đđ¨ Review: Edgar Wrightâs The Running Man Hits the Ground Sprinting
A Prophetic Dystopia Refuelled for the Modern Era
Director Edgar Wrightâs new adaptation of Stephen Kingâs 1982 novel, The Running Man, is not a simple remake of the 1987 Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle. Instead, itâs a darker, more faithful, and frenetically paced reboot that cuts to the satirical heart of King’s original visionâa vision chillingly set in the future year of 2025. Starring Glen Powell as the desperate protagonist, Ben Richards, the film arrives on screen with visceral action and a palpable sense of political rage that feels acutely relevant to our current media landscape.
The movie plunges the audience into a near-future America marked by grotesque wealth inequality, a collapsed healthcare system, and a populace kept docile by “Free-Vee,” a constant stream of reality garbage and violent entertainment. The top-rated show is, of course, The Running Man, where contestants are hunted for a billion-dollar prize.
Glen Powellâs Furious Everyman and the Star-Studded Cast
Glen Powell steps into the lead role of Ben Richards, a blacklisted former labourer who enters the deadly game show as a last resort to secure life-saving medicine for his gravely ill daughter. Unlike the 80s action hero, Powellâs Richards is a simmering, short-fused everymanâa “rage-fueled, middle finger” to the uncaring corporate authorities. He convincingly portrays a man pushed to his absolute limit, relying on street smarts and desperate instinct rather than sheer muscle mass.
The film is elevated by a magnificent supporting cast who embody the various degrees of villainy and desperation in this dystopian future:
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Josh Brolin as Dan Killian, the ruthlessly composed network producer, delivers a cool, corporate menace that perfectly captures the banality of media evil.
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Colman Domingo is electric as the flamboyant and cynical game show host, Bobby “Bobby T” Thompson, whipping the studio audience into a frenzy with manufactured narratives.
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Lee Pace brings a sleek, masked intimidation as Evan McCone, the mysterious lead Hunter.
Wright and co-writer Michael Bacall wisely retain the core plot of Kingâs novella, focusing on Richardsâ 30-day run across the country while being tracked by both professional Hunters and bounty-hunting citizens who use a real-time app to locate him.
The Satire: Manipulation in the Age of Deepfakes
Where the film truly excels is in updating the novelâs media critique for the digital age. While the 1987 film satirized network sensationalism, the 2025 version tackles the insidious power of digital fabrication and narrative control. Killian and the Network use AI-generated ‘deepfakes’ of Richards’s recorded ‘screeds’ to portray him as a dangerous, anti-social villain, cementing the filmâs timeliness in an era of manipulated media.
This update allows Wright to explore the unsettling idea that the Network doesn’t just broadcast death for entertainment; they control the truth itself to justify the system’s cruelty. This theme is bolstered by the presence of underground rebels, including a resourceful black-market dealer (William H. Macy) and an anti-Network podcaster, who assist Richards in his attempt to expose the lie to the public.
High-Octane Action with a Signature Style
Director Edgar Wright (known for Baby Driver and Hot Fuzz) brings his signature kinetic energy and tight, visual pacing to the action. The film rarely lets up, moving from frantic chases in futuristic, neon-lined slums to claustrophobic face-offs with the Hunters. The action sequences feel inventive, often employing Richardsâs quick wit and ability to improvise Rube Goldberg-esque booby traps to survive. The film is a thrilling watch, though critics have noted that Wright’s inherent playfulness sometimes undercuts the grim, serious intent of the political message, preventing the movie from achieving the truly chilling horror of its source material.
Verdict: A Punchy, Relevant Thriller
The Running Man (2025) is a stylish, action-packed, and highly watchable cinematic experience. It succeeds in taking a decades-old story and making it feel urgently relevant to modern anxieties about economic injustice, corporate power, and the weaponization of entertainment. Glen Powell proves his star power as the furious, desperate hero, steering the film through its propulsive, albeit slightly overlong, runtime.
It’s a vibrant, entertaining, and ultimately successful sprint that provides both a thrilling action film and a timely reflection on the state of media and society.