2025 has been a pretty good year for Stephen King adaptations. We had The Monkey, The Long Walk, and this remake of the 1987 Arnold Schwarzenegger classic. This is the weakest of the three, and a noticeable step down from the original, but it’s a fun flick, nevertheless. (It’s also been a good year for Schwarzenegger reboots of movies from 1987 after this and Predator: Badlands.)
In a dystopian future, out of work family man Ben Richards (Glen Powell) is faced with getting medicine for his sick daughter. He signs up for the nation’s biggest game show, The Running Man where he must elude a team of “Hunters” who will kill him on sight. Adding to the danger is the fact that citizens are encouraged to call in to the network and report his whereabouts for cash prizes.
Director Edgar (Shaun of the Dead) Wright’s remake is an entertaining melding of the original film and the King’s source material. It uses the same structure of the reality show from the novel (the hunt lasts thirty days instead of over the course of one broadcast) while still adopting the iconography of Paul Michael Glaser’s movie. Wright injects some of his personality into the proceedings (where else are you going to see a Home Alone-style action scene involving Michael Cera set to The Rolling Stones’ “Heartbreaker”?), although admittedly not as much as I was expecting. (The promos for the other reality shows are pretty funny too.)
The set-up is well executed. You really root for Richards, and Powell is great. (His word association test offers some huge laughs.) Wright does a fine job at setting the stakes early on and delivers a few impressive action scenes.
Ultimately, trying to be faithful to the book comes with a big disadvantage. By stretching the hunt out for an entire month, the action ebbs and flows as a consequence. The third act is easily the weakest as the social messaging becomes way too on the nose and gets in the way of the action. Fans of the book will probably have mixed feelings about how they try to remain faithful to the downbeat climax of the novel while still opting for a safe Hollywood ending.
Overall, it’s a fine vehicle for Powell and a good showcase for his action chops. Josh Brolin (who looks like he’s trying to imitate Timothy Olyphant) puts in a solid turn as the steely producer of the show. (No one could ever top Richard Dawson though.) Katy O’Brien is also fun as a fellow contestant and Cera gets some laughs as a meek revolutionary who helps Richards beat the odds.
A must-see for fans of intelligent sci-fi and razor-sharp action.
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