A
Scanner Darkly (2006)
Rated R
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Robert Downey Jr.,
and Winona Ryder
Rating:

out
of

|
Philip
K Dick's novels and stories are responsible for some of the best science-fiction
movies to ever come out of Hollywood. Total Recall, Blade
Runner,
and Minority Report were all based on Dick's stories. A frequent
complaint by Dick's fans, however, is that the movies tend to stray from
the source material in order to make a more conventional, Hollywood-style
movie. When the
promise
of a movie that was much more faithful to the original material presented
itself in the form of A Scanner Darkly, I jumped at the chance
to see the final result. It turns out there may have been a good reason
previous movies veered away from the original stories. A
Scanner Darkly takes place "seven years from now" in
a world where the United States has become a police state. The authorities
can
install surveillance cameras into your home simply as a result of "probable
cause". Your cell phone calls enable you to be tracked not only
by your location but
visually via cameras on every street. An illicit hallucinogenic
drug -- known as Substance D -- has swept the nation and over 20% of
the population
is
now addicted. (And when your every move is being watched,
a drug that would allow you to escape into your own mind sounds like
a good idea, right?)
"Fred"
(Keanu Reeves) is an undercover agent working to bust a ring of Substance
D dealers. As an undercover agent, he wears a device called a scramble
suit to shield his true identity. His true identity is that of Bob Arctor,
a man whose friends are all under surveillance. His roommates Barris
(Robert Downey Jr.) and Luckman (Woody Harrelson) are addicts. His girlfriend
Donna (Winona Ryder) is a dealer and an addict. And Bob is an addict.
This is a fact he tries to hide from his superiors but his current
assignment makes it more
and more difficult to conceal.
Director
Richard Linklater uses an animation technique called rotoscoping, which
paints over individual frames of film to turn live-action footage
into animation. Using computers, the process is tinkered
with in what turns out to be an annoying distraction from the plot, which
requires as much of your attention as you can afford to give in order
to keep things straight. It's hard to focus on the actions of the characters
when it looks like they're floating on their surroundings or perspectives
are altered just slightly enough to be noticeable. While it may have
been the director's intent to make the world appear as if it's being
viewed through the eyes of an addict, it prevents the
more important ideas of the film to be lost.
In
addition to the intruding animation technique, there's a problem in the
fact that the plot, which may have been hard-edged stuff
in 1977, now reads like headlines in the newspaper. A
government that allows spying on individuals without a warrant? Reality.
Corrupt
and drug-addicted police officers? Reality. Scramble suits? Pretty
much the only thing in the movie that hasn't happened yet. The fact that
much of this film is a roll call of current events is more disturbing
than anything the movie can serve up.
It's
not all bad. Keanu Reeves turns in a good performance. The arguments
between Downey Jr.'s Barris and Harrelson's Luckman are humorous
and provide the best moments of the film.
The
opening sequence, featuring Empire
Records' Rory Cochrane fighting off an army of aphids, is effective
and one of the only successful arguments for why the film should be
animated.
The
majority of what the movie has to say could have been done in a half
hour short film. Even at a running time of an hour
and 40 minutes, A Scanner Darkly seems entirely too long.
While not as disgusting as Spun,
or as lost up its own rectum as Fear
and Loathing in Las Vegas, A Scanner Darkly also
meanders through its individual drug-induced haze without making a
point strong
enough to make the journey worth taking. That said, I have a feeling
the film will be a cult hit at midnight showings. It does have some
smarts but
it doesn't have a story.
Trivia: The
title comes from a paraphrasing of the letters of the Apostle Paul in
the New Testament. Paul writes on "looking into a mirror darkly". (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |