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Philip
K. Dick (1928-1982) was a prolific science fiction writer with a pulp fiction style, a
futurist's imagination and a satirist's wit. He worked more with ideas than with
characterization, but his projections of current trends and technology into a
not-too-distant future provided the basis for action plotting that transcends the usual
output of the genre.
The first--and still best--of the films based on Dick's work was the
classic Blade
Runner in which the nature of androids (he called them
"replicants"--artificial human beings, extremely advanced robots) was explored
against the background of a radiation contaminated, overpopulated planet. Total
Recall was an Arnold Schwartzenegger vehicle in which the hero is caught up
in questions of what is real and what is illusion, a pervasive Dick theme that surely
influenced the popular Matrix
series. Spielberg's Minority
Report mixed the crime genre in with the sci fi, positing a police force that
could anticipate and stop crimes before they happen.
Now action director John Woo (Mission
Impossible II, Windtalkers)
gets his Philip Dick moment in Paycheck, where time again is of the
essence. A fiercely competitive corporation headed by megalomaniac Jimmy Rethrick
(Aaron Eckhart) has developed a machine that enables the user to see the future. They hire
brilliant consultant Michael Jennings (Ben Affleck) for an eight-figure fee to go on a
three-year junket with the goal of bringing back technology from the future. One condition
is that Jennings' memory is wiped clear, so that he personally is not privy to the
information obtained.
But when Jennings returns, things seem awry. In his own absence he has
signed away his fortune and the personal effects that are returned to him are not those he
turned over before departure. All of a sudden the FBI is after him and it turns out
Rethrick is trying to assassinate him, too. He realizes that the personal effects he now
has are items he sent back to himself from the future--clues to help him figure out what
happened/is happening/will happen.
So it's a setup for a combination of detective work and the chase. No
one does the latter better than John Woo and there are several extended,
adrenaline-churning action sequences. But the "detective" side of the script is
a bit opaque; the clues become logical enough as Jennings pieces them through, but the
audience isn't included in the game as it would be in a good detective story.