The greatest action movie never made.*
* The 1987 Arnold Schwarzenegger dooftacular resembles the book as much as Goofy resembles a...dog? But we'll enjoy the joyful, gap-toothed idiocy in screenshots, anyway, because it was a fun sort of stupid and worthy, at least, of a little representation here.
...most especially THAT--The Carrying Man-- aka Arnold, poppin' muscles and facial hair down at the factory. |
THE VACATIONING MAN |
Get to da choppahhh! |
Ben Richards won't be getting any sugar during The Running Man. |
The Sitting Man. |
Showtime! |
As heartless as the world in The Long Walk might be, the twisted sacrifice of a hundred young men once a year is ultimately by choice--it is considered a great honor and the kids must test to even be considered. While The Prize is at least theoretically coveted, a great number of the participants chose to be there for the perceived privilege, for the singular competition, and sometimes for reasons too complex for their young minds to comprehend, especially once the race grows harder and the consequences of bowing out turn from theoretical to literal.
The dancers are seriously the most 80s thing to ever 80s. |
These close-ups are meant to showcase the bitchen, glittery leotards and nothing else. |
The Opiate of the Masses. |
The Crowd in The Running Man is less carnival, more carnivorous. Part of the game requires whipping the audience into a frenzy of bloodlust, smearing the character of the contestant and his family, and triggering the most primal fears of "good citizens." While the game employs hunters to track down and take down the running man, the audience is incentivized to participate. There's money for confirmed sightings, but there's big money and a heap of fame if an audience member manages to kill the contestant. The Crowd is a weapon of the Games Authority and the State and the bloodier and more spectacular the violence in the chase, the better.
King understands a Crowd. He is a devoted student to its nastiest behaviors and stupidest convictions. Much like the heaving, groaning congregants amassed to raise hands and speak tongues for Jesus, he understands that we all need a little proselytizing to get by, we all need some Good Time Religion to believe in, even if it's bank notes over bibles, or Orange Julius Caesar over crucified Jesus Christ. Hell, I used to hate Twitter, found it too cacophonous and chaotic to get into, but have taken to checking it every day since the election in 2016 just to read the latest "sick burns" delivered by silverest tongues on "my" side of the aisle. Sometimes they go too far. Sometimes I find it hard to care. It's a manufactured balm on my own burns. Fuck those guys (TM), brought to you by Unguentine. This is deep in the bone, the chattering, murmuring, shrieking wave of the Crowd.
As time in this real world progressed, some of King's futurstic gimmicks and gadgets grew less futuristic and more nifty "for the time," and many things still commonplace even in King's imaginings (party lines and phone booths, for example) have long gone the way of the dinosaur. But I still shudder at how close he got to the Truth of things where it really, really counted. Air cars be danged, we literally have Free-Vees in our houses...and not just one but several, and they come in all shapes and sizes, from the mega flatscreen in your living room to the laptop I'm using to write this blog entry. Instead of watching a single channel of propaganda we have a whole slew of channels to choose from, many of which spew whatever propaganda you and your like-minded friends and family are most likely to feel best about, lean into, and fall calmly asleep against in the soft assurance that you are, in fact, on the right side of history. Worse yet, it isn't even free. At least in King's dystopian future, people had no choice. Free-Vee was government mandated. We pay for the equipment (tvs, computers, phones), the electricity to run it, and every "entertainment package" imaginable to get as much of the Vee-Sans-Free as we can consume. Hog heaven and a buffet full of bullshit.
One of the departures from the book is Killian. Here, he's the host (and founder) of The Running Man. In the book, Bobby Thompson is the host while Killian (Dan, not Damon) is the executive producer. |
Maria Conchita Alonso searches for change in her futuristic triangle purse while the futuristic glow of neon pulses in the background. |
"YOU." Arnold sees Maria for the first time since she ruined their vacation. |
In all The Running Man's manufactured vilification of its contestants, the lies, retouched photographs, and poverty based fear mongering, it's still somehow not as creeping loathsome as so much of the easily accessible media today. The Running Man, for all it's grotesque misery and empty despair, is almost quaint.
