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Rollerball





Director: Norman Jewison
Starring: James Caan (Jonathan E.), John Houseman (Bartholomew), Maud Adams (Elk) John Beck (II) (Moonpie)



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Rollerball (1975)
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"All branches of knowledge, which continue to develop at the thought of the spectacle, have to justify a society without justification, and constitute a general science of false consciousness.  This thought is completely conditioned by the fact that it cannot and will not investigate its own material basis in the spectacular system."

            (Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle)

As with cinema, science fiction reflects what is uppermost in the contemporary consciousness.  Its mood is drawn from the headlines of the moment past, the images that have flashed across the writer's vision and been juggled into a confetti of fantasies and conjectures before being cast out in the form of words and visuals.  The experiences of the past are controllable, available for manipulation, in contrast to the future which is an area of the "uncontrollable", rushing upon us with new unimagined possibilities or feared and long-avoided events, accidents, oblivions.  Science fiction seeks to anticipate the unknown, to shape a future vision from a changed and "improved" present (discovering in the process that improvements are not necessarily for the better, nor "utopian" progress the ideal form of existence). And if perfection is constantly elusive, since few people can agree on what is perfect and what isn't, science fiction most frequently signals directions by describing a society in transition and conflict - a society not dissimilar from any you may think of that exists in the World today.

In Norman Jewison's Rollerball (1975) based on William Harrison's hypnotic short story, it is the year 2018 and the World is at peace.  There is no crime and there are no more wars.   Corporations now control the globe.  Divided into several zones controlled by different companies working together in mutual co-operation.  Dissent has been eliminated. An ultra-violent hyper-game termed Rollerball is now the premier sport. 

Rollerball forms an elaborate thesis on social control and violence constructed around a clever symmetry of dystopian visions.  The atmosphere is suffused with diverse strands of conspiracy theory.  The thematic structure of the film describes how the social order imposed by the contemporary global economy maintains, perpetuates, and expands its influence through the manipulation of representations.  No longer relying on force or scientific economies the status quo of social relations is (as described by Guy Debord in Society of the Spectacle) "mediated by images".

The principle narrative in Rollerball revolves around the consequences that result when a strong individual clashes with a powerful establishment.  The central figure - a modern gladiator, Jonathan E (James Caan) is a hero in a definitive sense: a Nietzschean "metal-man" -  indomitable, unbreakable.  Even against the chilling uber-executive Mr Bartholomew (John Houseman)  Jonathan is resolute.   The story mechanics concern a boardroom decision that Jonathan has grown too popular and must retire.  Jonathan superstar of Rollerball and veteran of ten seasons with the Houston team is summonsed by Area Executive Bartholomew who is intent upon engineering the stars " graceful" exit.

Jonathan E:            (quietly)  The team ... they depend on me.

Bartholomew:    (softly) Let's think this through together. You know how the game serves us. It has a definite social function. The nations are bankrupt ... we don't have their tribal warfare any more ... even the corporate wars are a thing of the past. So now we have the Majors: Transport, Food, Communications, Housing, Luxury, Energy ... a few of us making decisions on a global basis for the common good ... corporate society takes care of everything. All it asks - all it has ever asked - is for anyone not to interfere with management decisions

It seems that Jonathan's continued tenure as a Rollerball champion is defeating the very purpose of the game, which is designed to illustrate that all players (and by inference the general populace) are an interchangeable component of a mass conformity which characterizes the globalized brave new World.

Norman Jewison designed Rollerball as an anti-violence statement.  By constructing the game central to the film to be as brutal and nihilistic as possible, he hoped audiences would share his distaste for the "mayhem as mass entertainment" that has become the dominant feature of contemporary sport.  In this respect, he failed. The three separate Rollerball games depicted - Houston vs Madrid, Houston vs Tokyo and Houston vs New York - are distinctly the most compelling and incendiary sections of the film and the reason Rollerball remains a cult favourite today. 

