The Running Man
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Paul Michael Glaser
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Richard Dawson
Maria Conchita Alonso
Yaphet Kotto
Kerry Brennan
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In post-apocalyptic, totalitarian America of the 21st century, policeman Ben Richards is framed for a crime he did not commit. Ben escapes from jail, determined to prove his innocence, but is captured. As punishment, he is teamed with a woman named Amber Mendez and forced to participate in a violent TV game show called The Running Man. The two "contestants" face what is most likely a public execution, as they run a gauntlet of assassins armed with chainsaws and other brutal weapons. They can win the contest and obtain their freedom...if they survive.
Cast
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Richard Dawson
Maria Conchita Alonso
Yaphet Kotto
Kerry Brennan
Roger Kern
Anthony Penya
Bryan Kestner
Ken Lerner
Sven-ole Thorsen
Karen Leigh Hopkins
Thomas Rosales Jr.
Kim Pawlik
Mia Togo
Gus Rethwisch
George Wilbur
Jim Brown
Wayne Grace
Marlene Lange
Melissa Hurley
Kurt Fuller
Lin Shaye
Charlie Phillips
Dweezil Zappa
Mary Ann Oedy
Franco Columbu
Mario Celario
John William James
Edward Bunker
Karen Owens
Eric Hulett
Sondra Holt
Greg Lewis
Billy Lucas
Lynne Stewart
Joel Kramer
Cindy Millican
Jesse Ventura
Jon Cutler
Mick Fleetwood
Andrea Moen
Boyd Kestner
Sydney Chankin
Erland Van Lidth De Jeude
Barbara Lux
Megan Gallivan
Marvin J Mcintyre
Bill Margolin
Pamela Rossi
Dey Young
Toru M Tanaka Jr.
Rodger Bumpass
Daniel Celario
Suzie Hardy
Dona Hardy
Anthony Brubaker
Paula Brown
Morgan Lawley
Sharon Owens
Debby Harris
Joe Leahy
Crew
Paula Abdul
Steven Abeyta
John A Amicarella
David Anderberg
James M Anderson
Michael Arbogast
Rémi Aubuchon
Bob Badami
Henry Baghdassarian
Michael Bailey
Glenn Barbee
Glenn Barbee
Keith Barish
Donah Bassett
Douglas E Beal
Ariel Bello
Richard Berger
Frankie Bergman
Bill Bernstein
Robert Blackman
Destiny Borden
Kenneth Borland
Tim Bowen
Tim Bowen
Max Brehme
Marc Brickman
Dan Bronson
Anthony Brubaker
Jackie Burch
Hugh Byrne
Dawn Leduke Calcaterra
Mark Cane
Jim Canepa
Paul Carden
Larry Carow
Chris Casady
Larry Cavanaugh
James J Cavarretta
Kenneth C Clark
Larry E Clark
Robert L Clark
Al Cleland
William B Clevenger
John S Coffey
Rob Cohen
Jack T. Collis
Rhonda Columb
Erik Cord
James M. Cox
Thomas R Cranham
Mike Cunningham
Gary D Daigler
Billy Damota
Jeff Dawn
Steven E. De Souza
David Degeus
Thomas Del Ruth
Mike Derosier
John Desjardin
Dennis Dewaay
Bryan Dirickson
Bennie Dobbins
Mike Dobie
Gary R Dodd
Dean Drabin
Irvin E Jim Duffy
George Dunagan
Jim Dunn
Syd Dutton
Louis Eaquinta
Louis L Edemann
Bradley Thomas Emmons
Manny Epstein
Harold Faltermeyer
Harold Faltermeyer
Steven E Fegley
Rick Fichter
Carl Fischer
Brian Fong
Harrison Fong
Richard C Franklin
Walt Fraser
Vaune Kirby Frechette
Dave Freeman
Larry Freeman
David Friedman
Steve Gardner
John Gazdik
Steve Gilbard
Diana Wooten Goodman
Richard Bryce Goodman
Robert H Grasmere
Whitney Green
Rhonda Gunner
Rhonda Gunner
Gary Gutierrez
Campbel Hair
Steve Hastings
Gary Hecker
Don Heitzer
Ron High
Michael Hirsch
Tim Hoggatt
Richard Hollander
Richard Hollander
Spike Allison Hooper
Alison Howard-smith
Alison Howard-smith
Alan Howarth
Jeff Howell
Joseph E Hubbard
Jerry Irvine
Guy Jackson
Jackie Jackson
Jackie Jackson
Merle Jackson
Francine Jamison-tanchuck
David Jansen
Jeff Jensen
Rob M Johnson
Tom Johnson
Carlton Jones
Joanie D Jones
Petko Kadiev
David G Kantar
Jack Keller
Douglas Kennedy
David Kern
James J Keys
Stephen King
Rick Kline
Jan Koshay
Luca Kouimelis
Joel Kramer
Bobbe P Kurtz
Shawn Lane
Kevin J. Lang
Steve Laporte
A P Lawrence
Greg Lazzaro
William D Lee
George Linder
Willard O Livingston
Willard O Livingston
Michael J Long
Ray Lopez
Bill Maley
Michael Maley
Dave Margolin
Lynn Marks
James Marsala
Pete Martinez
Jim Mccoy
Steven C. Mcgee
John Mcleod
Gregory L Mcmurry
Gregory L Mcmurry
George G Miller
Paul Miranne
Donald O Mitchell
Margaret A Mitchell
Robert Ken Miyamoto
Christopher Napolitano
Nick Navarro