Severe shoulder pads on beige women = Future Forward. |
Maybe it's the lies that have salted the pot so slowly and steadily over the years that we've collectively been brined into thick, dulled deadheads with no sense of the parameters of decency outside of whatever works for us in the moment. It is easy enough to gather around a television set alongside fellow humans to watch and rewatch the aerial view of a white Ford Bronco racing down a busy highway interspersed with footage of a walkway smeared in blood. Worse, I remember believing just about everything my government told me when I was growing up, regardless of whatever party was largely in charge at the time. If the news said it, it had to be true. You might say I was ignorant and naive...and you would not be wrong. It is also just a part of my personality, one flimsy gate made of duct tape and popsicle sticks that persists to exist even to this day. I'm learning, though, and it's been just horrible, akin to a sizzling, screaming exorcism of goodwill and dopey, smiling handshakes, but I'm girded at least against anything politician-related. I do remain, as always, vulnerable on an interpersonal level. I believe people are forthcoming, honest, and well-meaning. As empathetic as I imagine myself to be, I struggle to believe that a person standing in front of me, smiling and seemingly friendly, could have any other agenda than friendship and openheartedness. I know, right? Like fish in a barrel, I am.
This is the closest Schwarzenegger gets to the Real Ben Richards. |
"Here, use my back, victim." |
But people don't always mean well, and governments mean about as well as they are required to while still milking as much money and power as they can under the flimsy guise of "service." In the novel and the movie adaptation of The Running Man, Ben Richards kidnaps an upper-class woman (at vastly different stages and reasons because the book and the movie are only vaguely similar) who also believes everything the government tells her. Until the truth shines its ugly yellow light on how things are really done. In the movie, the Free-Vee programming is meant to numb the legions of the poor with flashy violence while feeding the bourgeois bloodlust against "criminal elements," most of which are poor and/or revolutionaries who would upend the status quo. There is a suggestion that if you just tell people the truth, they will rise up together, proletariat and bourgeoisie hand-in-hand praise Jesus, and crush the authoritarian powers of the Games Federation and the government to (perhaps) create a better world. Adorable, but stupid.
Sure, bitch. |
Here's your pen. (Look at Sven's expression.) |
In the book, the people living in poverty already know the score. They watch the Free-Vee or don't watch the Free-Vee, but they know exactly what they are and how little power they have. Contestants on all of the games are citizens, not criminals, but are painted in an ugly enough light to root against, anyway, not that it takes much for the upper class folks to root against the dirty destitute. It is easy to hate what you fear, even if it isn't the person at all but the poverty they wear like a stinking crevice of government cheese flab with a rheumy cough.
This face. Almost as good as the original ending in the book. |
The most gripping part of this read through was, by far, Ben Richards himself. I remembered each plot point as I read, but the rage he feels was so much more visceral this time around. I do not live in poverty, I do not go hungry, and I can breathe just fine most of the time, but I still understood that rage so much better than I ever had before. It isn't about one man, one party, one government, one country. If only. It's more about that insidious flora of lies, all the intertwining roots, hardy, healthy trunks, the shiny, greasy leaves, and all that heady, smoking haze of pollen, treacherous and sticky. The most comfortable are happy to believe whatever serves their own interests, everyone else be damned. Somehow millions of people living in poverty are convinced to work against their own interests to fatten cats already too fat to scat. Remember those Twitter tricksies I mentioned earlier? They fuck up, too, and more often than I can understand, because everything is reactionary now, minute to minute: the fastest condemnations, declarations, and witty decimations get the most likes. It's infuriating. I'm comfortable, I'm fed, I have everything I need and want, but that Ben Richards rage, man, it's too real, too present, too Now.
BLUE STEEL MAN. |
This is why, now more than ever, I am absolutely screaming for someone to please, please make this film. The real Running Man, the gritty, dirty, mean, hateful, angry, true Running Man. They could even keep it set in 2025 just like the book (the movie changed it to 2017, exactly 30 years from its release, which is funny because few movies look as bracingly and ridiculously 1980s as The Running Man). It could be a truly epic movie, something both action packed and moving, with little tweaks here and there, of course. Just after 9/11, I would have agreed that the ending would have to be changed. It's still tricky, but not impossible (or even groundbreaking, there have been several movies and shows that have depicted that very thing since to differing negative audience response). A new depiction of The Running Man could be a smeared, cracked mirror of the near-future Now. Audiences would definitely relate.
Tunnel of Death! In the book Ben Richards just takes the elevator down to the street. |
And I may have had other reasons for not hating it so much. Context always matters...
