Total Recall
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Paul Verhoeven
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Sharon Stone
Michael Ironside
Priscilla Allen
Karlyn Michelson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Set in the year 2084, a man goes to Mars via a memory implant and discovers the truth about himself.
Director
Paul Verhoeven
Cast
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Sharon Stone
Michael Ironside
Priscilla Allen
Karlyn Michelson
Roy Brocksmith
Erik Cord
Paula Mcclure
Dean Norris
Morgan Lofting
Dave Nicolson
Erika Carlson
Benny Corral
Michael Gregory
Joe Unger
Rosemary Dunsmore
Chuck Sloan
Monica Steuer
Michael Laguardia
Rachel Ticotin
Anne Lockhart
Ronny Cox
Roger Cudney
Ken Gilden
Mark Carlton
Ken Strausbaugh
Mel Johnson
Alexia Robinson
Ellen Gollas
Patti Attar
Lycia Naff
Kamala Lopez-dawson
Robert Picardo
Sasha Rionda
Debbie Lee Carrington
Parker Whitman
Marshall Bell
Rebecca Ruth
Milt Tarver
Robert Costanzo
Scott A. Bobbitt
Linda Howell
David Knell
Frank Kopyc
Mickey Jones
Bob Tzudiker
Ray Baker
Robert Bergen
Gloria Dorson
Michael Champion
Marc Alaimo
Crew
Jon Alexander
Ken Allen
Henry Alvarez
Armando Amador
Victor Anderbery
David Appleby
Lilia Soto Aragon
Andy Armstrong
Vic Armstrong
Vic Armstrong
David A Arnold
Alejandro Avendano
Anuar Badin
Kim Balser
Bruce Barbour
Jennifer Ann Barnes
David Bartlett
Ron Bartlett
Gary Baxley
Amanda Beard
Scott Beattie
Claudia Becker
Dickey Beer
James Belohovek
Craig Berkeley
Tom Bertino
Margaret Beserra
Paula Beyers
Michael Bigelow
Roland Blancaflor
Simone Boisseree
Clay Boss
May Boss
Bruce Botnick
Rob Bottin
Rob Bottin
William M Boyd
Marcus Brandly
Derek G Brechin
Robert Bremner
Eric Brevig
Tony Brubaker
Donald Bryant
Chere Rae Bryson
Pablo Buelna
Jane Bulmer
Stephen Burg
Jeff Burks
Rob Burton
Richard Butler
Anne Calanchini
Roger Callard
Craig Campobasso
Alfredo Gomez Capetillo
Antonio Gomez Capetillo
Hector Romero Cardenas
Heriberto Cardenas
Jon Carpenter
Ignacio Carreno
Giuseppe Carrozza
Dave Carson
Jose Demaria Casado
Jorge Casares
Anjelica Casillas
Elpidio Cano Castro
Miguel Chang
Kathy Chasen-hay
Ann Chatterton
James Christopher
James Clark
Larry E Clark
Richard F Clark
Ron Cobb
Richard L Cohen
Doug Coleman
Brent Collins
Alan Collis
Donald Collis
Jack Collis
Lynn Collis
Terry Collis
Rhonda Columb
Al Coulter
Gustavo Covarrubias
Simon Crane
Graeme Crowther
Hugo Gutierrez Cuellar
William Greg Curtis
James A D'orta
Jim Davidson
Jeff Dawn
Vince Deadrick
Gary Deaton
Tracy Defreitas
Noori Dehnahi
Efren Del Moral
Leon Delaney
Carlos Delarios
Bryan Dewe
Bob Dewitt
Philip K Dick
John Dickenson
Nick Dimitri
Cal Divalerio
Thomas B Divalerio
Dennis Dorney
John Downey
Tony Dublin
Christopher Duddy
Stephan Dupuis
Carlos Echeverria
Lynn Ehrensperger
Alma Rosa Elizondo
John Elliot
Kenny Endoso
Jeannie Epper
Stephanie Epper
Donna Evans Merlo
Dana Dru Evenson
Fernando Favila
Craig Feied
Buzz Feitshans
Matthew Feitshans
James Feldman
Mike Fenton
Robert Fentress
Gunnar Ferdinandsen
Greg Figiel
Scott R. Fisher
Thomas L. Fisher
Tammy Fites
Wayne Fitzgerald
Lily Flaschner
Donald Flick
Judee Flick
Stephen Hunter Flick
Ileana Franco U
Alex Funke
Jose Gallegos
Anna Sanchez Genard
Geo
Geo
Dominic Gerace
Giacomo Ghiazza
Buddy Gilyard
Gary Goldman
Jerry Goldsmith
Maria Asuncion Gomez
Scott Goodale
Judith Goodman
Robert Gould
Allan Graf
