Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

5 best prison movies if you liked Spiderhead

Director Joseph Kosinski (Top Gun: Maverick) and actor Miles Teller (The Offer) are leaving the Navy and heading to prison in Netflix’s Spiderhead, which is now available to watch on the streaming service. At the Spiderhead penitentiary, inmates volunteer to test various chemicals on their bodies in exchange for shorter prison times. These chemicals alter the thoughts, feelings, and actions of the test subjects with varying degrees of success.

Spiderhead is another welcome addition to the prison movie genre. Prison movies tend to revolve around penitentiary life and escape attempts as inmates dream about a better life outside the walls of their compound. Whether it’s a sci-fi prison or a 1950s pensionary, films set in prisons tend to be both riveting and exciting as they chronicle the adventures of an inmate and their quest for freedom.

Recommended Videos

Escape from New York (1981)

Image used with permission by copyright holder

A prison break is an excellent backdrop for a thriller, but converting the entirety of Manhattan Island in New York City into a maximum-security prison is pure genius. When Air Force One crashes on Manhattan in the year 1997, the iconic Snake Plissken, the Special Forces soldier turned criminal played by Kurt Russell, is presented with a deal: Rescue the President within 22 hours and receive a pardon for his crime or die from the explosives that were injected into his arm.

The 1981 film catches two creators at the right time in their careers. John Carpenter was hot off the heels of Halloween, which is one of the most successful and influential horror films of all time. Russell was a former child star looking to break into Hollywood who recently worked under Carpenter for the television film Elvis. With Carpenter’s signature visuals and score and Russell’s undeniable charisma, Escape from New York is a sci-fi action classic that still holds up in 2022.

Escape from New York is available to rent on Apple or Prime Video.

The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

Columbia Pictures

Although The Shawshank Redemption has no supernatural elements, the ideas of escapism and hope for a better life play prominent roles in both Shawshank and Spiderhead. In 1949, Andy Dufresne, played by Tim Robbins, is wrongly convicted for the murders of his wife and her lover. Dufresne is sentenced to life in prison and sent to Shawshank State Prison. Inside the prison, Andy befriends Red, played by Morgan Freeman, and the film follows their lives for nearly two decades.

The Shawshank Redemption is prominently considered one of the greatest films of all time due to its magnetic chemistry between Andy and Red and its redemptive story arc. Many of the inmates inside the prison might have committed deadly crimes, but the film creates sympathy and compassion for the prisoners, which is rare in a prison film. The feel-good ending is the perfect way to cap off a brilliant film.

The Shawshank Redemption is available to stream on HBO Max.

Escape from Alcatraz (1979)

Paramount

No “best of” list of prison movies can be trusted if it excludes one of the most important films in the genre, Escape from Alcatraz. The plot is very simple, but the attention to detail is quite complex. Frank Morris, a highly intelligent criminal played by Clint Eastwood, is sent to the maximum-security prison on Alcatraz Island. The warden makes it very clear that no inmate has ever escaped these walls due to its secluded location and high level of security. Challenge accepted.

The film meticulously chronicles Morris’ actions as he slowly plans his escape. Eastwood’s domineering presence commands the audience’s attention in every scene as the film builds toward his escape attempt. Escape from Alcatraz is just as suspenseful as it is entertaining, and the final act will leave audiences on the edge of their seats.

Escape from Alcatraz is available to stream AMC+.

12 Monkeys (1995)

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Just like the inmates in Spiderhead12 Monkeys relies on the idea of volunteerism and its use as a way to escape. Bruce Willis stars as James Cole, a prisoner in the year 2035 who agrees to be sent back in time to 1996 to help find information about a deadly virus that will eventually destroy most of humanity.

This sci-fi time-travel story comes from the mind of Terry Gilliam, who crafts one of the most futuristic depictions of the penal system in cinema. The nonlinear narrative and fast-paced story may require multiple viewings for one to understand the hidden themes and messages. However, viewers are rewarded for their patience thanks to a technical tour de force from Gilliam and standout performances from Willis and Brad Pitt, with the latter receiving an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor.

