The Running Man (1987)

Movie · 1987 · Action, Thriller, Science Fiction · 1h 41m · R · English

Curator score: 2.2/10 (367.5K ratings)

It is the year 2019. "The Running Man" is a deadly game no one has ever survived. But Schwarzenegger has yet to play.

Overview

By 2017, the global economy has collapsed and U.S. society has become a totalitarian police state, censoring all cultural activity. The government pacifies the populace by broadcasting a number of game shows in which convicted criminals fight for their lives, including the gladiator-style The Running Man, hosted by the ruthless Damon Killian, where “runners” attempt to evade “stalkers” and certain death for a chance to be pardoned and set free.

Ratings

Director

Paul Michael Glaser

Production

Braveworld Productions, Keith Barish Productions, Taft Entertainment Pictures

Cast

Arnold Schwarzenegger, Richard Dawson, María Conchita Alonso, Yaphet Kotto, Jim Brown, Jesse Ventura, Erland van Lidth, Marvin J. McIntyre, Gus Rethwisch, Professor Toru Tanaka, Mick Fleetwood, Dweezil Zappa, Karen Leigh Hopkins, Sven-Ole Thorsen, Edward Bunker, Bryan Kestner, Anthony Pena, Kurt Fuller, Ken Lerner, Dey Young

Where to watch

fuboTV, Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential, Starz, Philo

Curator Review

Verdict

A gleefully trashy, high-concept 80s action-satire with a strong cult appeal. It’s worth it for the outrageous game-show premise, Arnold’s deadpan charisma, and the lurid production design, but the execution is uneven and the social commentary is more blunt than sharp.

Best for

  • fans of campy dystopian action
  • viewers who enjoy quotable one-liners and practical-effects spectacle
  • people curious about 80s sci-fi satire
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger completists

Skip if

  • you want tight plotting or polished storytelling
  • you dislike cheesy tone and broad performances
  • you’re expecting a faithful, serious adaptation of the premise
  • you prefer subtle political allegory over loud, comic-book exaggeration

Overview

The Running Man is one of those movies that survives on attitude. The premise is irresistible: a totalitarian future turns televised murder into mass entertainment, and the movie leans into the absurdity with neon grime, oversized villains, and a constant stream of punchlines. It’s less a sleek thriller than a rowdy piece of pop-culture junk food, and that’s a big part of its charm.

Worth noting

What keeps it watchable is the collision between its nasty satire and its cartoon energy. The film sees where spectacle, propaganda, and audience complicity can go, even if it delivers those ideas with a sledgehammer. The game-show setting gives it a memorable rhythm, and the supporting rogues’ gallery makes each set piece feel like a new flavor of lunacy.

Bottom line

At the same time, it’s undeniably uneven. The pacing lags, the emotional beats are thin, and the movie often feels like a collection of good concepts in search of a better script. But if you’re in the mood for a loud, ridiculous, very 80s dystopian action movie, it has enough personality to earn its cult status.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Patrick Willems (3.5★) · 3177 likes

There’s a character named Dynamo who’s a big guy in a Tron costume with a centurion helmet who sings opera and has electric powers and I don’t understand why he isn’t in every movie

Matt Singer (3.5★) · 2650 likes

Deepfakes were invented 30 years ago in a movie where Arnold Schwarzenegger enters a Murder Game Show and strangles a hockey-themed American Gladiator of Death and then quips “He was a real pain in the neck.” Movies are just the best, guys.

laird (5★) · 1292 likes

Crazy how things that seemed like absurdities in this movie now seem plausible. "Department of Justice: Entertainment Division." "The President's Agent."

DirkH (4★) · 922 likes

Did you know that when you eat cheese it releases an opiate called 'casomorphin' into your stomach, making you feel all good and giddy? I guess eighties cheese is no different, because for some reason I really, really like this cheese fest based on source material a gazillion times better.

