Whether or not the action within the Total Recall remake takes
place solely within Douglas Quaid/Hauser's (Colin Farrell) mind or in
the film's objective domain is obviously up for debate.
The
evidence for both sides is provided within a functional formulaic
opposition between two states, one who owns the means of production (The
United Federation of Britain/UFB), and another who is forced to work
within them (The Colony/Australia).
The rest of the planet is uninhabitable due to prolonged chemical warfare.
In
the onset, Quaid/Hauser has become bored with the status quo and
decides to check out Rekall, a notorious company who can directly plant
living memories within your mind. After arriving, he chooses the secret
agent program (with the double agent option) and just as he's about to
drift off, seconds after he's intravenously hooked up, security forces
rush in.
For the rest of the film he's a pseudo-double
agent (Hauser) who has had his memory erased and replaced with the
persona Douglas Quaid. He instinctively remembers details of his former
life, usually gut reactions which help him escape UFB traps, but cannot
reconstruct the big picture.
His situation directly relates to a bewildering recurring dream he's been having, prior to visiting Rekall.
I
probably should have paid more attention to the myriad chase sequences
and mushy one-liners that predominate afterwards, for it's likely that
within their action/delivery lie clues designed to disambiguate Total Recall's 'dreamscape.' But said sequences and one-liners are abundant and I found myself zoning out after a while.
However, before Quaid enters Rekall, the one-liners are delivered with a self-reflexive gritty disengaged realistic dexterity.
After
entering Rekall and then travelling to the UFB, Hauser's first olympian
flight is characterized by constantly shifting ground and split-second
opportune life saving reflexes, in short, the stuff dreams are made of.
Yet,
as many people find themselves looking for permanent work, often having
to travel and compete to secure it, their terrain constantly shifts,
working for a year here, another there, perennially stuck in a
probationary period.
And while searching one must often use brief inter/national/provincial/regional expressions while communicating.
Quaid knows who he is. There's no doubt in his mind as to his identity nor to his historical path.
Hauser
has to rely on hidden messages and/or direct support/condemnation,
mired in contradiction due to his supposed status as double agent, apart
from the messages he's left behind for himself, and his actions, to
formulate a stable I, oddly mirroring the establishment of a dream
identity, albeit purely rational within the space's systemic parameters.
His
sudden epic coercive confusing circumstances require a leap of faith
which he makes, choosing to fight for the oppressed (the UFB has run out
of land and seeks to invade the Colony to take theirs), which he does
with the aid of his stunning versatile partner (Jessica Biel as Melina)
while his former wife (Kate Beckingsale as Lori Quaid) does everything
she can to stop them.
And an enigmatic individual whose
personality reflects the end of history prevents the colonialization
while enabling the creation of a social democratic state, amidst cheers
and celebrations and a giant advertisement for Rekall.
Is this resolution too good to be true?
Well,
in order to openly discuss the legitimate claims of oppressed workers
in the post-9/11 age of austerity while working within a domain that
regularly produces works designed to infantilize them, it makes sense
that such a discussion would have to take place within an ambiguous
framework in order for everyone involved to avoid any imperial
entanglements.
At the same time, if the narrative does
take place solely in Quaid's mind, it's designed to provoke critical
discussions of the ways in which the military industrial complex is
using pop culture
to substitute images for reality in order to disrupt collective
left-wing political actions by situating them within the cult of
the individual, thereby making them seem unattainable (director Len
Wiseman having taken control of the means of production).
Meaning that either way, Quaid is Hauser.
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