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'The Running Man' Director Edgar Wright on Stephen King and Influences
TV & Streaming

‘The Running Man’ Director Edgar Wright on Stephen King and Influences

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

When Arnold Schwarzenegger played game show contestant Ben Richards in the 1987 version of Stephen King’s dystopian novel “The Running Man,” his adventures took place in a relatively confined subterranean world. When “Baby Driver” and “Last Night in Soho” director Edgar Wright took on the challenge of reimagining King’s novel for 2025, he decided to go back to the more ambitious scale of the original story — even though it meant taking on the biggest production of his career.

“In the original Stephen King [writing under the pseudonym Richard Bachman] book, the playing field of the game is the world,” Wright told IndieWire’s Filmmaker Toolkit podcast. “Ben Richards leaves the network studio, and he’s got to exist in the world for 30 days. It’s hide and seek on a national, even global scale — there’s nothing in the rules to say you couldn’t get out of the country. The Arnold Schwarzenegger version kept it all contained.”

VATICAN CITY, VATICAN - MAY 8: The newly elected Pontiff, Pope Leo XIV is seen for the first time from the Vatican balcony on May 8, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. White smoke was seen over the Vatican early this evening as the Conclave of Cardinals took just two days to elect Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, who will be known as Pope Leo (Leone) XIV, as the 267th Supreme Pontiff after the death of Pope Francis on Easter Monday.  (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

With that in mind, Wright pitched his “Running Man,” in which Glen Powell plays the game show contestant running for his life, less as a remake than a new adaptation of the novel. “We wanted to do the book, and we wanted to have the same scale as the book,” Wright said, though he acknowledged that after completing the film, he understood why the makers of the 1987 movie went a different way. “Having now done the shoot and been totally exhausted by it, I understand it was a practical decision rather than an artistic one.”

“The Running Man,” which encompassed 165 different locations and sets across England, Scotland, and Bulgaria, may have exhausted Wright, but for the audience it’s more energizing than tiring thanks to the movie’s high style and carefully calibrated pacing. It’s essentially a non-stop chase in the tradition of Sam Peckinpah’s “The Getaway” (adapted by screenwriter Walter Hill from the Jim Thompson novel), and it not only shares that film’s elegant sense of structure and visual dynamism but its approach to the hero.

“ Usually when I make a movie, we watch a good luck film before we start production,” Wright said. “The week before we started shooting, we got together and watched ‘The Getaway,’ because Glen had actually never seen it. It’s a great example of a great movie star performance. [Steve] McQueen had immense power and charisma, not saying very much at all, and you could point to a lot of his performances, but that’s a really great one in terms of how to hold the screen.”

Powell’s version of Richards has a tightly coiled rage reminiscent of McQueen in “The Getaway,” but what really makes the performance work is his vulnerability — the fight scenes are sometimes as clumsy as they are kinetic, giving the viewer the sense that Ben Richards could easily be defeated at any given point. “He’s a tough character, but he’s not John Wick,” Wright said. “He’s not Jason Bourne. He doesn’t have amazing action skills. He’s fallible, and he makes mistakes.”

In addition to McQueen’s Doc McCoy in “The Getaway,” Wright had two other reference points for the characters. “We talked about two performances a lot,” Wright said. “One was Harrison Ford in ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark,’ because he’s an adventurer, but he’s not perfect. The key moment is when he says, ‘I don’t know, I’m making this up as I go along.’ Or I think of Ford getting punched in the face and falling like a sack of potatoes. He’s not superhuman.”

The other influence was Bruce Willis’ performance as John McClane in “Die Hard.” “In the first one at least, even though he’s a cop, the exciting thing is that for large portions of the film, he’s out of his depth, and you think there’s no way that he can take on all of these guys and win. What we talked about [in ‘The Running Man’] was the idea that Ben Richards is on his heels the entire time, and there’s something really fun and hopefully exciting about the fact that he’s just trying to tough his way through it.”

Although the scale of “The Running Man” was more elaborate even than big-budget Wright films like “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,” the director said he had a safety net in the form of collaborators with whom he had worked many times before. What really made him nervous wasn’t making the movie — it was getting script approval from the book’s author, one of Wright’s childhood heroes.

“[Stephen King]  is a producer on the film and had script approval and some cast approval as well,” Wright said. “I had been in contact with him on and off for years, and he’d always been really kind, but when I was working on [the script for ‘The Running Man’], I didn’t talk to him about it until we were very close to it happening, because I didn’t want to be the boy who cried wolf. The idea of getting in touch with him about the script and the film not happening would be heartbreaking to me.”

