A 1990 Sci-fi film based on the Phillip K. Dick short story "We Can Remember It For You Wholesale",Total Recall, starringArnold Schwarzenegger, is on its face a sci-fi take on a spy thriller, set in memories implanted into a bored construction worker of the future...or is it? Because of all theAlternate Character Interpretation, the film is often called "The thinking man's action movie."
Douglas Quaid (Arnold S.) is tired of lifeTwenty Minutes Into the Future. His literal life's dream is to get his ass to Mars as a way of escaping his humdrum existence. A commercial for the Rekall brand "Ego Trip" induces Quaid to try one of the trips, which are just implanted memories of a vacation that he'd never be able to take in person. Quaid elects for an enhanced set of fake memories that cast him in the role of a super spy... sort of a memory novella that he will remember living through. When something goes wrong with the procedure, he discovers that his entire life is a lie, and that he is, in reality, a super spy working under deep cover.Or is he?
The viewer is constantly challenged to decide if Quaid's experiences are real or all just a result of his "ego trip". The film is also well known for its special effects and over-the-top gore, likesomeother notable Verhoeven films. Highlights include tons ofcool guns,three-breasted mutants and abizarre NES tie-in game (Or do they?)
A remake starring Colin Farrell was released in 2012.
Tropes used inTotal Recall include:
A-Team Firing: Richter's goons surroundHauser's hologram on all sides, firing from less than 10 feet away withoutever hitting each other, even though the bullets should be passing right through the hologram.
Mars is roughly under half an AU from Earth at closest approach, meaning it should take at least three minutes each way for the video phones to send messages.
There are so many things wrong with Mars in this film. The finale is especially egregious though: melting the frozen core of the planet fills the atmosphere with water, turning Mars into an earth-like, perfectly viable planet.
In the fight scene in the memory implantation suite on Mars, one of the technicians attacks Quaid with a slender metal rod, but between the more than meter of metal and his own strength, he's not able to even raise a bruise on Quaid when he parries the rod with his bare forearm, but it's still strong enough for Quaid to drive it through his attacker's skull. Being able to drive the thick metal lug that had held one of the restraining cuffs to the chair (before Quaid simply lifts the restraint straight up out of the arm) into another technician's neck and create a rather neat, circular wound is similarly silly (OK, it's an Arnold fight scene, so the laws of physics tend to go out the window, but things really should make more sense than that).
Mars has 38% of the Earth's surface gravity. While people and objects would clearly still be bound to the planetary surface, people would walk and objects would fall differently.
Or these are clues that these events are not real...
Cool Guns: Look forPancor Jackhammers street sweepers wheneverRichter is really pissed off. Also the cool magazine-on-the-back Calico weapons.
Crapsack World: Mars is definitely this. It's basically a backwater colony whose inhabitants are exploited to mine valuable minerales for Earth, have mutated due to prolonged exposure to radiation and are forced to pay for the very air they breathe.
Dark Is Not Evil/Light Is Not Good: Ironically, the script makeslovable blonde girl-next-door Lori a villain, whilethe dark-skinned, slutty ("sleazy," to use Quaid's term), and rude Melina is the sympathetic one.
Eye Scream: The eyes of characters exposed to the near-vacuum atmosphere of Mars. Even if they recover from suffocation, they should be blind after their eyes have taken that kind of abuse. But then, the entire movie seems to be a case ofEyes Are Unbreakable.
Cohaagen: First you try to kill Quaid, then he escapes! Richter: He had help from our side, sir. Cohaagen: I know that. Richter: But I thought... Cohaagen: Who told you to think? I don't give you enough information to think. You do what you're told. That's what you do.
I Have a Family: Benny the cab driver has four kids to feed, and likes to bring it up to potential fares.Or was itfive?
Imminent Danger Clue: Quaid realizes Lori and the doctor are about to kill him from the bead of sweat rolling down the doctor's head.
Indy Hat Roll: Quaid, right after arriving on Mars, to escape enemy pursuit.
It's a Small World After All: Mars hasone red light district (Venusville), and is arranged into sectors that number enough to be designatedletters of the alphabet. Since we don't know how much of Mars was colonized, it's possible that the human population there all lives in the same city.
Mind Screw: Quaid's entire adventure follows the plot of the super spy vacation he orders, as described by the Rekall salesman. Coincidence?!?Or was it?
Quaid and Melina, who somehow instantly recover fromDecompression fairly quickly, despite it being previously shown to turn people into jelly.
It seems that theAlien reactor also managed to bring the pressure to Earth-Norm, but it still shouldn't have been that fast.
No OSHA Compliance: Rather than kicking in automatically, the emergency pressure doors in the Mars spaceport terminal have to be manually activated while potentially (as happens in the film) fighting against being sucked into a near-vacuum.
Note to Self:: The video messages Hauser leaves for Quaid.
Planetville: Even the presence of other tropes reinforce this. For example,the atmospheric pressurization is so fast that if it was interpreted as accurate, it not only shrinks the colony to appreciable city-size, but thewhole damn planet.
Rare Guns: The Pankor Jackhammer, though it is actually a Cobray Sweet Streeper made to look like one. It's not very convincing, but damn if it doesn't look cool.
The Tape Knew You Would Say That: Hauser leaves instructions to Quaid, anticipates how Quaid is going to react at various points, and seems to know roughly how long it'll take him to remove the tracking device, before continuing (theoretically justified by some sort of basic AI programmed to judge responses, like the JohnnyCabs, but nothing like that's actually mentioned).
These Hands Have Killed: Quaid does this right after he slaughters the five agents trying to kill him on Earth, before he goes back to his "wife" Lori. He actually has their blood on his hands at the time.
Uncle Tomfoolery: Benny the cab driver,until he reveals himself as a mutant collaborator. And especially afterthat turns out to be a lie and he wasEvil All Along.
Video Phone: Used a lot on Mars. Talking to someone on Mars was as easy as phoning them up on Earth. In fact, Cohaagen (when on Mars) uses his vid phone to call Richter (on Earth) without any technical difficulties.
Villainous Breakdown: Richter has a brief one afterLori's death, but pulls himself together quite quickly after nearly killing himself and his head goon.
Vilos Cohaagen: Richter goes hog-wild screwing up everything that I spent a year planning. Frankly... I'm amazed it worked!
Your Head Asplode: Subverted, where the exploding head is a bomb-rigged animatronic prosthesis which Quaid wears as part of a costume. His deception uncovered,he tosses the head to his pursuers, in whose hands it cracks wise and then asplodes. Also averted and played straight, since the thin Martian atmosphere causes one bad guy's head to asplode. Arnie and his gal narrowly avoid the same fate.