Directed by: Edgar Wright
Starring: Glen Powell, Jayme Lawson, Josh Brolin, Lee Pace, Colman Domingo, Michael Cera, Daniel Ezra, William H. Macy, Amelia Jones
The Running Man suffers in comparison to the 1987 Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle. Is it more faithful to Stephen King's novel? It may be, but it is a slog to get through, even from the early moments. Glen Powell assumes the Schwarzenegger role but not the charisma to carry it. At a bloated 2:13 running time, The Running Man asks a lot of any actor to carry.
Powell is Ben Richards, an angry, out-of-work factory worker in a dystopian future blackballed from work by the state for whistleblowing about unsafe conditions. His baby daughter is suffering from medical issues, his wife works at a gentleman's club presumably dancing, and Ben decides to travel down to the state TV network to try out for one of their game shows. After a physical and psychological test, Ben is chosen to participate in The Running Man, the most watched show on the network in which contestants have to avoid being killed by "Hunters" as a rabid public is encouraged to report the contestants' whereabouts for lucrative rewards. The contestant must survive for thirty days. I liked the 1987 version in which Ben and his friends would have to only live through one night and four different bad guys harnessing various weapons such as a flamethrower or a chainsaw would stalk them. This version also requires the contestants to send out a video each day to ensure the public and network he or she is still alive. Does this create opportunities for doctored footage which turns people against Ben? What do you think?
The show is run by oily network honcho Dan Killian (Brolin), who believes Ben could possibly be the first winner of The Running Man. The show is hosted by the Jerry Springer-inspired Bobby T. (Domingo), who enthusiastically eggs on the proceedings like a modern-day P.T. Barnum. Sure, these guys are bad, but at least they're fun to watch. Powell looks the part of action hero, but he has only one dimension (angry), and the entire movie grows tiresome quickly as Ben travels from place to place encountering those willing to help him and those who can't wait to turn him in.
Dragging out the action over thirty days is tedious and soon we find ourselves checking our watches more than getting involved in the action. The Running Man feels as long as the thirty days in which the action is supposed to take place.
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