This month, the Subjectively Obscure Sci-Fi Primer returns to the cyberpunk side of things withTotal Recall 2070. Don’t be fooled by the title, as it has practically nothing to do with the similarly-named Schwarzenegger film; it’s more of a separate (if not particularly accurate) adaptation of the same Phillip K. Dick story, “We Can Remember It For You Wholesale,” although it’s so different that the author isn’t mentioned in the credits at all. Produced in Canada, it originally aired in the US on Showtime alongsideStargate SG-1, before that show jumped networks. Showtime really had a thing for turning movies into series that had very little in common with the original film, apparently. As is typical for these obscure shows, it managed only one season, but what’s there is worth a look. It’s likeAlmost Human, ifAlmost Human didn’t hate itself for being sci-fi.
As the title implies, the show is set in the year 2070, by which point mankind has colonized Mars and some of the space in between, although that fact is rarely relevant to the series plot. Both planets are dominated by a handful of megacorporations, collectively referred to as “The Consortium.” Our main character, David Hume, is a detective working for the CPB, or Citizen’s Protection Bureau, until his partner is killed by a surprisingly self-aware android, and he’s in turn forced to partner up with another android, Ian Farve, to solve the case. Farve, it turns out, is an “Alpha,” an experimental android with mysterious origins who’s designed to be more human than any before. Much of Total Recall 2070‘s approach to androids is drawn from Asimov, which is always a safe way to go. Hume also has a wife, Olivia, who works for one of the megacorps and has her own biases against androids. The cast is rounded out by Olan, their forensics expert and general do-everything-science person, representative of the Assessor’s Office (the megacorps’ own private police, essentially) Calley, and the CPB’s Reasonable Authority Figure, Ehrenthal.
Total Recall 2070 takes exactly one thing from the film: the company Rekall, and its “memory vacation” technology. Everything else feels straightBlade Runner–dark streets, hyper-dense metropolis, overpowered corporations and androids that are sometimes too real. Even the soundtrack is a downplayed version of the early electronic/synth music that madeBlade Runner so memorable. In this regard, one might speculate that perhaps the show was originally supposed to be a spinoff of that film, and they just couldn’t secure the rights to it. I haven’t found much to indicate either way, but I’m also far from the first to question it. Just how blatantly derivative it is turns out to be one of the show’s biggest problems.
This derivative nature is likely what will determine whether or not you can enjoy the show. It tries to be intellectual, but since so much of what it presents is the same old stuff, that never quite works. There just aren’t really enough new, unusual, or at least thought-provoking perspectives at work here. Are androids people? Do we, as humans, put ourselves at risk by becoming too dependent on AI? You’ve seen these themes before, no doubt, and Total Recall 2070‘s answers are the ones we usually get.
But, if you really love cyberpunk in general andBlade Runner in particular, and just want more of that, then Total Recall 2070 is absolutely your show.Charlie Jade is pretty much the only other TV series I’ve seen that makes good use ofBlade Runner‘s visual style, but sustained glimpses of the Alphaverse are few and far between. And unlikeAlmost Human, there’s no shiny, modernesque side of the city for the show to hide in so as to keep costs down. This is 100% unfiltered cyberpunk dystopia. That definitely aided my ability to enjoy the show, almost enough to make me want to bump it up a grade.
A quick run down on my rating system: a 5 represents must-see–a “hidden gem,” as it were. A 4 is good, solid television. A 3 is “cult classic” stage, where the show’s appeal is likely limited to a specific group. A 2 is flawed, but fun, or even “so bad it’s good,” depending on the series and its release timeframe. A 1, of course, is avoid at all costs.
With that being said, I can’t justify giving it a 4 just because I happen to be in the “specific group” this time. Still, I feel like it’s a better example of cyberpunk than nearly every other attempt on TV, and it does whatAlmost Human tried to do better than that show ever did. So if you enjoyed watching that last year, you’ll definitely want to giveTotal Recall 2070 a shot. I ended up watching it (in very low quality) on youtubehere, but there may be other places you can find it; most of the legal streaming services that did offer it at one point have shut down since, and it’s not on any of the big ones (Netflix, Amazon, Hulu) at the moment. Even the DVDs are quite expensive to acquire.
Have any suggestions? Or are there any little known shows you’re a fan of that you’d like me to cover? Leave them in the comments, or send a tweet to@RetroPhaseShift. To be notified of the next entry in the Subjectively Obscure Sci-Fi Primer, you can subscribe to the RSS feed by clickinghere.
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