The Rollerball game as a sport combines roller derby, motor-cross, grid-iron football and Ice-hockey.  The players skate inside a bowl/arena using motor cycles and towing rigs in order to maintain speed.  Helmets, skates, padding, spiked mittens and weapons are included in the equipment.  The "object" of the contest is to maintain possession of a silver hand-sized metallic ball, which is initially fired into the course at high speed, and carry it eventually scoring by dropping it into an illuminated aperture in the upper perimeter.  The strategy is similar to American football, the speed and blocking ice hockey but the origin derives from an ancient Mayan ball court-game where opponents compete with their lives to punch a ball through an elevated stone ring.

In the arrangement of shot-construction Rollerball divides neatly to emphasize its thesis.  The exterior scenes appear in primary long-shot form with muted colour tones (white/grey) and a subdued sound-scape, manifesting a frozen stillness.  In contrast the game-sequences are vehement and dynamic.  High impact editing is enforced by the vibrant red and black colouration.  The sound now conjures with images of animalistic conflict.

The Corporation's executives' determination to terminate the popular champion leads to an adaptation of rules in each game, making them progressively more extreme.  The strategy ultimately fails and in the final game, where rules have been dispensed with completely and where the teams play until one or the other is comprehensively destroyed, Jonathan E is the sole survivor, triumphantly slamming the ball in the opponents goal.  Jonathan triumphs, at least temporarily, but we never learn his fate.

"In the future there will be no war.

There will only be Rollerball"

The actions of governments interpreted on the screen customarily insist that bureaucracy is built upon multiple mistakes and cover-ups, violently administered.  The symbolic aliens are frequently replaced by a savage authoritarian regime trampling on freedom.  (Alphaville - Godard (1965)) - Farenheit 451 - Truffaut (1966) - Soylent Green (1973) - THX 1138 George Lucas 1965)). The standard was established by John Frankenheimer and George Axelrod creators of The Manchurian Candidate (1962). Rollerball demonstrates the dangers of corporate domination.  All literature/information is collected/"summarised" or effectively sterilized.  Corporations become the enemy of freedom.  Jonathan E doesn't accept the order he receives to retire.  Everywhere he searches for an answer to the question "why", he meets a wall of silence.  This defiance creates conflict ultimately played out in the Rollerball arena.

Violent and frightening, but always true to its subject, Rollerball is a visionary portrait of the brutal, authoritarian and overlit future that beckons ever more powerfully from the basis of the present techno-corporate landscape.

Reviewed by Adrian Gargett


Reader comments about Rollerball

Ian Attwood (ian.attwood@avon.com) writes:

top film. top cast. what more can you say ?


Sam D. (sderzie@ix.netcom.com) writes:

Great film!

I hope the upcoming re-make is as good.

There are certain parallels with Rollerball and Ancient Rome - I believe this was a futuristic re-make of the Roman Colloseum.

There are also parallels with Rollerball and Gladiator (2000), with the hero challenging the establishment.


jefe (Email address withheld) writes:

This movie was a let down. Extremely boring except for the actual rollerball games and the extremely odd blowing up of trees. I was planning on buying it but decided to rent first. Am very glad because i never want to see it agian. The new one with LL COOl J will probably be better.


Derek Baldwin (DJBNJB@aol.com) writes:

The crassness of the film is matched blow for blow by the pretentiousness of your reviewer. The film is not capable of supporting a post-modern interpretation or for that matter a situationist one because all that it is is a not particularly watchable exploitative actioner. I can only imagine what a remake with LL Cool J will be like but I think I'm safe in assuming that any satiric intent that may or may not have been coded into the original will probably be lost the second time around. And then some.


Dicky (dickydoo66@hotmail.com) writes:

This is one of the best futuristic films ever made. There is no glam or glitz in this film & there is a reason for this.....the future has always been depicted as steril & controlled. This is due to the fear that our excesses will lead to our downfall. The remake, though I have't seen it yet, will not be able to capture this because we now live in the future & our excesses have not yet lead to our donefall....not yet.