Chuck Neely
Mel Neiman
Alan L Nineberg
Bob Noland
Gene Nollmann
Bob O'brien
Kevin O'connell
Thomas J. O'connell
Joseph R Olsen
David Page
Joe Pancake
Phillip Pappas
Bunny Parker
Robert Lansing Parker
John Parr
John Parr
Nancy Patton
Erich Todd Petrie
Ed Piwowarski
Karen Price
Kevin S Quibell
Steven Ramirez
Isidoro Raponi
Isidoro Raponi
Mark Rappaport
Charles H Ray
Brian Reeves
Mike Revell
Margaret Rezaie
Charlene Richards
Paul Bruce Richardson
Pattee Roedig
Charles E Rogers
Rod Rogers
Mitch Romanauski
Frank Rose
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Edward Bunker (1933-2005)
He was born on December 31, 1933 in Hollywood, California to a mother who was a chorus girl in a few Busby Berkely musicals, and a father who was a studio grip; two of the lesser positions in the Hollywood hierarchy. After his parents divorced when he was four, he spent the next several years in various foster homes and juvenile reform schools. By 14, he notched his first criminal conviction for burglery; at 17, he stabbed a youth prison guard; and by 19, he was considered so violent a felon, that he became the youngest inmate ever at San Quentin.
For the next 20 years, Bunker would be in and out of prison for numerous felonies: robbery, battery, and check forgery, just to name a few. While in prison, he read the novel of another San Quentin inmate, Caryl Chessman, whose book, Cell 2455, Death Row, was a reveleation to Bunker, so he set about devoting himself to writing.
He enrolled in a correspondence course in freshman English from the University of California, and after several years of unpublished novels, he struck gold in 1973 with No Beast So Fierce. The novel, about a paroled thief whose attempt to reenter mainstream society fails, was as tough and unforgiving as anything ever written about a parolee's readjustment to the outside, and it rightfully earned Bunker acclaim as a writer to watch.
After he was released from prison in 1975, Bunker concentrated on writing and acting. His big film break happened when No Beast So Fierce was turned into the movie Straight Time (1978) starring Dustin Hoffman. He co-wrote the screenplay, and also had a small part as one of Hoffman's cronies.
Bunker's next big hit as a screenwriter and actor was Runaway Train (1985), a pulsating drama about two escaped convicts (Jon Voight and Eric Roberts) where again, he had a small role as Jonah. It was obvious by now that Bunker, with his gruff voice, unnerving gaze, broken nose, and his signature feature - a scar from a knife wound that ran from his forehead to his lip - would make a most enigmatic movie villian.
A few more roles in prominent pictures followed: The Running Man, Shy People (both 1987), Tango & Cash (1989), before he scored the best role of his career, Mr. Blue in Quentin Tarantino's celebrated cult caper Reservoir Dogs (1992). It couldn't have been easy for Bunker to hold his own in a cast of heavyweights (Harvey Keitel, Lawrence Tierney, Tim Roth and Steve Buscemi), but he did - and with a muscularly lithe style that was all his own.
After Reservoir Dogs, Bunker was in demand as a villian. His next few films: Distant Cousins (1993), Somebody to Love (1994), were routine, but he proved that he could deliver with professional, if familiar performances. Actor Steve Buscemi helped Bunker get his novel Animal Factory to the screen in 2000, with Bunker again adapting his own work for film. He was last seen as a convict, although with sharp comedic overtones, in the recent Adam Sandler farce The Longest Yard (2005). He is survived by his son, Brendan.
by Michael "Mitch" Toole
Edward Bunker (1933-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall November 13, 1987
Released in United States on Video May 25, 1988
Re-released in United States on Video May 9, 1995
Arnold Schwarzenegger replaced Christopher Reeve in the lead role.
Formerly distributed by Vestron Video.
Began shooting September 29, 1986.
Re-released in United States on Video May 9, 1995
Released in United States on Video May 25, 1988
Released in United States Fall November 13, 1987