Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from tastytech.

    What's Hot

    Fans React To The New Star Fox

    May 7, 2026

    Final Fantasy 9 Official New Release Drops On May 16

    May 7, 2026

    We Built Our Perfect BMW iX3 and Kept It Under $72,000

    May 7, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    tastytech.intastytech.in
    Subscribe
    • AI News & Trends
    • Tech News
    • AI Tools
    • Business & Startups
    • Guides & Tutorials
    • Tech Reviews
    • Automobiles
    • Gaming
    • movies
    tastytech.intastytech.in
    Home»movies»‘The Running Man’s Edgar Wright Used These Unexpected ’80s Game Shows To Make It Feel Like UFC Meets ‘American Idol’
    ‘The Running Man’s Edgar Wright Used These Unexpected ’80s Game Shows To Make It Feel Like UFC Meets ‘American Idol’
    movies

    ‘The Running Man’s Edgar Wright Used These Unexpected ’80s Game Shows To Make It Feel Like UFC Meets ‘American Idol’

    gvfx00@gmail.comBy gvfx00@gmail.comNovember 14, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    In the 1980s, television made humiliation look like harmless fun. Forty years later, Edgar Wright calls it prophecy. The path to The Running Man began with It’s a Knockout! and 3-2-1, two surreal British game shows that turned confusion and chaos into national entertainment. On It’s a Knockout!, ordinary people in costumes stumbled along obstacle courses while the crowd cheered. On 3-2-1, contestants solved riddles so bizarre that even the winners often left empty-handed. Together, they formed a picture of spectacle without empathy, a kind of cheerful cruelty that fascinated Wright.

    At a premiere screening followed by a Q&A at the TIFF Lightbox in Toronto on November 12, Wright described to viewers and the media, including Collider’s own Tania Hussain, that his adaptation of the Stephen King novel has vibes of “UFC meets American Idol” for a satire built from decades of television evolution. “Michael Bacall [my co-writer] and I watched some very obscure British game shows,” he said. “A game show called It’s a Knockout!, a game show called 3-2-1.” He explains that what connected them was their ability to turn absurdity into ritual. Their laughter carried a hidden darkness, and that darkness became the emotional foundation of his Running Man.

    Table of Contents

    Toggle
    • The Shows That Turned Humiliation Into Entertainment
    • A Dystopia That Feels Uncomfortably Familiar
      • Related posts:
    • The Mastermind | Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere | Two Lane Blacktop (1971)
    • 10 Game-Changing Anime Series That Totally Rewrite Genre Rules
    • Female friendship and rebellion: Nana at 20

    The Shows That Turned Humiliation Into Entertainment

    It’s a Knockout! and 3-2-1 were, on the surface, innocent. Contestants ran through slapstick challenges, guessed impossible clues, and performed for the delight of a studio audience. Families gathered around the television to laugh, not realizing they were watching early blueprints for something more cynical. Both shows invited the same reaction: amusement at someone else’s failure or confusion. That dynamic fascinated Wright. “When the book was written, you hadn’t had twenty-five years of reality TV,” he said. “Now, people know how the sausage is made.” In other words, audiences now recognize the manipulation behind every competition. But long before the rise of reality television, It’s a Knockout! and 3-2-1 had already taught viewers that embarrassment could be entertaining. They made ordinary people the center of attention not through talent or achievement, but through struggle.

    Wright realized that this impulse was the missing link between Stephen King’s 1982 novel and the world of 2025 in which it is set. The laughter of those shows evolved into something sharper. What had once been foam suits and baffling riddles became confessionals, eliminations, and “villain edits.” “Members of the public are not supposed to be made national laughingstocks,” Wright said. “But that’s literally a phrase now.”

