Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Hit Escape on this one

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PAPILLON Direction: Actors:

Rating:

The book was a bestseller when it came out in 1969. The original film adaptation, released in 1973, was a blockbuste­r and remains among Hollywood’s finest escape dramas. This remake is just redundant.

In his masterful autobiogra­phical work, Henri Charriere had taken the reader through the horrors of the French penal system in the early 1930s. The film starred Steve Mcqueen and Dustin Hoffman as the two prisoners determined to escape.

This new retelling directed by Danish filmmaker Michael Noer is faithful to the narrative arc, but where the book and first movie were suspensefu­l and engaging, this is unrelentin­gly gruesome.

Charlie Hunnam plays the petty criminal nicknamed Papillon (French for butterfly, after the tattoo on his chest). He’s been framed for the murder of a pimp and shipped to a seemingly inescapabl­e island fortress where he befriends a vulnerable fellow convict (Rami Malek).

Their several escape attempts, including one on a small boat tossed around in a storm, are as harrowing as life in prison.

But they keep going. With its savage beatings, stabbings and an overly bloody beheading, the film offers far more violence than suspense.

Unrelentin­gly grim throughout its 130-minute runtime, Papillon is an exhausting experience.

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