The Running Man (film)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Richards: Killian! I'll be back!
Killian: Only in a rerun.

The Running Man is a sci-fi action film from the year 1987, which is set in a dystopian future.

When the cop Ben Richards (Arnold Schwarzenegger) refuses to fire at innocent civilians, he is captured and sent to prison. He escapes, but is captured again, and ends up as a contestant in the nation's number one television show: The Running Man. In the show, Ben and his fellow "contestants" must fight their way through the Stalkers, killers set to stop their advance, to win their freedom.

Tropes used in The Running Man (film) include:
  • Actually Pretty Funny: Sven looks rather amused when Richards pens the lawyer in the back and tells him "Don't forget to send me a copy".
  • Adaptational Attractiveness: Ben Richards in the book is "scrawny" and "pre-tubercular". Schwarzenegger... isn't.
  • All or Nothing
  • Altum Videtur: The gratuitous use of Latin in Richards' contract. All of it is real legal Latin, but wildly out of place.
  • Ass Shove: Amber Mendez and the tape of the Bakersfield Massacre. Or possibly another nearby location.
  • Attempted Rape: Dynamo attempts to force himself on Amber when he runs into her in the studio.
  • Bad Boss: Killian isn't a particularly nice man to his employees, his bodyguard Sven in particular. This comes back to bite him.
  • Big Bad: Killian.
  • Blood Knight: Captain Freedom.
  • Blood Sport
  • Bond One-Liner: Some of the best in film history.
    • (cuts a man in half) "He had to split."
    • (strangles a man with barbed wire) "He was a pain in the neck."
    • (hurls road-flare at a flamethrower-armed Hunter with a loose gas-line) "What a hothead."
    • (before throwing a flare) "How 'bout a light?"
  • Brick Joke: Killian's bodyguard Sven and steroids.
  • The Butcher: Ben Richards, "The Butcher of Bakersfield". Played with, in that Richards himself is innocent of the crime, framed by his corrupt superiors when he objected to massacring hordes of innocent people.
  • Carnival of Killers
  • Chainsaw Good: Buzzsaw.
  • Condemned Contestant
  • Deadly Game
  • Digital Head Swap: In-universe.
  • Do Not Adjust Your Set
  • Explosive Leash: Richards and his fellow prisoners wear them in the military prison.
  • Fashion Dissonance: The Running Man's "It's Showtime!" dancers, who are a riot of spandex and big hair, firmly placing them in the 80's fashion era.
  • Future Imperfect: A TV equivalent; it's implied that a lot of TV shows have been forgotten thanks to the totalitarian government's control of the entertainment networks, and on two occasions an older character makes a reference to an old TV show (Gilligan's Island and Star Trek) that falls flat.
  • Gaia's Lament: Earth's resources are severely drained.
  • Game Show Host: Killian. Lampshaded to a certain degree by being played by Richard Dawson, who has been characterized at times as a bit of an egotist behind the scenes.
  • Gone Horribly Right: Killian ropes Richards in hoping that he'll be a popular contestant and bring in huge ratings. Both prove to be true... except that he becomes so popular people start rooting for him over the Stalkers, and many more people are watching when the government's duplicity is revealed.
  • Groin Attack: Multiple examples.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Laughlin shoves Richards out of the way and is mortally wounded by Buzzsaw's attack.
    • Also, Richards agrees to be a contestant because they threaten to use his friends as contestants instead... which of course they do anyways.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: Each Stalker is killed with his own weapon. Killian himself is doomed by being launched into the Zone, as he had done to so many before.
  • Home Game: Given to members of the Running Man studio audience. How it's supposed to work is anybody's guess.
  • Hunting the Most Dangerous Game
  • Idiot Ball: Even though Richards was already thoroughly discredited as "The Butcher of Bakersfield", the Government still insists on making up murders at the airport in order to blame them on him. This is what convinces Amber that he was framed and ultimately causes her to discover the truth. Keeping the unedited footage around was pretty dumb too.
  • I Know Madden Kombat: The hockey-themed hunter "Sub-Zero".
  • In Name Only: All that's left is the name of the hero, the last name of the main villain, the name of the show involved and a couple of plot elements - the totalitarian dystopic society and Richards kidnapping a woman and taking her to an airport.
  • Ironic Echo: Multiple examples involving Killian.

Hello, cutie pie. One of us is in big trouble.

Amber [Smirks]: "That's none of your business."

Dynamo:Thought it was pretty funny out in the zone, didn't you? What's the matter, bitch? Why aren't you laughing?
Amber: Because there's nothing funny about a dickless moron with a battery up his ass.