Total Recall

ActionAdventureScience Fiction
Overview : Construction worker Douglas Quaid's obsession with the planet Mars leads him to visit Recall, a company that manufactures memories. When his memory implant goes wrong, Doug can no longer be sure what is and isn't reality.
Budget : 65000000USD
language : en
Runtime : 113 min
Release Date : 1990-06-01
Imdb ID : tt0100802
Status : Released

Cast

Arnold Schwarzenegger
Douglas Quaid / Hauser

Rachel Ticotin
Melina

Sharon Stone
Lori Quaid

Ronny Cox
Vilos Cohaagen

Michael Ironside
Richter

Marshall Bell
George / Kuato

Mel Johnson Jr.
Benny

Michael Champion
Helm

Roy Brocksmith
Dr. Edgemar

Ray Baker
Bob McClane

Rosemary Dunsmore
Dr. Lull

David Knell
Ernie

Alexia Robinson
Tiffany

Dean Norris
Tony

Mark Carlton
Bartender

Debbie Lee Carrington
Thumbelina

Lycia Naff
Mary

Robert Costanzo
Harry

Michael LaGuardia
Stevens

Priscilla Allen
Fat Lady

Ken Strausbaugh
Immigration Officer

Marc Alaimo
Everett

Michael Gregory
Rebel Lieutenant

Ken Gildin
Hotel Clerk

Mickey Jones
Burly Miner

Parker Whitman
Martian Husband

Ellen Gollas
Martian Wife

Gloria Dorson
Woman in Phone Booth

Erika Carlsson
Miss Lonelyhearts

Benny Corral
Punk Cabbie

Bob Tzudiker
Doctor

Erik Cord
Lab Assistant

Frank Kopyc
Technician

Chuck Sloan
Scientist

Dave Nicolson
Scientist

Paula McClure
Newscaster

Rebecca Ruth
Reporter

Milt Tarver
Commercial Announcer

Roger Cudney
Agent

Monica Steuer
Mutant Mother

Sasha Rionda
Mutant Child

Linda Howell
Tennis Pro

Robert Picardo
Johnnycab (voice)

Kamala Lopez
Additional Voices (voice)

Morgan Lofting
Additional Voices (voice)

Patti Attar
Additional Voices (voice)

Bob Bergen
Additional Voices (voice)

Joe Unger
Additional Voices (voice)

Karlyn Michelson
Additional Voices (voice)

Joel Kramer
Harry's Henchman (uncredited)

Andy Armstrong
Richter's Henchman (uncredited)

Graeme Crowther
Richter's Subway Agent (uncredited)

Thomas Ebert
Subway Rider (uncredited)

Frank Allen Forbes
Vestron Soldier (uncredited)

Allan Graf
Harry's Henchman (uncredited)

Peter Kent
Richter's Subway Agent (uncredited)

Steven Lambert
Man Standing Behind Fat Lady (uncredited)

Billy D. Lucas
Richter's Subway Agent (uncredited)

Bennie Moore
Richter's Subway Agent (uncredited)

Terry Richards
Henchman at Cementfactory (uncredited)

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Reviews

Ruuz
Intrinsically Verhoeven, _Total Recall_ is a film from my youth that I probably shouldn't have been watching quite as early as I did, but that I still love to this day. All the practical effects, exquisite violence & nudity and provocative sci-fi themes you've come to expect from this sort of thing, but twists and turns that start just five minutes in and keep running all the way through to the end. _Total Recall_ is a must-see. _Final rating:★★★★ - Very strong appeal. A personal favourite._
John Chard
Verhoeven bonkers adaptation of a P. K. Dick story. Doug Quaid keeps getting recurring dreams about a visit to Mars. In spite of his friends warnings, he decides to have a memory implanted Mars holiday. But during the implantation he remembers being a secret agent who is fighting evil Mars boss Vilos Cohaagen. Things are about to go very intergalactic bonkers indeed. Total Recall finds director Paul Verhoeven on particularly OTT form, with the often maligned director cranking up the action and violence to the max. So then, who better to play out the carnage than the big Austrian oak himself, Arnold Schwarzenegger? It was actually Schwarzenegger who brought Verhoeven into the picture. The idea for the film had been kicking around for years, a number of director's came and went, David Cronenberg famously worked on a screenplay for a year only to have it jettisoned for being too close to the P. K. Dick short story "We Can Remember It For You Wholesale". The makers wanted a high energy sci-fi blockbuster, a star vehicle for Schwarzenegger, and Verhoeven was only too happy to oblige. Total Recall is a fascinating concept as we find ourselves wondering what in fact is reality? Quaid himself is never quite sure as the film takes a delicious twist at the midpoint to further compound the confusion, but in true Verhoeven style, it all comes crashing together in a giant ball of bangs, crashes and explosions. It should be noted that the film is far removed from the cerebral essence of Dick's story, and really when one saw that Schwarzenegger was to star in a Verhoeven directed adaptation, one really should be prepared for the high octane brain dumb down that Total Recall is. Something which was beyond some highbrow critics who are still baffled by the gargantuan financial success of the film (it made over $260 million worldwide). Fleshing out the cast are a stoic reliable bunch. Rachael Ticotin, Ronny Cox, Sharon Stone & Michael Ironside deliver the expected tongue in cheek professionalism. While the effects prove to be a mixture of the poor and the decent; tho it's nice to see the often lost art of model work being of a pretty high standard. All of which leaves me personally with a film that I find to be a hugely enjoyable piece of uber violent popcorn fodder. 8/10
Geronimo1967
Aside from maybe "Predator" (1987) this is probably my favourite outing from Arnold Schwarzenegger. He ("Quaid") goes off to have an harmless implant of memories from an holiday on Mars (that he hasn't had) only to find that his life starts to unwind very quickly afterwards. Even his girlfriend "Lori" (Sharon Stone) becomes a would-be assassin and he is soon under attack from just about every other quarter too. Why? Well, that's what we now explore as he decides that he - helped by a video iteration of himself - must travel back to the red planet and get to the bottom of things. My flaw - well Ronny Cox is just dreadful as "Cohaagen" which does prove important towards the end of the film, but for the main part it is an action packed and well directed vehicle for a very much on-form star. It's one of the first films I recall that started messing about with timelines. We are not quite sure what happened when or if, indeed, at all - and Paul Verhoeven keeps that tempo running well right from the start of the film. Arnie has a chance to deliver some quite fun one-liners and the visual effects enhance, sparingly, the production rather than impose themselves on it. It has dated a little, some of the sets do look a bit static, but thirty-odd years on, it's still standing up well and is well worth seeing.
GenerationofSwine
Man, it's almost like Saw with it's torture-porn thing... only the over-the-top gore actually fits beautifully into the story in the most entertaining way possible, even when it is so 80s cheese that it's almost comical. But the ultra-violence is part of the fun of these types of films. It's part of the reason why people love them... and it's over-the-top in a way that can't really be done today. It's also pretty stylistic and fun and that brings you into the world that the story is trying to create, while at the same time it leaves the viewer thinking that they are watching one heck of a mystery. Like Blade Runner, if you wanted to, you could walk away thinking that it's all an illusion, that what you thought was real was fake... if you wanted to be that deep. But let's face it, no one really bothers to debate that because what we are watching is an action sci-fi movie that is so well done, we don't want it to be as deep as it really is.