Once Wright was pretty sure the movie was on its way to a green light, he sent King the script he co-wrote with Michael Bacall and waited for the author’s response. “Stephen King is probably the most famous English teacher in the world, and it was literally having to hand in your homework to Stephen King over a very long weekend. At one point, he started reviewing it page by page, and my heart couldn’t take it. I was like, ‘Please, just read the whole thing!’”

Luckily, King liked the script, but after some early conversations about casting, he stayed away until the movie was finished. When Wright showed King the film and finally met him in person on a visit to Bangor, Maine, where the author lives, he got the perfect response.

“He said this thing that really stuck with me, and it’s what I hope the audience will take away from it as well,” Wright said. “He said, ‘It’s faithful enough to the original book to keep the fans happy, but different enough to keep me excited.’ And I was thinking, ah, you can’t say it better than that. I couldn’t ask for anything more, really.”

“The Running Man” is currently in theaters. To hear the entire conversation with Edgar Wright about and make sure you don’t miss a single episode of Filmmaker Toolkit, subscribe to the podcast on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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The Running Man review: Glen Powell proves a charismatic hero in Edgar Wright's patchy remake
TV & Streaming

The Running Man review: Glen Powell proves a charismatic hero in Edgar Wright’s patchy remake

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

The Running Man is in cinemas from Wednesday 12 November. Add it to your watchlist

On-the-rise action man Glen Powell (Top Gun: Maverick, Twisters) takes on a role originally played on screen by his Expendables 3 co-star Arnold Schwarzenegger in this explosive, big-budget remake of the 1987 thriller.

Set in a dystopian, totalitarian United States where violent television programmes have become the opium of the people, the original film was based on a 1982 novel by Stephen King (under his Richard Bachman pseudonym), but co-writer/director Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead, Last Night in Soho) has opted to stay even closer to the source material for his adaptation.

Glen Powell in The Running Man. Paramount

So, instead of Arnie’s Ben Richards being a cop coerced to participate in the game, Powell’s Richards is a working-class Everyman living in an overcrowded slum, whose frustration with his inability to hold down a job and look after his waitress wife and their ailing toddler forces him to volunteer for the financially lucrative if lethal Running Man TV show.

Avoid capture for 30 days and $1 billion is the ultimate reward. However, contestants are also hunted across the United States by an elite team of assassins led by a merciless masked mystery man. The action is televised to an audience happy to dob them in to the authorities for a slice of the financial pie, all under the auspices of ever-smirking network CEO and smug puppet-master Dan Killian (Josh Brolin).

Colman Domingo in The Running Man, wearing a purple tuxedo and with his arms outstretched

Colman Domingo in The Running Man Paramount

Killian and motor-mouthed MC Bobby T (Colman Domingo) consider Richards a ratings winner, especially when he continues to evade his murderous pursuers and their ever-present drone cameras, and then survives by the skin of his teeth when they do get close, as in one fiery encounter at a down-at-heel Boston hotel. However, could Richards’s resilience and apoplectic defiance inspire something other than bloodlust from viewers and threaten their best-laid corporate plans?

Josh Brolin in The Running Man, sat at a desk, smiling and pointing

Josh Brolin in The Running Man Ross Ferguson/Paramount Pictures

No stranger to delivering breakneck action (Hot Fuzz, Baby Driver), Wright produces plenty of nerve-jangling, kinetic set-pieces, whether it is a deadly game of chicken on a bridge or the climactic airborne stand-off. The fact the deadly contest takes place across the US (rather than a murky underground labyrinth as seen in the 1987 movie) also expands the scope of the story, revealing an America riven by economic inequality and manipulated by a self-satisfied few who have no qualms about using fake news to control the narrative.

A similar theme fuels The Long Walk – released earlier this year, and also based on an early King story – in which televised survival of the fittest is used to distract ordinary folk from their impoverished plight. It’s the type of allegory that Wright’s director idol George A Romero (of Night of the Living Dead fame) would have applauded.

However, the episodic nature of the plot, with Richards having to don a variety of disguises to lay low and avoid recognition, occasionally leads to a lull in the pace and a lessening of tension.

Nevertheless, Powell proves to be a charismatic hero, bristling with anger but also able to stay alive thanks to his own ingenuity and much-needed assistance from those he meets on his travels, such as cameoing William H Macy, Emilia Jones (CODA) and Michael Cera (star of Wright’s Scott Pilgrim vs the World), whose mercurial rebel lives in an elaborately booby-trapped bolt-hole worthy of Rambo.

Oh, and regarding cameos, keep your eyes peeled for a left-field appearance from Schwarzenegger himself.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Edgar Hansen
TV & Streaming

What Happened to ‘Deadliest Catch’s Edgar Hansen? His Sexual Assault Case and Exit From Show

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Sig Hansen is a staple on Deadliest Catch, and for several seasons, viewers also got to know his brother Edgar Hansen as they worked aboard the F/V Northwestern together. However, he abruptly disappeared from the program after Season 14 in 2018 and has not returned since.

