The Running Man

Does America harbor a sadistic society? Are stunt-based TV competitions a last refuge for the desperate? Is “reality” TV real or is it faked? How close are we to a dystopian police state? 

These are legitimate questions one might ask after seeing the new film The Running Man. But if you want to ENJOY the movie, it’s best to table those questions for now and let the almost non-stop action take you along on Ben Richards’s quest for survival. It’s a fun ride with new challenges for The Running Man popping up constantly.

Richards (Glen Powell) is a husband and father whose baby daughter needs meds. He can’t keep a job and keeps getting fired for insubordination. His wife Sheila (Jayme Lawson) works at a strip joint as a waitress. Richards goes to network studios to pursue a spot on a game show and ends up as one of three contestants on The Running Man. The odds that he will survive the hunters who chase him are small but the potential reward is a huge pile of money. 

The film is a revised remake of the 1987 film The Running Man which starred Arnold Schwarzenegger as Richards and Richard Dawson as Damian Killian, the producer and host of the TV show. The new film stars Josh Brolin as producer Dan Killian and Colman Domingo as Bobby, the show’s host. The prize money is in “new dollars” and the currency shown has Schwarzenegger’s photo on it!

Richards’s journey takes him from the dystopian city where he lives to New Hampshire and Maine. The tale is from a book by Bangor resident Stephen King, originally published under the nom de plume Richard Bachman.

Before he hits the road he gets disguises and fake IDs from a crafty anarchist played by the always excellent Willam H. Macy.

In a beautiful old New England home Richards is given refuge by Elton, a strange man played by Micheal Cera whose crazed mother (Sandra Dickinson) ID’s Richards and calls in the Hunters to take him in. For Cera, this is his second odd ball role this year, following his appearance in The Phoenician Scheme back in the spring. 

Richards escapes, ending up in a highway chase, riding with a young woman Amelia (Emilia Jones) before boarding an airplane where he faces off with a prior Running Man contestant Evan McCone (Lee Pace) on his way to the story’s conclusion.

The action is intense and the story moves fast. The movie isn’t exactly one long chase scene but Richards has to stay on the move. A one word review of The Running Man might be “kinetic.” As mentioned, it’s a fun film and Glen Powell is up to the task of carrying it to the finish line. Enjoy it with the large bucket of popcorn.

The Running Man is directed by Edgar Wright, written by Wright and Michael Bacall. Rated R.

Nuremberg

Nuremberg. Powerful drama. Excellent film!

You’d be correct to presume that the two lead actors would deliver knockout performances in this new movie. Hermann Goring (Russell Crowe) and U.S. Army shrink Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek) have a compelling relationship before, during and after the trial of the highest ranking surviving Nazi and several of his henchmen.

A surprise is Michael Shannon’s acting. He plays U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson. Shannon’s a solid actor but his work here is a few notches above his normal level. It’s a juicy role for him and he brings it home.

Goring is captured after the war has ended. Should the allies just shoot him and move on? Justice Jackson suggests an international tribunal would allow the world to know the details of the German’s horrific acts. Jackson meets the pope to seek the pontiff’s sanction for such a trial. He becomes the lead prosecutor.

Yes, Nuremberg is a courtroom drama. But much of the film’s narrative occurs outside the courtroom. Kelley meets newswoman Lila (Lydia Peckham) on his train ride to Nuremberg. Her appearance later in the film leads to a key development.

Kelley is assigned to evaluate the Nazis as they await trial. His conversations with Goring lead him to have a level of respect—almost an admiration—for the Nazi murderer. He even serves as a go-between, taking missives from Goring to his wife.

Kelley is joined along the way by Dr. Gustav Gilbert (Colin Hanks) who tries to provide input and assistance to Kelley but they clash. Prosecution teammate Brit Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe (Richard E. Grant) helps justice Jackson in his courtroom face-off with Goring. Kelley’s translator Howie Triest (Leo Woodall) adds an important viewpoint.

Nuremberg has several scenes of the Nazi death camps, offering visual evidence of the mass killings of Jews, showing piles of human bodies and evidence of abuse of those still alive. Even if you’ve seen some of these images before, their effect is still gut wrenching eighty years later. Obviously this film montage of Nazi terror was a vital element of the case that led to the conviction and sentencing of Goring and his associates.

James Valentine wrote and directed Nuremberg. He does a nice job of balancing all the story’s parts and not getting bogged down in its focus on Goring or on the drama inside the courtroom. Bravo, Mr. Valentine!

There are those who will (and have already) compare what happened in Nazi Germany to our recent political history in the United States. But equating a president who works to consolidate executive power and punish his political enemies with a regime that slaughtered six million humans is ridiculous. 

Could what happened in Germany a century ago happen here? Could it happen anywhere? Is our species prone to evil behavior if unchecked? Is there a lesson for the world from the Nuremberg trial? Yes. This new film reiterates that lesson and reminds us of what happened then and should never be forgotten.

Nuremberg is rated R. It runs just under two-and-a-half hours.