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Review: The Running Man
To be clear, the original 1987 film is dreadful. The type of ā80s action sludge you would get with a bunch of swinginā dick producers saying they just want a film with boom boom, without bothering to work out a coherent script.Ā
It was an intended star vehicle for emerging action hero Arnold SchwarzeneggerĀ āĀ when the original film was released, in mid-November, it was coming off his biggest hit to date, the estimable Predator, which had premiered at the beginning of the summerĀ ā as his name was becoming synonymous with such fare. As such, it gleefully included a meandering bunch of dumb-ass stunt pieces ending in bloody carnage with Arnold firing off one of his patented terrible, grim puns (āNeed a light?ā he would tell someone he just hit with a flamethrower; or āHe had to split,ā about someone he sheared in half) ā but even for the rabid, teen boys whose foreheads it was aiming for, it didnāt do much at the box office.
Mind you, there remain critics of a certain vintage, who saw some of these rancid early Arnold moviesĀ āĀ to this list, we can add Commando, Raw Deal, and Red Heat, among othersĀ ā at a formative time in their lives, who will try to defend them as something other than violent cineplex trash. They will say the films are underrated, and attempt to justify their childhood nostalgia behind a cloak of formalism. Do not let their questionable enthusiasm sway you: Many of these movies are cynical, formulaic junk. Itās like rhapsodizing about a Happy Meal you had that one time, or how funny you thought āThreeās Companyā was.Ā
The 1987 version of The Running Man was depressingly stupid and poorly made ā filmed with a last-minute replacement director in Paul Michael Glasser, best known for driving around a red and white Gran Torino with his good friend David Soul in the TV series āStarsky & HutchāĀ ā with achingly stale āsatireā (a TV poster in an executiveās office boosts a show called āThe Hate Boatā) but there was a germ of a good idea there, taken from the novel by Stephen King, something that might have worked better had anyone actually tried to find it.Ā
Enter Edgar Wright, the type of director who can handle action, satire and silliness in equal portions. This version runs considerably closer to the source material, which helps give its hero some emotional weight, as opposed to watching Arnold decimate everyone in his path for the sake of big-muscle violence.Ā
Set in a future dystopia (2025, in the novel, to be exact, a hauntingly apt prediction, as it happens) where corporations have taken over the existing government, and rule the country with an oppressive iron fist, Glen Powell plays Ben Richards, a hard-working blue collar type, who has lost various jobs for his acts of solidarity and kindness towards his fellow workers.Ā
Desperate for work, as his young daughter is badly sick and in need of medicine, and his wife, Sheila (Jayme Lawson), is forced to work at nightclubs where she gets propositioned all the time, Richards reluctantly agrees to audition for āThe Running Man,ā a sadistic and wildly popular game show, run by a slick entertainment executive, Dan Killian (Josh Brolin), and MCād by a populist weasel known as Bobby T (Colman Domingo).Ā
Naturally, Richards wins a spot on the showĀ āĀ his secret power, according to Killian is his rage, which the executive believes gives him an actual shot to win for the first time in the showās historyĀ āĀ along with a pair of less-likely contestants (Katy OāBrian and Martin Herlihy). They are sent pell-mell out into the world, given a 12-hour headstart before the producers send out the Hunters, lead by bemasked psychopath Evan McCone (Lee Pace), to chase after them. In short order, Richards must elude the Hunters, and practically everyone else in the country, as any citizen who recognizes the contestant can call the network tip line and be richly rewarded. If he can survive 30 days of such deep inhospitality, he stands to win enough generational wealth to keep his family protected for life.
What follows is Richardsā sometimes clever, sometimes fortuitous spiked journey, meeting sympathetic people wanting to topple the hierarchy as he goes. The longer he survivesĀ āĀ taping combative updates for the show, as per requirementsĀ āĀ the more he becomes a sort of populist hero, the āinstigatorā as one character puts it, that puts a charge into the sense of rebellion in the country.Ā
Wright is working more or less within his element hereĀ āĀ stylized violence surrounded by biting satire (a recurring bit featuring a reality series calledāThe AmericanosāĀ āĀ a Kardashian stand-in familyĀ āĀ is particularly ripe)Ā ā and proves a good match for the material, even as Kingās plot starts grinding its gears in the third act.Ā
Wrightās version, while still substantially stuffed with action bits, does include a thread of more politicised criticism. Hard to miss the genuinely rebellious spirit of Wrightās vision (as one character puts it, the scariest thing in the world for a fascist regime is āa free man with a conscienceā) as it plays out in a not-so-subtle backdrop of deep fakes, media caving in to a dictatorās whims, and mass cruelty as an opiate for the masses, as it were.Ā
The director also has a good touch with layered action sequencesĀ āĀ a fiery encounter between a be-toweled Richards coming out of a shower, and a group of agents at a Boston flop house anchors the middle of the film with deftly executed pizzazzĀ āĀ and remains near the top of his game for significant needle drops (the film opens with Sly and the Family Stoneās irrespressible āUnderdog,ā and features a deep cut Stonesā tune at the start of the Boston fracas).Ā
More significantly, despite Richardsā character not quite adding up (Killianās notion aside, Richardsā supposed rage seems to come and go as the plot sees fit, rather than being organic to the man himself) it actually makes senseĀ āĀ far more, it must be said, than with Arnoldās version of the characterĀ ā that he could become a touchstone for a population stifled by oppression.Ā
Making that work is largely the effort of Powell, whose supernova charisma powers much of the filmās breathless pace. Not only is he movie star good looking (and, shall we say, able-bodied), what comes across in his work is the palpable joy he seems to feel in producing it. Whatever hellish devilment heās up againstĀ āĀ and in this film, heās subjected to quite a bitĀ āĀ you get the sense thereās no place heād rather be. Itās a rare quality to find in an actor (and, perhaps, a fleeting one, depending on the stresses of oneās career), but it helps adhere an audience to whatever project they attempt.Ā
Wright didnāt have to work terribly hard to clear the ground-level hurdle of the original, but he still injects enough fun and poignance to make the film a decent ride. It must be said, however, for all the ways this version eclipses Arnoldās, the films share one significantly unfortunate element: An ending that seems entirely too tidy and pat. You canāt win them all.Ā
Sweet Smell of Success (1957)

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Sweet Smell of Success (1957)
Pickup on South Street (1953)
marry me - st vincent + sweet smell of success