Why is it so fucking hard for movie studios to get Philip K. Dick right? If youโre adapting a Philip K. Dick story to film, you need a solid dose of futurism and glossy technology, but you also need an organic, druggy feel underlying the movie, too. Richard Linklaterโs A Scanner Darkly had some flaws, but it nailed the mood: Everything should feel like a bad trip, where every level of reality feels woozy and suspect and plasticized.
The creators of the Total Recall remake simply donโt understand this. To them, a Philip K. Dick story is just a reason to add a science-fictional sheen to your basic brain-dead spy thriller. Itโs a mistake many other filmmakers have made (see also: Paycheck, Next, Impostor), and itโs an absolutely baffling choice. Total Recall is at least pretty to look at, in the way that all movies with a unified design sense are pretty to look at: The future world weโre given here is yet another drab dystopia, but itโs a compact, monstrous labyrinth of concrete and rain and human-pacifying screens splayed on every available surface. The premise of this world is stupidโchemical warfare has destroyed all but two urban areas on the planet, and the residents of one urban area, in Australia, must commute through the center of the earth every day to the other urban area in Great Britain to serve their economic betters through drudgeworkโbut at least a design team took the premise seriously and created some beautiful, claustrophobic sets for the characters to run around in.
But those characters arenโt worth your time. With a disappointing drop in quality from last Augustโs surprising Fright Night remake, Colin Farrell plays a boring, ordinary joe named Douglas Quaid who wastes his life in a factory constructing synthetic policemen for the 1 percent. After a visit to a memory-implant company called Rekall, Quaid finds himself on the run from the police, because suddenly heโs got another set of memories, in which heโs a double (or maybe triple) agent named Hauser. Heโs torn between two skinny brunette lady-spies (Kate Beckinsale in the Sharon Stone role of wife/antagonist, Jessica Biel in the predictably Jessica Bielish role), and the whole thing is a conspiracy that involves a Big Successful Guy named Cohaagen (Bryan Cranston in a shamelessly bad performance, considering how heโs dropping everyoneโs jaws on a weekly basis as Walter White on Breaking Bad) who may or may not want to take over the world or something.
This remake has less of Schwarzeneggerโs cheesy gusto from the 1990 iteration, instead gunning for a Bourne Identity kind of on-the-move vibe. There are a few exciting chases, but more often than not, they end with a cheatโin a close-combat scene, Quaid slips out through a window we never saw beforeโthat indicates lazy filmmaking. All the exciting, druggy sci-fi flourishes from Paul Verhoevenโs original are gone, although there are a couple of perfunctory cameos of some of Verhoevenโs weirder moments in the remake, which serve to remind you how boring and drab the new movie really is. Itโs all so painfully normal. Even the instances of Dick-ish philosophy are neutered into lame fortune-cookie philosophy that make The Matrix seem deep. Did you ever stop to think about how all we are is a bunch of chemicals sloshing around in a brain? Now, do you realize that you read that last sentenceโฆ with your brain? Did I blow your mind? No? Not even a little bit? Oh, well. Whatever. ![]()