DallasFrance (3.5★) · 856 likes

“I’LL BE BACK.” “HE HAD TO SPLIT.” “YOU ARE ONE UGLY MOTHERFUCKER.” “HELLO, CHRISTMAS TREE!” “HASTA LA VISTA, BABY.” “LET OFF SOME STEAM, BENNET!” “WELL, CONSIDER THIS A DIVORCE.” “HAVE A LIGHT!” “HERE IS SUBZERO! NOW… PLAIN ZERO!” “STICK AROUND.” “Only on a rerun!” Arnie Trivia: While Billy Wilder’s final official film was Buddy Buddy in 1981, he ghost-wrote all of the I’m-about-to-kill-you quips in Arnold Schwarzenegger’s 80s action films. A late career highlight, to be sure! Arnold Schwarzenegger Ranked Stephen King Adaptations Ranked

Recommended similar titles

The Warriors

1979 · Action, Thriller · 1h 34m · R · Curator 7.9/10 (188.4K ratings) · Where to watch: fuboTV, Philo

A stylized chase movie with comic-book energy, urban danger, and a cult-movie sense of momentum and attitude.

Escape from New York

1981 · Action, Thriller, Science Fiction · 1h 39m · R · Curator 7.5/10 (174.4K ratings) · Where to watch: Philo

Shares the grimy dystopian mood, anti-authoritarian edge, and rough-edged genre fun of 80s sci-fi action.

RoboCop

1987 · Action, Thriller, Science Fiction · 1h 42m · R · Curator 7.6/10 (696.7K ratings)

Another satirical action film that mixes ultraviolence, media critique, and deadpan humor with real bite.

They Live

1988 · Science Fiction, Action, Thriller · 1h 33m · R · Curator 6.5/10 (502K ratings)

A cult dystopia that turns consumer culture and propaganda into blunt, entertaining genre commentary.

The Truman Show

1998 · Comedy, Drama · 1h 43m · PG · Curator 9.4/10 (5.9M ratings) · Where to watch: fuboTV, Paramount Plus Premium

For viewers drawn to media manipulation and spectacle, this offers a more elegant but still accessible critique of performance and control.

Battle Royale

2000 · Drama, Thriller, Action · 1h 53m · R · Curator 9.8/10 (3.8K ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads

A brutal survival-game premise that pushes the televised competition idea into darker, more emotionally charged territory.

The Hunger Games

2012 · Science Fiction, Adventure, Action · 2h 22m · PG-13 · Curator 6.5/10 (3.8M ratings) · Where to watch: Hulu

A mainstream evolution of the same entertainment-as-oppression concept, with clearer worldbuilding and broader appeal.

The Purge

2013 · Science Fiction, Horror, Thriller · 1h 25m · R · Curator 1.0/10 (927.2K ratings)

Another high-concept social nightmare built around violence as public policy and mass spectacle.

Snowpiercer

2013 · Action, Science Fiction, Drama · 2h 7m · R · Curator 6.9/10 (1.3M ratings)

A class-struggle dystopia with sharp satire, vivid production design, and escalating set-piece invention.

The Lobster

2015 · Comedy, Drama, Romance · 1h 59m · R · Curator 7.3/10 (1.4M ratings) · Where to watch: Max

For the absurdist side of the appeal: a bizarre, deadpan social allegory with a strong cult sensibility.

Upgrade

2018 · Action, Thriller, Science Fiction · 1h 40m · R · Curator 6.1/10 (527.5K ratings) · Where to watch: Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads

A leaner, nastier genre ride with a futuristic edge, strong action choreography, and a pulpy revenge engine.

Ready or Not

2019 · Horror, Comedy · 1h 36m · R · Curator 5.1/10 (1.3M ratings) · Where to watch: Hulu, fuboTV

A darkly comic survival thriller that turns a deadly game into a crowd-pleasing genre exercise.

Topics

dystopian sci-fi, 80s action, satire, game show violence, cult classic, media manipulation, camp, futurism, totalitarian state, practical effects

Open The Running Man (1987) on Curator TV