Rollerball (1975) Rollerball

IMDb: tt0073631 | Wikipedia

Norman Jewison's near-future dystopian sport film, adapted by William Harrison from his 1973 Esquire short story "Roller Ball Murder." James Caan plays Jonathan E., star of the Houston Energy rollerball team in a world run by six corporations that have replaced nation-states. The Houston Executive (John Houseman) wants Jonathan to retire because his decade-long survival in a sport designed to demonstrate the futility of individual effort has made him an icon. He refuses. The corporations escalate the rules — first elimination by limited substitutions, then no penalties, then no time limit — to make sure he doesn't.

Quick facts

Director Norman Jewison
Screenplay William Harrison (from his short story)
Cinematography Douglas Slocombe
Music André Previn (with London Symphony Orchestra; Bach, Albinoni/Giazotto, Shostakovich, Tchaikovsky)
Production design John Box
Edited by Antony Gibbs
Released June 25, 1975
Runtime 129 minutes
Budget ~$5–6 million
Box office ~$30 million worldwide
Studio United Artists

Cast

See Cast and Characters (Rollerball) for the full ensemble.

The film at a glance

The story unfolds in three acts. The first hour establishes Jonathan's ten-year equilibrium inside the corporate-society bargain — ranch, women on rotation, executive parties, the Houston championship — and then disrupts it with Bartholomew's white-office order to retire (Commitment). The second hour tracks Jonathan's effort to find out why through corporate channels, ending at the Geneva Library Midpoint where the world's central archive is shown to have lost its history. The third hour stages the final escalation at MSG: a death-match designed to make Jonathan into the gladiator the game requires, and the body's refusal of that role at the Madison Square Garden Final.

The structure is a Two Approaches arc — see Plot Structure (Rollerball) and Backbeats (Rollerball). The quadrant is better tools, sufficient: Jonathan's post-midpoint approach (stay in the bowl, refuse every off-ramp, let the body answer) is the right approach, and the climax test confirms it. The corporate world is still in place at the freeze-frame; a single name has been spoken into it that the corporation cannot summarize away.

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