the image that looked back at you from every video rental shop in America in the 1980's |
Watched: 04/20/2024
Format: Amazon
Viewing: First
Director: Norman Jewison
Selection: Me
I very much recall the 1980's and wandering the sci-fi aisles of video rental stores where we never, ever rented Rollerball (1975). When you'd bring up the movie with someone of age to have seen it in theaters, mostly they hadn't. So all we had to go on was a box which was Jimmy Caan with a spiked glove. And if we wanted movies about sci-fi athletes, which we really didn't, we'd watch Solarbabies. It was a different and stupid time.
But, yeah, we just never picked it up, even when the film was remade in 2002 by John McTiernan (from my reading, the remake is more or less a completely different movie that happens to include the same sport).
Parts of the movie are exactly what I'd expect. It's sort of The Kansas City Bomber, but they added a whole bunch of kooky stuff to Roller Derby to make it violent. Motorcycles, a big metal ball, spiked gloves... stuff like that. The game is played in a future world where the corporations have taken over, completely. Cities now exist to serve specific corporate interests.
Example: the team we're following is Houston, which is an Energy town, and, man, is that uncomfortably close to the truth.
It's not dissimilar to plenty of other sci-fi set-ups, where a wealthy elite sit at the top pulling the strings, and everyone else is happy with the world they're in, but our hero stumbles onto the plan/ evil machinations of the elite. The problem with Rollerderby is that, actually, aside from our lead character's life, everyone else seems fine? I mean, I don't love the world they present, and people are dying playing this goofy game, but... literally everyone else in this movie is playing along. There's no Fahrenheit 451 group of folks quietly or loudly resisting. There's no masses starving and miserable like Soylent Green. I don't like the idea of a corporation providing me with a new girlfriend every six months, but no one seems pretty bent out of shape with it, no matter how weird or dehumanizing.