12 Monkeys is available to stream on Starz.

Shutter Island (2010)

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Though penitentiaries and psychiatric facilities are two different entities, Shutter Island feels like a prison due to its seclusion from society and strict set of rules that patients must follow. U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, and his partner, Chuck Aule, travel to a psychiatric facility for the criminally insane on Shutter Island. The two marshals are tasked with investigating the disappearance of a patient who drowned her three children.

Part psychological thriller and part neo-noir, Shutter Island will leave the audience guessing throughout the entire film. The shocking ending is still talked about to this day. The film is another entry into the successful partnership between DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese. That alone should be enough reason to watch this intriguing mystery.

Shutter Island is available to stream on Showtime.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Dan is a passionate and multitalented content creator with experience in pop culture, entertainment, and sports. Throughout…
Forget Die Hard; this 1980s action film is the most underrated Christmas movie ever

Warning: This article discusses suicide.
The campaign to canonize Die Hard as a Christmas movie has been in full swing for year now, with adherents advocating for the movie’s holiday bona fides with almost religious zealotry. But while some have made compelling arguments – even the movie’s distributor, 20th Century Fox, called it the “greatest Christmas story ever told” – it’s not hard to see why others, including star Bruce Willis, consider it a shaky claim.
Yes, it’s set during Christmastime. And yes, there’s the glorious sequence in which Beethoven’s Ode to Joy plays as the villains help themselves to $640 million in early holiday loot. (The director, John McTiernan wanted to use Ode to Joy because he had liked it in that heartwarming holiday classic A Clockwork Orange.) But while Christmastime is an effective setting, there’s just not a ton of evidence that the movie is Christmas-themed. Die Hard 2 (which I’ve always preferred to the original anyway) is set during the holidays in Washington, D.C., and boasts something far more Christmassy than the LA-set original: snow.
Which isn’t to say that Christmas movies can’t be set in LA. There's an argument that Lethal Weapon, released the summer before Die Hard (Joel Silver produced both movies), more intentionally embodies classic holiday themes. Here are some reasons why it belongs in the canon of Christmas classics as much -- or more than -- Die Hard.

Just a lonely Christmas

Read more
This Anne Hathaway thriller is 2023’s freakiest movie. Here’s why you should watch it

Early December is the time to attend to the usual list of things to do before the year ends, such as pay overdue bills, buy those last-minute gifts, or grudgingly attend painfully awkward Christmas parties. It's also a time to feast on the best cinema has to offer, as studios and independent distributors alike release movie after movie designed to win awards and the stone-cold hearts of critics worldwide.

Chances are, you've seen Oppenheimer, and have at least heard of Killers of the Flower Moon, Napoleon, or The Holdovers. All of those movies are excellent and deserve to be seen, but there's one movie that's flying under the radar that's equally worthy of attention. Eileen is being marketed as a thriller, and while it does have its share of thrills, it's so much more than that. It's also a great atmospheric mood piece and an excellent showcase for two actresses at the top of their game. It also possesses one of the most infuriating endings of the year. Eileen is freaky (you just never know quite where it's going) and indefinable, and it's 2023's most beguiling movie.
Eileen has a great sense of time and place

Read more
You probably didn’t watch the most underrated crime thriller of the 2010s. Here’s why you should see it now

In 2018, one of the greatest directors alive made a surprising, creatively inspired left turn. Just five years after he won Best Picture for 12 Years a Slave, Steve McQueen released his fourth feature directorial effort, Widows. Co-written by Gone Girl scribe Gillian Flynn, the crime thriller marked McQueen’s first foray into the kind of genre filmmaking he’d long avoided. Not only was it an unexpected follow-up to an austere award winner like 12 Years a Slave, but it felt like a purposeful change of pace for a director whose previous credits also included decidedly dour dramas like Hunger and Shame.

Many viewed the decision with skepticism: Was McQueen really the right fit for a pulpy thriller about a group of widows who decide to pick up where their deceased criminal husbands left off? When it was eventually released, Widows was welcomed with little fanfare. Some seemed to regard it as an intriguing, but ultimately minor experiment on McQueen’s part, and while it wasn’t a box office bomb, casual moviegoers didn’t run out in droves to see it, either.

Read more