Deadliest Catch is currently in the midst of its 21st season, with Sig remaining as a main player. But what happened to Edgar? Scroll down for everything we know about why he left the show and more.

What happened to Edgar Hansen?

Edgar’s exit from Deadliest Catch came after he pled guilty to sexually assaulting a 16-year-old girl. His guilty plea came in July 2018, following a September 2017 incident, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Per The Seattle Times, Edgar submitted a handwritten statement, in which he agreed to the assault. He pled guilty to fourth-degree assault with sexual motivation.

“I committed this assault for the purpose of my own sexual gratification,” Hansen said. “I am very sorry for that conduct, and I have commenced treatment to ensure that nothing like this assault ever happens again.”

Hansen’s victim was identified as 16-year-old “Jane Doe,” who told her therapist in October 2017 that Hansen had sexually assaulted her the month prior. She reiterated the allegations in an interview with a police specialist.

Did Edgar Hansen go to jail?

No, Edgar did not serve any jail time as part of the plea deal he reached in the case. Instead, he received a 364-day suspended sentence, had to pay court fines and fees of $1,653, and underwent a sexual-deviancy evaluation and treatment, per The Seattle Times.

Why did Edgar Hansen leave Deadliest Catch?

While Discovery has not commented on Edgar’s legal issues, he no longer appeared on Deadliest Catch after the court case in 2018. His last episode of the show was at the end of Season 14 in 2018, which had already been filmed prior to his sentencing.

When Season 15 returned in April 2019, Edgar was no longer part of the cast. However, viewers have claimed to spot him in the background of scenes aboard the F/V Northwestern in the years since, so it’s possible he still works with his brother and the rest of the crew.

Deadliest Catch, Season 21, Fridays, 8/7c, Discovery Channel

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Quick Behind-the-Scenes Look at Edgar Wright's 'The Running Man'
Hollywood

Quick Behind-the-Scenes Look at Edgar Wright’s ‘The Running Man’

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Quick Behind-the-Scenes Look at Edgar Wright’s ‘The Running Man’

by Alex Billington
September 18, 2025
Source: YouTube

“We’re really breaking out the heavy artillery. The big explosions. Hopefully I’ll make the stunts look cool.” Paramount has debuted a quick new behind-the-scenes promo video for The Running Man, the next new Edgar Wright movie after Last Night in Soho in 2021. Landing in theaters this November – watch the first trailer here. Based on the 1982 novel by Stephen King (under his pseudonym Richard Bachman) – it is the second adaptation of the book following that 1980s movie with Arnold Schwarzenegger. Set in a dystopian future, a game show called “The Running Man” has people chased by murderous Hunters across the world to win money. Ben Richards is willing to go the distance in this ultimate game of life and death… This new 2025 version stars Glen Powell as Ben, with Katy O’Brian, Daniel Ezra, Karl Glusman, Josh Brolin, Lee Pace, Jayme Lawson, Michael Cera, Emilia Jones, William H. Macy, David Zayas, Sean Hayes, and Colman Domingo. I’m not sure why this featurette is so short – only 30 seconds, with just a few quick shots of the behind-the-scenes stunt work. I hope we’ll see more soon! This movie better be good.

Here’s the quick action featurette for Edgar Wright’s movie The Running Man, direct from YouTube:

The Running Man Featurette

The Running Man Featurette

You can rewatch the first official trailer for Edgar Wright’s The Running Man right here for more footage.

Set in an oppressive future where the government controls the media, Ben Richards (starring Glen Powell) volunteers to participate in a deadly game show, which will see him hunted by professional killers over 30 days. Should he survive, he’ll win a cash prize that will help save his sick child and lift his family out of a horrid living situation. The Running Man is directed by acclaimed British genre filmmaker Edgar Wright, director of the films A Fistful of Fingers, Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, The World’s End, Baby Driver, and Last Night in Soho recently, plus The Sparks Brothers doc. The screenplay is written by Edgar Wright and Michael Bacall (of Scott Pilgrim, Project X, 21 & 22 Jump Street). Based on the 1982 sci-fi novel “The Running Man” from writer Stephen King. Produced by Edgar Wright, Nira Park, Simon Kinberg. Made by Genre Films and Complete Fiction. Paramount will debut Wright’s The Running Man movie in theaters worldwide starting on November 14th, 2025 this fall. Anyone want to watch this?

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Find more posts in: Featurette, Hype, Sci-Fi, To Watch, Trailer

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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