MovieChat Forums > Rollerball (1975) Discussion > Watched it for the first time in decades...

Watched it for the first time in decades and it's still brilliant!


Watched this as a kid and was totally engrossed in the game, really wanted to play Rollerball for real although I'm a lousy skater (maybe I could have ridden one of the motorbikes?). Reputedly the cast and crew actually did play Rollerball (presumably with penalties, substitutions and time limits rather than the ultimate no holds barred version we see at the end?) in between takes and really got into it. I wonder if there's any film of that? In the 70s 2000AD magazine had a comic strip 'inspired' by Rollerball where the players wore jetpacks which is about the only way you could make the game more exciting.
What makes it special though is that it's not just a glorification of a brutal futuristic sport but a study of the role of the individual in a civilized society. Thomas Mann would recognise the concept although he probably wouldn't have included motorbikes in it. The future is depicted as a quasi-benign dictatorship as Plato always advocated. We have no wars, no crime, no poverty, corporations run the show and conflicts are confined to the boardroom and stock exchange with no racism or sexism. People are free within the system as long as they don't question the established order. Some have described it as fascist but actually it strikes me as more communistic, the individual sublimated for the sake of the greater good. However mankind never changes so an outlet is needed for aggression and populist entertainment. Hence we have Rollerball. Problem is in a society which values conformity Jonathan E has become an individualistic superstar and that threatens the whole nature of society.
Great performance from James Caan and equally great from John Houseman who isn't exactly the villain, it's very subtle on his part, you can't really be sure who's right or wrong in all this (noticeably Houseman's character doesn't want Jonathan to have an 'accident'). Also like Shame Rimmer as the team manager, the obedient corporate stooge who tells it as it is but still cares about his team, trying to prevent an injured Jonathan E from going back out to probable death during the final game (the New York manager noticeably succeeding in doing the same for one of his players). Fantastic music too, the classical influence contrasting with the sheer brutality of the game. And it is still shocking after all these years, the scene where the injured player slides down the rink leaving a bloody trail behind him still makes you cringe. You're so happy that Jonathan spares the final New York player and then goes on to score the final point, to him it's still all about the game rather than the violence.
No offence to Star Wars but it rather killed the more thoughtful sci-fi we had in the 1970s, Silent Running, Dark Star, Logan's Run, THX 1138, Westworld, Solaris, The Omega Man etc.
The only bad thing is Jonathan's trip to the the computer bank in Geneva which is utterly baffling.

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One of those "set in the future" films that really does a pretty good job of laying out a dystopian vision of the future.

Cleverly filmed use of "modern" settings and furnishings in primarily Germany.
Corporatization of the world = globalization
Rollerball itself ... any number of reality shows/sports hybrids
Technology = home theatres/ flatscreens / videoconferencing * Yes, I know the ICT looks a bit ancient, but the movie is 41 years old.🐭

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I think one reason we got so many like that in the 1970s was the very real world use of hyper-modern furnishings, design and architecture. This made it a lot easier and cheaper for filmmakers to give us a near-future vision of the world. It also made it much more realistic as a sense of where thing were heading because those elements existed (at least in small quantities) in the real world, they weren't just creations for the film. When you saw a modern building in a city and then saw this movie it was completely clear which way the world was moving and made the movie future look that much more believable.

The bummer is those design concepts fell out of fashion and now look kind of dated, even if as pure design they're still kind of interesting.

I think of all the dystopian future films, Rollerball is underrated for its prescient view of the future. I mean you can re-label "corporatization" as "globalization" but globalization is just a way of describing corporatization without corporations getting defensive, it's a euphemism meant to mask the true state of affairs.

The only thing it's gotten wrong is we don't have multivision.

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remember seeing it as a kid on late night tv back in the 80s. Can remember the beginning of the organ classical music that felt very unnerving .. then it being turned off (I think) when it started getting too violent (and too late) and think my dad continued to watch it and think remember him saying next day it was too violent for me which made me wanna see it even more! Then seeing various articles on it in various old SF magazine I had. And then finally seeing the rest of it a few years later

and yes its still great. one of the last great 70s SF/horror dystopian movies before the 'dark times'..before Star Wars! lol

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