Para reduzir o risco de fugas, a Luftwaffe decidiu transferir para um campo de prisioneiros de segurança máxima uma parte dos seus mais audaciosos prisioneiros de guerra Aliados, quase todos com um longo currículo de fugas fracassadas. Decididos a não baixar os braços e a, pelo menos, provocarem a maior confusão possível entre os captores Alemães, um grupo de prisioneiros decide organizar uma fuga em massa de 250 prisioneiros numa só noite.
A “Ilha do Diabo” não é somente uma prisão…é um purgatório onde homens pagam por seus crimes sofrendo as maiores degradações e brutalidades. Localizada na Guiana Francesa, é um lugar cercado por uma floresta impenetrável e de onde é impossível que algum de seus prisioneiros consiga fugir. Henri Charrière (Steve McQueen) é conhecido pelo apelido de “Papillon” devido à tatuagem de uma borboleta que carrega em seu peito. Louis Dega (Dustin Hoffman) é seu companheiro, um prisioneiro frágil e intelectualizado. Dois homens com nada em comum, mas cheios de vontade de viver e de buscar um lugar para morrer.
Henri “Papillon” Charrière, um arrombador de cofres do submundo parisiense, é injustamente incriminado por homicídio e condenado a prisão perpétua na colónia penal da Ilha do Diabo. Papillon cria uma improvável aliança com o falsário Louis Dega, que em troca de proteção concorda em financiar a fuga de Papillon. Juntos irão planear e executar a mais corajosa fuga alguma vez contada.
Em 1974, um desorientado jovem de 19 anos chamado Michael Peterson decidiu que queria fazer um nome para si próprio e, portanto, com uma espingarda caseira de canos serrados e uma cabeça cheia de sonhos, tentou roubar uma agência dos correios.Foi rapidamente interceptado e inicialmente condenado a sete anos de prisão, Peterson esteve posteriormente mais 34 anos atrás das grades, trinta das quais em isolamento.Com uma inteligente, provocadora e estilizada abordagem, "Bronson" (Baseado numa história veridica) segue a metamorfose de Mickey Peterson o mais perigoso prisioneiro da Grã-Bretanha, Charles Bronson.
After killing a prison guard, convict Robert Stroud faces life imprisonment in solitary confinement. Driven nearly mad by loneliness and despair, Stroud's life gains new meaning when he happens upon a helpless baby sparrow in the exercise yard and nurses it back to health. Despite having only a third grade education, Stroud goes on to become a renowned ornithologist and achieves a greater sense of freedom and purpose behind bars than most people find in the outside world.
Despite vocal objections from Warden Blakely, prison psychologist Diana Purlow journeys deep inside the mind of serial killer Jesse Mowat in a desperate attempt to reveal the source of his psychotic tendencies.
Members of a teenage gang are sent to the State Reformatory, presided over by the callous Thompson. Soon Patsy Gargan, a former gangster appointed Deputy Commissioner, arrives and takes over the administration to run the place on radical principles. Thompson needs a quick way to discredit him.
Army Captain Edward Hall returns to the US after two years in a prison camp in the Korean War. In the camp he was brainwashed and helped the Chinese convince the other prisoners that they were fighting an unjust war. When he comes back he is charged for collaboration with the enemy. Where does loyalty end in a prison camp, when the camp is a living hell?
There are 100,000 US citizens in solitary confinement across the country, a staggering number prompting comment from both President Obama and the Pope. Situated in rural Virginia, 300 miles from any urban center, Red Onion State Prison is one of over 40 supermax prisons across the US built to hold prisoners in eight-by-ten-foot cells for 23 hours a day. Filmed over the course of one year, this eye-opening film braids stark prison imagery, stories from correction officers, and intimate reflections from the men who are locked up in isolation. The inmates share the paths that led them to prison and their daily struggles to maintain their sanity.
For decades, the United States has been fixated on incarceration, building prisons and locking up more and more people. But at what cost, and has it really made a difference? FRONTLINE goes to the epicenter of the raging debate about incarceration in America, focusing on the controversial practice of solitary confinement and on new efforts to reduce the prison population, as officials are rethinking what to do with criminals.
In 2011, Maine State Prison launched a pioneering reform program to scale back its use of solitary confinement. Bafta and Emmy-winning film-maker Dan Edge and his co-director Lauren Mucciolo were given unprecedented access to the solitary unit - and filmed there for more than three years. The result is an extraordinary and harrowing portrait of life in solitary - and a unique document of a radical and risky experiment to reform a prison. The US is the world leader in solitary confinement. More than 80,000 American prisoners live in isolation, some have been there for years, even decades. Solitary is proven to cause mental illness, it is expensive, and it is condemned by many as torture. And yet for decades, it has been one of the central planks of the American criminal justice system.
A solitary dish washing robot living out his life in the back room of a restaurant is enlightened to the world that exists beyond his four walls, with the help of a small friend he breaks free of confinement to pursue his dream of exploration.