Review of Midnight Express (1978) by Roger Ebert for Chicago Sun-Times — 12 Nov 2002
Parker succeeds in making the prison into a full, real, rounded world, a microcosm of human behavior; I was reminded of e.e. cummings' novel The Enormous Room. The movie's art direction is especially good at recreating that world, as in a scene where Hayes and his friends try to escape down an old cistern.
And there are visions into the inferno, as in a scene in the madhouse where the inmates circle forever around a stone pillar. The movie creates spellbinding terror, all right; my only objection is that it's so eager to have us sympathize with Billy Hayes.
You can read the full review where it was originally posted online.
This review of Midnight Express (1978) was written by Roger Ebert and published by Chicago Sun-Times on 12 Nov 2002.
Midnight Express has generally received very positive reviews.
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