Jose Rodriguez Granada
Jim Grce
Jim Grce
James Green
Douglas Greenfield
Kris Gregg
Xavier Pérez Grobet
Lee Grodsky
Jesus Guerrero
Dana Gustafson
Anette Haellmigk
James Hagedorn
Daryl Hall
Kenneth Hall
Ed Hamilton
George Hanson
Donald Hardenburg
Roy Harrison
Tracy Hauser
Janet Healy
Scott Hecker
Suzanne Hefner
Erik Henry
Daniel Hermosillo
Enrique Lechuga Hernandez
Javier Ibarra Herrera
Freddie Hice
John Hock
Marcia Holley
Alan Howarth
Mentor Hubner
Georgie Huntington
Walter Huse
Walter Huse
Gloria Hylton
Jay Ignaszewski
Fred Iguchi
Dream Quest Images
Enrique Soto Izquierdo
David James
Nicholas James
Ismael Jardon
Bob Jaurequi
Jeff Jensen
Jeanne Joe
Jess Johnson
Rick Johnson
Dave Karpman
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Wins
Best Visual Effects
Award Nominations
Best Sound
Best Sound Effects Sound Editing
Articles
Total Recall (1990)
Though Total Recall went into production nearly a decade after Dick's death, the property had been optioned as early as 1974 by little-known screenwriter Ronald Shusett, whose claim to anything resembling fame at the time was a story credit on the Cinerama Releasing Corporation thriller W (1974), which paired Twiggy with a pre-Battlestar Galactica Dirk Benedict. Paying $1,000 for the story rights, Shusett pressed friend Dan O'Bannon into adapting "We Can Remember It For You Wholesale" for the big screen. (O'Bannon had cowritten the low budget space opera Dark Star [1974], the first feature film for director John Carpenter.) When the futuristic tale - which featured space travel and memory manipulation - began to seem to the collaborators too expensive, they shifted focus to a more modest tale of interstellar terror, which became (as fate would have it) Ridley Scott's Alien (1979). The success of Alien brought Shusett to the attention of Disney, where Total Recall found a home for a time. Eventually, the property drifted to the De Laurentiis Entertainment Group) and Rome, where maverick Italian producer Dino de Laurentiis ordered the production artwork, the construction of sets, and the cashiering of Canadian filmmaker David Cronenberg as his director.
Cronenberg stayed with Total Recall for a year, writing more than a dozen drafts of the script, scouting locations in Tunis, and bringing in Oscar-winning actor Richard Dreyfuss (though he preferred the more cerebral William Hurt) to play a mild-mannered government clerk who comes to believe he is an amnesiac secret agent embroiled in a conspiracy with intergalactic implications. He eventually parted ways with both de Laurentiis and Shusett over irreconcilable artistic differences; The Stunt Man (1980) director Richard Rush would jump ship for similar reasons. De Laurentiis then passed the property to Australian director Bruce Beresford, with Dreyfuss replaced by Dirty Dancing star Patrick Swayze. Production resumed Down Under until D.E.G. ran out of money, at which point the property was acquired by Arnold Schwarzenegger and Carolco Pictures (for whom Schwarzenegger had just headlined Red Heat [1988]) for $3,000,000. A fan of Paul Verhoeven's RoboCop (1987), Schwarzenegger tapped the Dutch expatriate to take the reins on the runaway production - an apt selection, given that Verhoeven was Shusett's director-of-choice a decade earlier, based on his 1977 film Soldier of Orange (which starred a pre-Blade Runner Rutger Hauer).