Deeeaaaaathhhhhh! |
With my first paycheck, I bought an NES and Super Mario Brothers. With my second paycheck, I bought a VCR, our family's very first. I'd coveted one since spending hours taping and rewatching Mtv videos and cable movies on my best friend's Betamax, even going so far as watching all of Poltergeist on backwards play. I was a high school kid with a mild video game addiction and a major movie fixation. I was obsessed.
Soon enough, we were hooked on taping movies and comedy specials off of HBO on our new VCR...Spaceballs, Splash, Aliens, The Lost Boys, everything...including The Running Man. I was the right age to enjoy some slapstick gore and pithy one-liners, but truth be told it was kind of a hard sell. Even in 1987, The Running Man was a very ridiculous movie. Plus I knew the truth of the story and how little it jived with the film. It made serious stuff into something worse than a joke. A high-haired girl could get righteously mad and stompy about it. Except...
It also had Arnold Schwarzenegger. This was important. I may or may not have had a Massive Crush on said Schwarzenegger. I may or may not have had the only damn poster anybody carried of said Schwarzenegger up on my wall, a gross, camo-makeup smeared, gun toting promotional poster from dorky Predator. I may or may not have watched The Running Man just to see said Schwarzenegger in his lil yellow track suit or, better yet, that Nice White T when he benchpresses Maria Conchita Alonso. Who can say.
Grow lights in the arena. |
Most of it was sufferable enough to watch while existing in the 80s (the jazzerdancers, the neon, the big hair) but even then the acting is just terrible--terrible--and there are few things worse than Mick Fleetwood the earnest revolutionary acting against Arnie the muscle puppet. Well, one thing was worse. In the movie, Richard Dawson (acting exactly how we imagined Richard Dawson to act after the Family Feud cameras turned off and all the kisses were dispensed) introduces the contestants, makes the audience hate them, then sends them down this silly chute to a sort of arena (earthquake ruins of the city). There they are hunted by "stalkers" who are basically just campy superhero characters from some rebate comic in Hell. They go by names that describe their particular talents, like Buzzsaw, Subzero, and the absolute worst, Dynamo, a dipshit, rapist, cartoon of an asshole in an ELO charioteer, plastic suit-of-armor who lip syncs opera and electrocutes people from afar. What. An Asshole. In, like, every way. It's so campy you start to slide down in your seat and end up on the floor with popcorn debris.
Sure, why not. |
Arnold Schwarzenegger is not Ben Richards. In the book, Richards is described as "a man in baggy gray pants and a cheap bowl haircut and sunken eyes." He lives on a diet of "greasy pizza wedges and government pill-commodities." He is not anyone remotely related to Mr. Universe. Of course the image of that hideous bowl cut really stuck in my craw when I read the book in the 80s (and quite frankly still irritates, like why) so my brain adapted a different appearance to make the hero more palatable. Ironically (or not), I always imagined Michael Biehn would make a fine Ben Richards. Yes, Arnold's pesky little rat of a Sarah Connor savior, Mr. "Cyborgs Don't Feel Pain I Do," and all around furrowed-brow-troubled-by-these-developments Everyman who later played the much loved Hicks in Aliens. He was skinny enough, for sure, but also normal-handsome and able to convey all sorts of tortured inner feelings about whatever bad thing was going on in makebelieve land, be it mean-mouthed cyborgs or skittering, chompy xenomorphs.
The Concerned Man. |
Frankly, the book could never have been accurately depicted in 1987...probably not even 1997. We were still so deep in the pocket of paranoia and blind nationalism from the Cold War to buy into the ugly truths laid out in King's story. Not even one projected as far into the future as we could stand to imagine--thirty short years--and even then it was a candy-coated, high-minded, Good Always Wins clown college of slapstick murder and flat one-liners. We deserve a real, full-tilt, no-holds-barred update of The Running Man. Something that let's off steam and let's us all collectively rage against the machine, even if it's only vicariously.
Grade: A
Scary? (0-nope to 10-you will die): 6, not scary so much as intense. The depiction of rampant, lethal pollution is scarier now than it was 30+ years ago, that's for damn sure.
Warnings: Casual and virulent bigotry and racism, Real Rage, despair, and some truly fantastic GORE that will freak you out for a lifetime (guaranteed).
Artifact: See, Rage. Thanks, Wichita Public Library!
Note: All screenshots were taken from this HD trailer and this hilarious part of the movie with the dancers and the pen. Thanks to these YouTube heroes for sharing the weirdness that is ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER'S the running man.