Running Scared opened at the Plaza Cinema, Lower Regent Street, London on 27 April 1972. It ran for two weeks before being withdrawn having taken only £2,302. It then got a circuit release as supporting feature to
Play It Again, Sam, playing the ABC cinemas Brixton and Bayswater and the Classic cinema in Hampstead.
Loss The film has screened on British television once, on
BBC Two on 23 July 1978. As at 2020 it has never had a
VHS or
DVD release although it is understood that 16mm prints were struck. Local interest in
Running Scared is surprisingly strong. For an exhibition at the 2010 Braunston Festival photographs taken during filming, as well as press cuttings, original scripts and posters were displayed to the public. The original film was intended to be shown but unfortunately this was not the case at that time. Due to the interest shown, a larger exhibition and possible documentary (with input from local residents) was planned for the 40th anniversary of the making of the film in summer 2011. In December 2011, the film was shown twice in Braunston Village Halls; lead actress
Gayle Hunnicutt was present at the screening and claimed it was the first time she had seen the film in its entirety. As of 2020 the copyright has yet to be determined.
Reception Tom Milne, reviewing the film in
The Times, commented that it "somehow fritters itself away into long, broody pauses and soulful searchings". Several sequences, on the other hand, were "done with a razor-sharp incisiveness that would not have shamed
Losey and
Pinter ... on balance, it seems worth risking the tedium to watch a born director at work". The British periodical
Films and Filming noted the influence of
Michelangelo Antonioni and stated "the lifelike and somewhat enigmatic nature of the story is seemingly based on an assumption of intelligence in the audience which is far in advance of the UK film making norm" of the time. It rated
Running Scared three stars for "not to be missed". ==References==