The year is 2025, and the world is a fractured, desperate place, particularly in America. The economy lies in ruins, leaving millions in the sprawling, polluted Co-Op City in grinding poverty. For Ben Richards, a scrawny, 28-year-old man, the desperation is a gnawing beast. His infant daughter, Cathy, is terribly ill with pneumonia, and his wife, Sheila, has been forced to sell herself to afford black-market medicine. With no viable work and blacklisted from his trade, Ben sees only one impossible path to save his family: the Games Network.
He applies to the government-operated television station, enduring a battery of physical and psychological tests, until he is finally selected for the most popular, lucrative, and deadly show: The Running Man. Before a live studio audience, who boo and despise him, Ben is declared an enemy of the state. His objective is simple: survive for 30 days while being hunted by an elite team of Network-employed hitmen, known as Hunters, and an incentivized public who can earn rewards for reporting his whereabouts. For every hour he stays alive, he earns a hundred dollars, with a grand prize of one billion New Dollars if he reaches the 30-day mark. He is given $4,800 and a pocket video camera to record twice-daily clips for broadcast, which the Hunters will use to track him.
With a mere twelve-hour head start, Ben Richards vanishes into the vast, decaying landscape of America. His flight is a brutal, relentless chase across the country, a desperate struggle for survival against overwhelming odds. He travels through Boston, where the Hunters and police converge on his position, forcing him to detonate an oil tank in a YMCA basement to escape, killing several officers in the process. The Network, meanwhile, manipulates his recorded messages, dubbing over his voice with obscenities to further demonize him in the public eye.
Ben adopts disguises, using fake IDs and relying on the kindness - or desperation - of strangers he encounters, some of whom are sympathetic to his plight and the rigged system, while others are eager to betray him for the reward money. He finds fleeting sanctuary and assistance from a resistance network, including a young man named Bradley, who helps him evade checkpoints and provides him with a car and untraceable mailing labels for his video tapes. He begins to understand the true extent of the Network's control and the pervasive apathy of a society desensitized to violence, consuming it as entertainment.
As the days tick by, Richards becomes an unlikely symbol of defiance, his resilience inspiring small, whispered bursts of revolution among the populace, though the Network works tirelessly to suppress any genuine uprising. He continues to outwit his pursuers, the Chief Hunter, Evan McCone, growing increasingly frustrated by the elusive runner. The chase escalates, leading Ben to hijack a Lockheed TriStar jet.
High above the ground, a chilling transmission reaches Ben Richards: word that his wife and daughter have been murdered by Network operatives. The news shatters any lingering hope or reason for him to continue the game. With nothing left to lose, Ben turns the hijacked jet, its running lights blinking like malevolent eyes, and steers it directly towards the towering Network Games Building. The explosion, described as tremendous, lights up the night sky like the wrath of God, raining fire for twenty blocks, a final, defiant act against the brutal, all-consuming system that had made a game of his life.