    For Wright and Bacall, that phrase defined the story they were telling. Their version of The Running Man does not exaggerate television’s cruelty; it simply holds it in place long enough for audiences to see it clearly. The show-within-the-film reflects how spectacle has absorbed morality. “When Glen [Powell] is backstage as Ben Richards with his co-competitors, they’re all best pals,” Wright explained. “Until he goes out there, and suddenly he’s the villain. That immediate betrayal, that switch, is what reality TV is built on.”

    That same switch made It’s a Knockout! and 3-2-1 addictive. Every fall, every wrong answer, every ridiculous costume turned discomfort into laughter. The audience was safe because the failure belonged to someone else, but Wright saw the cruelty inside that comfort.

    A Dystopia That Feels Uncomfortably Familiar

    When King first wrote The Running Man, it was a warning. The idea that ordinary people might compete for survival on live television still felt grotesque. When the 1987 film adaptation arrived, its satire seemed exaggerated, a colorful mockery of media excess. But in Wright’s hands, the same premise feels disturbingly plausible. The sets resemble game-show stages, the cameras are real, and the audience is genuine. Wright’s film collapses the line between fiction and documentary. It does not invent the future; it observes the present and removes the filter of irony.

    Just before filming began in late 2024, Wright watched a documentary about The Jerry Springer Show. “It confirmed absolutely everything that was in the script,” he said. The manipulation, the editing, the moral theater were already there. It’s a Knockout! and 3-2-1 had been the prototypes, and reality television had perfected the design. That realization became the heartbeat of Wright’s adaptation. His Running Man is not a film about technology or politics; it is a story about performance. The contestants, the audience, and the producers all play roles in the same machine. The game never ends because the applause never stops.

    Wright has explored this theme throughout his career. Scott Pilgrim vs. the World turned a comic book spectacle into an emotional reckoning. Last Night in Soho used nostalgia to expose the darkness beneath memory. With The Running Man, he aims for entertainment itself. By tracing the lineage from It’s a Knockout and 3-2-1 to modern television, he shows how easily laughter can turn into cruelty and how willing audiences are to keep watching. King imagined an age when death would become entertainment. Wright looks around and asks a harder question: when did we stop noticing?

    The Running Man is now in theaters.


    the-running-man-remake-early-teaser-poster.jpg


    Release Date

    November 14, 2025

    Director

    Edgar Wright

    Producers

    George Linder, Nira Park, Simon Kinberg



    Related posts:

    Raw Alt-Rock Momentum Meets Personal Reckoning

    Kathleen Kennedy Steps Down as Head of Lucasfilm

    A Personal Family Drama Examining Grief, Reconciliation, and End-of-Life Grace Through Star-Powered ...

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleBMW Issues New Recall for 2000–2001 X5 Over Takata Air Bag Inflator Risk
    Next Article Zenless Zone Zero’s new Krampus squad know when you’ve been bad or good in a Christmas-y update to close out 2025
    gvfx00@gmail.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    movies

    Final Fantasy 9 Official New Release Drops On May 16

    May 7, 2026
    movies

    Our Land review – superb doc on the right to roam

    May 7, 2026
    movies

    Red (2024) by Brillante Mendoza

    May 6, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Black Swans in Artificial Intelligence — Dan Rose AI

    October 2, 2025140 Views

    We let ChatGPT judge impossible superhero debates — here’s how it ruled

    December 31, 202571 Views

    Every Clue That Tony Stark Was Always Doctor Doom

    October 20, 202569 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from tastytech.

    About Us
    About Us

    TastyTech.in brings you the latest AI, tech news, cybersecurity tips, and gadget insights all in one place. Stay informed, stay secure, and stay ahead with us!

    Most Popular

    Black Swans in Artificial Intelligence — Dan Rose AI

    October 2, 2025140 Views

    We let ChatGPT judge impossible superhero debates — here’s how it ruled

    December 31, 202571 Views

    Every Clue That Tony Stark Was Always Doctor Doom

    October 20, 202569 Views

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from tastytech.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Homepage
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2026 TastyTech. Designed by TastyTech.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.