Edgar Wright and Glen Powell deliver a wild but weak remake
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Before checking out the 2025 version, it might be worth going back to watch the 1987 adaptation of "The Running Man."
Early reviews for "The Running Man" reboot showcase how it stacks up to the classic 1980s Arnold Schwarzenegger version.
Edgar Wright’s impressively muscular reboot of Arnie’s ’80s sci-fi hit goes back to Stephen King’s original story
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Arnold Schwarzenegger's The Running Man Features A Hilarious Credits Gag You Probably Never Noticed
If you're doing a rewatch of The Running Man with Arnold Schwarzenegger, keep your eyes peeled for a gag in the credits you've likely missed.
Stephen King is having a great year. Three of his works have been adapted for the screen and released in 2025. “The Life of Chuck” exists alongside movies based on his pseudonym Richard Bachman’s dystopian books, “The Long Walk” and now, “The Running Man.” In the immortal words of Meat Loaf: “two out of three ain’t bad.”
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The Running Man Review: A Great Stephen King Movie... Up Until It Totally Screws Up The Ending
Movies The Running Man Has Screened, And The First Reactions For The Glen Powell-Led Movie Delve Into How It ‘Bottled Magic With Stephen King’s Novel’ Movies The Long Walk Changes The Ending From Stephen King's Book,
Arnold Schwarzenegger feels "so excited" by the new Running Man movie. The 78-year-old actor starred in the original Running Man film, which premiered in 1987, and Schwarzenegger "lost his mind" while watching the new movie.
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The Running Man Review
Edgar Wright and Glen Powell have teamed up to remake a classic Arnold Schwarzenegger 80s action flick with The Running Man. But it was also a Stephen King sci fi novel before anything else. The story of Ben Richards in a near future dystopia filled with health care crises,
T his weekend, Glen Powell is going to enter history alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger as he becomes the second Hollywood star to lead a film based on Stephen King’s The Running Man. It will certainly keep the two stars linked in cinema history forever, although that link had already been set up, technically.
The first film adaptation of the Stephen King novel — revisited by Edgar Wright and Glen Powell in a version hitting theaters Nov. 14 — nearly lost its way amid director turnover and blown production deadlines.
There's only one movie that Schwarzenegger always wanted redone. At the premiere of 'The Running Man,' Schwarzenegger met with Glen Powell and Edgar Wright to tell them his praise of the movie.