Sean (sean.preece@gb.abb.com) writes:

This will always be one of my favourite films of all time, and one I now possess on DVD. It still has a unique freshness to it some 27 years on from when it was first released and is still enjoyed by people like myself who saw it first time around, and now also by a new younger audience, who regard the film as a true classic.


Andrew (kindsoul1@earthlink.net) writes:

This is a classic movie. There is nothing more exciting than to watch someone on skates being pulled by a motorcycle. And who needs rules anyway? Sometimes they are meant to keep us down. Anybody know where we can play this sport? Maybe James Caan would come and watch the action!


Liam (Email address withheld) writes:

I am one of the younger audiences Sean talks of. To discover and watch for the first time a classic such as this, is truly rewarding. What a film. While the theme may not be entirely original, the film as a whole is unique and Jewison's vision of the future suprisingly bleak yet frightening.


L F (e mail address un disclosed) writes:

Awesome Original..EQUALLY IF NOT MORE AWESOME REMAKE!

People WAKE UP! DONT YALL SEE???.. The Remake was A STORY OF TRUE LOVE!!!!

all be it hidden behind a spectacle of a fusion of WWE and Ben Hur... The Black Widow Aurora Portrayed by Rebecca Romijn Stamos FINALLY Snagged the man of her dreams.. for whom whe had waited all of her days... ALL HER LIFE she had wanted one like him.. One She could claim ------------- ALL FOR HERSLEF!!!!!!!!!! As is the mating ritual between the actual species of the black widow and her mate.......But Poor Jonathan Bless his soul... He will do as a man will do....take true Black WIdow's love for granted.... Almost too late...but not quite though.. Thank the Powers that be... For the Golden Horde Uniform is only that.. a uniform.. Aurora is A Black Widow Horsewoman at heart... And Jonathan realizaed in the end .. Again thank the Powers that be.... and reclaimed his Black Widow for his own.. as it should be ;)


zero g (Email address withheld) writes:

I did'nt see the original Rollerball,but the remake is crap.There were so many people i hated in this movie that i couldn't stand watching it.Paul Heyman,fat and loud...just like he is in the pro-wrestling world.LL Cool J,this man needs to stick to hip-hop because he can't act worth a damn...and what is with the licking of the lips?Now i can see if you just got finished eating some ol' greasy fried chicken or something,but otherwise that crap is just plain corney.Jean Reno,no...i'm a fan of his.Rebecca Romijn Stamos,loved you in X-men,hated you in this for some reason.Back to Paul Heyman,you know you need to just shutup sometime.If anything i would have loved it if Lucia Ryker just punch you in the head one time so you can just shutup.Your fat and loud,i don't have nothing against fat people but it's just the really annoying combination of being both fat and loud that annoy's me.Chris Klien,your young and handsome...we get it!I guess that's it,and oh yeah Paul Heyman and LL Cool j sucks....thank you.


goonerboy (Email address withheld) writes:

The original was the best, though there should have been more games. loads of UK soccer lads would love to have a go, just wear DM's and some leathers and those fucking smart spiked gloves. any lads up for a game or even training


2houseplague (2hp@2houseplague.com) writes:

I guess there's something to be said for controlled violence. The great film Rollerball dared to call it evolutionary that "war" had been replaced with a "game" where people died... I am not sure about that, but the argument is strong. It depends on whether you think we are inescapably violent by nature, or, if you believe we can do better.


Norm Old Paint (Email address withheld) writes:

I was in high school when the original came out. I went to see it alone, then I told my friends about it and we went together three more times. We loved the game, but the rest of the movie was slow (exotic looking hookers, though !) When my sons were teenagers, I showed it to them and they thought the game was great but the rest was slow. Hmmmm. I didn't ask them what they thought of the hookers. Now, having worked for General Electric, the rest of the movie seems quite prophetic. I kind of dismissed the evil corporation message when I was a teenager. Not any more. Too much of it is true.


mike (Email address withheld) writes:

The film grabs you by the heart and never lets you go.(This was the ad splurge when it came out but it's true. after thirty years it still has me by the heart.

The remake was absolute crap and didn't get the message (nor the visuals).

This film (original) will stand the tsts of time...


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