Bringing on screenwriter Gary Goldman (fresh from penning John Carpenter's Big Trouble in Little China [1986]), Verhoeven, producer Shusett, and star Schwarzenegger recrafted the tale, teasing the dry, cerebral exercise favored by Cronenberg (whose subplot of Martian mutants was nonetheless retained) toward the paradigm of an action film (Shusett's model had long been Spielberg's Raiders of the Lost Ark) in which the protagonist was changed to a brawny construction worker who fantasizes about an exciting life on Mars and pays to have that false memory implanted in his brain - only to find out the dream is reality. Setting up shop at Mexico City's Churubusco Studios in March 1989 with a budget of $50,000,000, Verhoeven put a crew of five hundred to work on forty-five sets built inside eight soundstages. Total Recall would be one of the first Hollywood films to combine live action, miniatures, matte work, and animatronics with a glazing of computer generated imagery (later branded as CGI) to seal the illusion of far-flung futurism. Cast as Schwarzenegger's duplicitous wife was newcomer Sharon Stone (star of Verhoeven's follow-up blockbuster Basic Instinct [1992]), athletic character actress Rachel Ticotin, RoboCop villain Ronny Cox (as yet another corporate rotter) and Michael Ironside, a Canadian film actor best known for his dastardly turn in Cronenberg's Scanners.
A gamble for Carolco at the price, Total Recall nonetheless earned a massive return on its investment upon release in June 1990, recouping nearly half of its production budget on opening weekend alone and garnering an Academy Award for Best Visual Effects. Despite the big numbers, interest in a sequel was low, as film franchises (even in the wake of James Cameron's Aliens [1986] and Terminator 2: Judgment Day [1991], which starred Schwarzenegger) remained an idea whose time had not yet come. It was Gary Goldman who got the ball rolling when he optioned the 1956 Philip Dick story "Minority Report," about a police agency that uses precognition to apprehend criminals before any crime has been committed, with a mind toward directing it a low budget feature. When Goldman tapped Verhoeven to executive produce, the idea was floated to reshape Minority Report as a Total Recall sequel, with Goldman demoted to writer, Verhoeven stepping in as director, and Schwarzenegger returning as the name above the title. The subsequent bankruptcy of Carolco drove the property to 20th Century Fox, where Verhoeven lost ownership of the project and all plans for Total Recall 2 were dropped in favor of Minority Report being a stand-alone feature, slated initially to be directed by Verhoeven's countryman Jan De Bont until De Bont lost favor with Fox over the failure of Speed 2: Cruise Control (1997) and The Haunting (1999).
Steven Spielberg ultimately took the reins of Minority Report, which took several more years to coalesce into a feature film starring Tom Cruise. Meanwhile), Total Recall spawned a short-lived Canadian TV series, Total Recall 2070, which ran to 22 episodes in 1999. In 2009, a feature-length remake of Total Recall was announced in the Hollywood trades, with Kurt Wimmer slated to direct. (Wimmer's previous credit was the hyper-violent futuristic cop tale Equilibrium [2002], a thinly-veiled cash-in on the widely popular The Matrix [1999].) By the time the Columbia Pictures release went before the cameras in Toronto, however, Underworld's Len Wiseman was sitting in the director's chair, with Colin Farrell playing the Schwarzenegger role and Kate Beckinsale and Jessica Biel the women in his life (and dreams). As slate gray monochromatic as Verhoeven's adaptation had been chromatically candied, Total Recall (2012) was a critical and box office nonstarter that oddly elected to jettison the Mars setting of the earlier film in favor of an exclusively earthbound narrative - a tack that had been championed years earlier by Dino De Laurentiis, who was shouted down by every director he had hired for the job.
By Richard Harland Smith
Sources: "We Can Rewrite It For You Wholesale" by David Hughes, Tales from Development Hell: The Greatest Movies Never Made? (Titan Books, 2003-2012) Total Recall: My Unbelievably True Life Story by Arnold Schwarzenegger with Peter Petre (Simon and Schuster, 2012) The Cinema of David Cronenberg: From Baron of Blood to Cultural Hero by Ernest Mathijs (Wallflower Press, 2008) Divine Invasions: A Life of Philip K. Dick by Lawrence Sutin (Da Capo Press, 2005)
Total Recall (1990)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Summer June 1, 1990
Released in United States on Video November 1, 1990
Released in United States 1990
Released in United States June 2001
Shown at Deauville Film Festival August 31 - September 9, 1990.
Shown in New York City (Anthology Film Archives) as part of program "You Asked For It: The Films of Paul Verhoeven" June 21-30, 2001.
Formerly distributed by Carolco Home Video.
Completed shooting August 23, 1989.
Began shooting March 20, 1989.
Released in United States Summer June 1, 1990
Released in United States on Video November 1, 1990
Released in United States 1990 (Shown at Deauville Film Festival August 31 - September 9, 1990.)
Released in United States June 2001 (Shown in New York City (Anthology Film Archives) as part of program "You Asked For It: The Films of Paul Verhoeven" June 21-30, 2001.)