‘Tis the
season to be jolly – jolly broke! All month long here at The ‘Bin, we’re gonna do
a bit of counter-programming in the form of
BUY &
SELL: CONSUMERISM GONE WILD! MONTH
We have a hot
one this week. Let’s go straight to the review!
Directed by Paul Michell Glaser, 1987, 100 minutes, Rated R
“Don’t touch that dial!”
I am very much a child of the ‘80s. As such, I had a lot of the same
cultural role models as many of the other boys my age: the too-cool-for-school
Han Solo, the all-business powerhouse of the Boston Red Sox, Jim Rice, and the
dashing good ol’ boy Bo Duke from The Dukes of Hazzard. Yes, I know The
Dukes of Hazzard hasn’t aged well, but it had car chases and whatnot, and
that was more than enough to impress me as a wee lad.
But there was one man I found particularly fascinating. He was a beloved
television personality, and because of him I learned the meaning of such words
as “suave” and “droll” because he fully embodied those concepts. And the women
loved him – loved him. That man, of course, was Richard Dawson, host of The Family Feud.
Yes, I know this take hasn’t aged well, but Dawson was effortlessly charming
and funny and stylish, and that was more than enough to impress me as a wee
lad. Other kids wanted to be astronauts or firemen or baseball players, but I
wanted to be Richard Dawson. So it shouldn’t be any surprise that I was very,
very, very excited for Mr. Dawson’s star turn as the villainous game show host
in Arnold Schwarzenegger’s The Running
Man.
I can’t help but feel that The
Running Man is the neglected film in Schwarzenegger’s filmography. I get
that it falls in a truly epic run of Ahnold movies (Predator, The
Running Man, Red Heat, Twins, Total Recall, Kindergarten
Cop, Terminator 2 – how’s that for a five-year run?), but that’s not
to love about The Running Man? It has
Ahnold in his career prime and most quippiest, it’s (very loosely) based on a Stephen King story, it has Richard
freakin’ Dawson!
Know what else it has? An opening scroll in a font that screams “The
Future Circa 1982.” I’ll spare you the full transcription, but we’re in the
distant future of 2017 and we’re either in the world of The Hunger Games or North Korea. Also, the general public has
become enamored with a “sadistic game show” featuring “high-tech gladiators.”
Maybe someday someone can explain how gladiator fights appease unhappy masses.
Hey, it’s Ahnold (or “Ben Richads,” as the film insists on calling him),
and he’s flying a choppah! He and his fellow soldiers have been ordered to fire
on a “food riot” consisting of unarmed, starving people. Ahnold refuses, and he
brothers-in-arms are strangely happy to beat the snot out of him. This not only
gets him thrown in a workcamp with Yaphet Kotto and a Nerdy Tech Guy that takes
at least seven minutes to break out of, but it also gets Ahnold framed as “The
Butcher of Bakersfield” for firing on unarmed citizens.
Enough of that, let’s talk about The Dawson! Check out how we meet his
character, famed game show host Damon Killian: Dawson is pedeconferencing with
his assistant about ratings when he physically bumps into an old janitor. The
janitor is immediately apologetic, but Dawson blows it off. Dawson draws him
in, asks the old guy for his name, complements him. And then, alone in the
elevator with his assistant, Dawson makes it clear that the janitor is to be
fired post-haste.
It’s the kind of “evil corporate guy” scene we’ve scene a million times,
but Richard Dawson sells the hell out of it. It’s the most convincing instance
of someone being warm and folksy and then a cutthroat bastard on the flip of a
switch. It makes me wish Richard Dawson did more movies.
Meanwhile, Yaphet Kotto and Nerdy Tech Guy want Ahnold to join their
Resistance to Fight the Power and Rise Against the Machine and whatnot, but
Ahnold wants nothing to do with it. Instead, he goes to his brother’s apartment
to find a Lovely Latina Lady doing aerobics in lingerie to a workout show
hosted by Jesse “The Body” Ventura. I know that sentence reads like a fever
dream, but that’s what happens. Ahnold comes up with a terrible plan to force
the Lovely Latina Lady to go to Hawaii with him, and it’s a bit depressing to
see that even in this fascist dystopian future, airport security isn’t as
strict or invasive as it is in our real life. Yada yada yada, Ahnold has
“volunteered” to be the next contestant on The
Running Man.
There’s some great satire here. In addition to the stuff we’d expect
about studios doing anything for ratings, we get fun little moments like a
“court-appointed theatrical agent” and members of the studio audience winning “The Running Man home game.” The televised
experience of The Running Man itself is
frightening like today’s Big Brother:
a large studio audience applauds the host, and together they all watch beefy
idiots do stuff via a giant TV screen.
(Side Note: Big Brother might be the stupidest thing I’ve ever
watched – and that’s coming from someone who chooses to watch and review bad movies.
Yet, as of this writing, Big Brother has been on the air for 22 years
and is still hosted by the robot known as “Julie Chen.” The has just been
renewed for a 25th season. The world is indeed full of mystery.)
Right before Ahnold is sent into the game on some kind of hydraulic
bobsled, we get the Greatest Use of Ahnold’s Catchphrase Ever. “I’ll be back,”
Ahnold gravely informs Richard Dawson. The Dawson takes a beat, intimidated,
then recovers and glibly retorts, “Only in a rerun.” Ha!
Have I really gone 900 words without talking about the actual game within
The Running Man? That’s because it’s
kind of half-baked. Contestants have to make their way through unused sets from
The Warriors while “Stalkers” –
assassins outfitted like rejected Mortal Kombat characters who are selected by
members of the studio audience – hunt them down and kill them. Of course,
they’ve never met a contestant like Ahnold, and soon enough, the studio
audience starts pulling for the underdog.
I could happily write another 900 words talking about the Stalkers. Hell,
I could write 900 words about the ridiculous Dynamo – what with his opera
singing and Lite Brite uniform and goofy little go-cart – but I’d just assume
not spoil the experience for you. Yes, as Kurt Fuller grumbles in a
particularly self-aware moment, The
Running Man does have some third act problems, but it’s the helluva lot of
fun and deserving of more attention than it gets.
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This is the great and terrible Dynamo. Now go watch this movie.
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