MovieChat Forums > The Running Man (1987) Discussion > This film accurately predicted several t...

This film accurately predicted several things.


American Gladiator
Digital video
Widescreen home TV's

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Plus laptops, internet and CGI.

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those things already existed by the time it was filmed.

CGI was used in The Black Hole, laptops did exist but they had butt ugly screens and were heavy. Internet has been around since the late 60's.

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[deleted]

The Internet existed, but very few people used it until about 1991 when the World Wide Web and Netscape and AOL started.

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Maybe it would've been better, if you had said "convenient online booking and shopping", or something along those lines.

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American Gladitor idea came from this movie.

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"those things already existed by the time it was filmed."

Re: the 1960's internet. Maybe, but people weren't booking vacations on that was they? This film predicted it correctly when Ben booked a ticket for Hawaii on the InfoNet.

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I had no idea that there was internet in the 1960s. There wasn't even any Personal Computers back then. How can people access the internet back then?

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Maybe, but people weren't booking vacations on that was they?


Actually, they were, as hotel chains and airlines had computer reservation systems. (Remember the scene in Wargames where Lightman makes reservations to Paris on Pan Am.) It wasn't "self-serve" like it is now, but all it took was a visit to a travel agent or a simple phone call to make reservations.

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but all it took was a visit to a travel agent or a simple phone call to make reservations.


What does that have to do with the internet? It has something to do with transportation and the telephone, but not the internet!

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Their reservations systems and computer networks were connected to each other.

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I know what you're saying, but it isn't really the same thing! You couldn't order them with just few buttons at home like Ben Richards did in the movie.

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It's true: The Internet has existed at least since the early 70s with the development of TCP/IP.

The Internet AS WE KNOW IT (ie: the world wide web) did not exist until at least the early 90s, with the development of http.

The Internet shown in the film is both anachronistic and futuristic at the same time, as it utilizes a lot of technologies that already existed in 1986 (modem, databases, barcode scanner, interactive televisions), but not with such ease and convenience, and definitely not for home consumer use.

Incidentally, a type of home consumer barcode scanner was developed and sold in the late 90s during the first dot-com boom, called the CueCat. You could use it to scan/purchase products right off the screen by simply waving the scanner in front of it. The idea did not catch on and the company soon went bankrupt. The arrival of smart phones and QR codes a few years later rendered it obsolete.

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"The Internet AS WE KNOW IT (ie: the world wide web) did not exist until at least the early 90s, with the development of http.
"

Wrong.

World Wide Web can be accessed via, but is not the internet.

From wikipedia:

"The World Wide Web (abbreviated WWW or the Web) is an information space where documents and other web resources are identified by Uniform Resource Locators (URLs), interlinked by hypertext links, and can be accessed via the Internet.

The terms Internet and World Wide Web are often used without much distinction. However, the two are not the same. The Internet is a global system of interconnected computer networks. In contrast, the World Wide Web is a global collection of documents and other resources, linked by hyperlinks and URIs. Web resources are usually accessed using HTTP, which is one of many Internet communication protocols"

In mid-1990s, I was already sick of people, who confuse 'World Wide Web' and 'Internet'. They are two different things, please don't lie about it.

And it's HTTP, not "http". WWW has to do with HTTP indeed, but both are just a tiny part of the whole internet.

Internet is not software, it's not a protocol, it's not a small part of itself.

The internet is a network of millions of computers and server, accessible via ISPs.

Try to keep your facts straight, it's just as easy as to get them wrong, and it'll create less work for me, because then I don't have to be correcting stupidity and ignorance all the time.

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You have to be correcting stupidity and ignorance all the time, because you are full of both. Add arrogance to that, too.

Yes, the definitions you provide may be technically correct, but for normal people, internet is the thing full of http pages that you access with a browser. Very few people care about ftp, gopher or pop3 protocols; in fact, very few people care about what a protocol is. Fortunately, most people who do care uses that to do their work, not do be a complete moron on imdb.

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Verbose. Make a life for yourself.

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"a lot of technologies that already existed in 1986 (modem, databases, barcode scanner, interactive televisions)"

Is the "interactive television" the video games like Atari and PlayStation, or are you talking about something else?

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You could use it to scan/purchase products right off the screen by simply waving the scanner in front of it. The idea did not catch on and the company soon went bankrupt.

well no shit , what the fuck would be the point of that?
Any tech company making products that show a complete ignorance of what a keyboard or mouse is for deserve to go bust!


{edit}
its crossed my mind that maybe the idea was to scan the code on a actual thing you already possessed in order to order another one .... but that would still be monumentally dumb.

... or maybe the code is on a catalogue full of pictures of things you might want to buy .
.. still incredibly dumb idea.

sounds like the company just had a load of barcode scanners to get rid of!
a solution looking for a probelm , and if that cant be found , fake one .

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christ bob!
just cos the internet wasnt in every home dosent mean it wasnt there

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Their reservations systems and computer networks were connected to each other


One up on smoke signals I suppose.

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Also predicted that we would have voice control over things like lights and tv.

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Yeah, Japmax14, my boss has a TV that activates by his voice to radio. It has a woman's voice and is kind of Bond-like.

It is freaky how we have DVDs and life-like CGI here.

I am not sure if the restrictive collars will happen. I do know we have something like them for dogs.

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Restrictive collars are one of the mainstays of sci-fi films, and are probably available in private shops on the continent alongside gimp suits and butt-plugs.

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hahahahahahahah

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Voice controlled lights , how did we ever live without them? oh wait ....

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Alexa.

Plus Deep Fakes, and reality TV.

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Memory cards.

When María Conchita Alonso, was looking through the filing cabinet and found the footage from Ben's massacre it was on a black card, that looked like a Gameboy cartridge

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Not to mention the authoritarian government and media who perpetuate lies and then smears anyone who calls them out on it.

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yes exactly!!

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