre-trial detention center. Seven criminals captured employees of the "Crosses", but they failed to escape. As a result, three prisoners and one prison officer died. Escape attempts from Russian prisons do not happen often, and each of them becomes the subject of increased attention. We will tell you about the five most high-profile attempts to escape from Russian prisons.

Crosses, 1992

An attempt to escape from the pre-trial detention center "Crosses" on February 23, 1992 is one of the most famous attempts to escape from IZ No. 47/1 of the Central Internal Affairs Directorate of St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region, better known as "Crosses".

In June 1991, recidivist thief Yuri Nikolayevich Perepelkin, born in 1959, was brought to Kresty. He was previously convicted of theft and escape from the colony-settlement.

Perepelkin planned to escape on a holiday on February 23, 1992. Seven prisoners seized two Krestov employees and demanded that they be given weapons, transport, drugs, and not interfere on their way to the airport.

The message about the hostage-taking was received by the duty unit at about nine in the morning. Long negotiations with criminals did not give positive results. During the assault, the special forces soldiers neutralized the intruders, but they could not avoid victims from the side of the SIZO staff. The leader of the rebellious gang managed to inflict several fatal blows with sharpening to the cynologist Alexander Yaremsky. During the assault, three intruders were killed by sniper shots. Three more were detained. The leader of the gang for organizing the escape and murder of a prison officer was sentenced to capital punishment - execution, which, after the adoption of the moratorium, was replaced with life imprisonment.

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Crosses, 1922

On November 11, 1922, the gangster, who was called Lenka Panteleev, and three of his accomplices tried to escape from the Kresty prison in St. Petersburg, and this attempt was crowned with success. They managed to break free thanks to a pile of firewood, imprudently piled near one of the outer walls that surrounded the territory.

It was possible to jump over the fence for firewood, but no one wanted to break their legs, so the convicts showed their imagination and wove ropes from blankets and sheets, along which they carefully descended to the ground on the appointed day.

This escape attempt was also carried out on a holiday - the Day of the Police. Thus, the criminals wanted to make a "gift" to the Soviet law enforcement officers, who somewhat relaxed their vigilance on their professional holiday. Some employees paid for this failure with their positions.

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Sailor silence, 1995

The most famous escape from Matrosskaya Tishina (detention center No. 1 in Moscow) took place in 1995. Alexander Solonik, nicknamed "Killer No. 1", fled. He was suspected of numerous murders in the interests of the Kurgan criminal group.

Its members introduced their man into the pre-trial detention center for the position of warden. He carried climbing equipment and a pistol into Solonik's solitary cell. At night, together they put a mannequin under a blanket, then went up to the roof of the isolation ward and, with the help of equipment, went down to the street. Solonik fled to Greece. In 1997, he was killed in a villa near Athens.

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Butyrka, 2010

House burglar Vitaly Ostrovsky in 2010 arranged a successful escape from Butyrka (detention center No. 2 in Moscow). He escaped in broad daylight in front of an astonished audience.

In the afternoon, an unarmed guard came after Ostrovsky into the cell to take him to the bathhouse. They forgot to put handcuffs on him, and therefore, seizing the moment, Ostrovsky pushed the guards away and rushed to the door, which, by a strange coincidence, was not blocked. Running out into the courtyard, the prisoner ran into a 4.5-meter fence and began to climb up it with great dexterity. While the prison guard realized what had happened, and the dogs ran along the perimeter of the fence, the criminal disappeared.

It so happened that I was not particularly familiar with the fourth season, I saw only a few episodes. The thing is that the fourth season disappointed me very much, and for some time I was terribly angry with the creators of this, as it seemed to me, a grandiose series. The first three seasons, which included about sixty episodes, I probably watched in a record three days. This is due to the fact that I could not fall asleep in any way without knowing what would happen next. The series just struck me with its chic and damn interesting idea. Each episode it was a portion of unearthly buzz. The fourth season disappointed me in that after watching a few episodes, I simply did not recognize the former series.

There was no previous heat of passion, the actors already looked tired, they probably expected that the storyline would end in the third season, where, in principle, everything was logical to end this series, and, as they say, leave beautifully. The episodes from the fourth season were not as catchy as before, I was very bored watching this brand new series with the same actors, and I decided to just give it all up and better start watching something new. I also rejected this feature film for a long time. And when I finally found the time to watch it, I didn’t even know that this film is just a gluing of the last two episodes of the fourth season, as it turned out, they were worth highlighting from all this boring pack of episodes of the last season.

So to say, the escape is back! In my opinion, the directors made a very, very right move, because with such an amazing, I’m not afraid of the word, one of the best series in the whole world, it was necessary to part beautifully and correctly. The current directors do not know and do not want to know what it means to finish a film beautifully and correctly, therefore they make the finals of their series (films) so mysterious that then you can’t sleep at night, jumping from forum to forum in search of one single answer, will there be a continuation ? gave his fans the last hour and a half of the old and good escape in his excellent traditions. With this film, directors, screenwriters, actors and everyone, everyone who worked on this lovely, brilliant series, say goodbye to all of its multimillion-dollar army of fans.

"Prison Break: The Final Break" this is a bright, very interesting, dynamic, and simply cool end to an adventure that began back in 2005. I really liked that this final escape gathered all the well-known characters from this series near it. At the beginning of the film, I somehow doubted the new escape design that Michael began to develop. It seemed to me that the scriptwriters would no longer be able to recreate at least something similar to the first season, but I was very much mistaken, the escape turned out to be very bright and bewitching, it was very interesting to watch the actions of all the characters in the film. The picture kept me in suspense for the whole hour and a half, and at some moments I even began to worry about my old, good friends.

The film begins with the FBI arresting Sarah, accusing her of killing Michael's mother. Sarah is facing a life sentence, but that's not all of the bad news, because Sarah is pregnant and will be forced to disown her baby after giving birth. The greatest design engineer Michael, decides to organize another escape, as a result of which, his beloved Sarah will be free. I really liked the ending of this masterpiece series, everything was very logical and beautifully completed. One of the best series of all time deserves the highest score from me. I would like to thank all the people who worked on this series, guys, thank you so much!



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