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Paycheck

 
Movies:

Paycheck

  • Director: John Woo
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Science Fiction
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Action, Tech Noir
  • Themes: Amnesia, Mind Games, Experiments Gone Awry
  • Main Cast: Ben Affleck, Aaron Eckhart, Uma Thurman, Paul Giamatti, Colm Feore
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 119 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

John Woo directs the sci-fi action thriller Paycheck, based on a story written by Philip K. Dick in 1953. Waking up with his short-term memory erased, engineer Michael Jennings (Ben Affleck) learns that he has been doing highly secretive work for the last three years in exchange for billions of dollars. But when he tries to get paid, he finds out that he himself had previously exchanged the money for an envelope of random clues to his life. Chased by an FBI agent (Michael C. Hall) and his old boss Rethrick (Aaron Eckhart), Michael uses the clues to find out his identity and prove his innocence. Uma Thurman appears as his love interest and partner, Rachel. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide

Review

As calculated as it is perfunctory, this John Woo sci-fi thriller submits a decent cast to the indignities of silly pseudo-science, snoozy action sequences and a smarmy, tacked-on epilogue. The high-concept premise comes straight from the Phillip K. Dick source material, but it's been transformed into something so slick and overly clever that the entire story crumbles under the weight of its pretensions. That'd be fine if the filmmakers seemed to care about filling their frame with gorgeously choreographed fights and glib banter -- those satisfying staples of the action blockbuster. But once the fun opening sequence has run its course, director Woo can't seem to work up much enthusiasm for the material; he shows signs of life only during the climax, with its overabundance of catwalk chases and hydraulic lifts. As for hired-gun screenwriter Dean Georgaris, he seems more adept with clever throwaway details than with the careful world-building that allows an audience to suspend disbelief. Even the actors seem to have trouble convincing us they mean it as they spout their cornball cloak-and-dagger dialogue. Ben Affleck clenches his jaw through an amnesiac role that's a pale echo of the one Guy Pearce played in Memento. Uma Thurman is reduced from the grandeur of Kill Bill Vol. 1 to the pale tremulousness of a standard-issue girlfriend role. As a white-collar villain, Aaron Eckhart is given free reign to chew scenery and smirk like it's going out of style. That leaves only American Splendor's Paul Giamatti and Six Feet Under's Michael C. Hall -- both supporting players -- to provide a few glimpses of actual humanity in a flick so cynical that its humanitarian "message" provokes only guffaws. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide

Cast

Paul Giamatti - Shorty; Joe Morton - Agent Dodge; Michael C. Hall - Agent Klein; Kathryn Morris - Rita Dunne; Michelle Harrison - Jane Anderson; Fulvio Cecere - Agent Fuman; Ivana Milicevic - Maya-Rachel; Emily Holmes - Betsy

Credit

Arthur Anderson - Art Director, Sandy Cochrane - Art Director, Mindy Marin - Casting, Arthur Anderson - Co-producer, Caroline Macaulay - Co-producer, Erica Phillips - Costume Designer, John Woo - Director, Gregg Smrz - Second Unit Director, Christopher Rouse - Editor, Kevin Stitt - Editor, Stratton Leopold - Executive Producer, David Solomon - Executive Producer, John Powell - Composer (Music Score), Norma Hill-Patton - Makeup, William Sandell - Production Designer, Jeffrey Kimball - Cinematographer, John Davis - Producer, Terence Chang - Producer, John Woo - Producer, Michael Hackett - Producer, Elizabeth Wilcox - Set Designer, Sony Pictures Imageworks - Special Effects, Eric Batut - Sound/Sound Designer, Gregg Smrz - Stunts Coordinator, Owen Walstrom - Stunts Coordinator, Dean Georgaris - Screenwriter, Larry Blanford - Second Unit Camera, Gregory L. McMurray - Visual Effects Supervisor, Al di Sarro - Special Effects Coordinator, Clay Scheirer - Special Effects Coordinator, Per Hallberg - Supervising Sound Editor, Mark Stoeckinger - Supervising Sound Editor, CIS Hollywood - Visual Effects, Rising Sun Pictures - Visual Effects, Frantic Films - Visual Effects, Pixel Playground - Visual Effects, Creo Collective - Visual Effects, Philip K. Dick - Short Story Author

Similar Movies

Johnny Mnemonic; The Bourne Identity; Face/Off; The Net; Overdrawn at the Memory Bank; Memento; Looker; F/X; Runaway; The Final Cut; 5ive Days to Midnight; Dead by Midnight
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Wikipedia: Paycheck (film)
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Paycheck
Directed by John Woo
Produced by John Woo
John Davis
Terence Chang
Michael Hackett
Written by Short Story:
Philip K. Dick
Screenplay:
Dean Georgaris
Starring Ben Affleck
Aaron Eckhart
Uma Thurman
Music by John Powell
Cinematography Jeffrey Kimball
Editing by Christopher Rouse
Distributed by - USA -
Paramount Pictures
-International-
DreamWorks SKG
Release date(s) United States:
December 25, 2003
United Kingdom:
January 16, 2004
Running time 119 min
Country USA
Language English
Budget $60 million
Gross revenue $96,269,812

Paycheck is a 2003 film adaptation of the short story of the same name by science fiction writer Philip K. Dick. The film was directed by John Woo and stars Ben Affleck, Uma Thurman and Aaron Eckhart. Paul Giamatti and Colm Feore also appear.

Contents

Plot

Michael Jennings is a reverse engineer; for lucrative sums of money, he analyzes his clients' competitors' products and designs new versions that excel above and beyond the original's features. However, when he finishes each of his jobs, he undergoes a memory wipe with help from his friend Shorty to protect his client's intellectual property. At the beginning of the film no job has extended beyond two months. He is offered a job from James Rethrick, an old college roommate and CEO of Allcom, which may take up to three years but will be rewarded handsomely with company stock. Jennings agrees, and takes up residence in the highly secure Allcom facility, falling in love with biologist Dr. Rachel Porter during his tenure. Jennings is injected with a special radioactive memory marker that will be used to track down how far his memories have to be erased. Jennings, finding himself three years later (in the year 2007 according to a form in an envelope shown later in the movie) and congratulated by Rethrick for a successful job, attempts to cash on his reward to find that he signed away his shares of Allcom. All that Jennings has to show for his time is an envelope claiming to be his personal possessions that he entered Allcom with three years ago, but instead contain a seemingly random assortment of items. As Jennings tries to figure out what happened, he is captured by the Federal Bureau of Investigation who are concerned over his involvement with Allcom and the connected disappearance and death of physicist William Dekker. Jennings manages to escape their captivity, quickly realizing that each item in the envelope can be used at the right time to keep himself out of the FBI's hands.

Meanwhile, Rethrick is surprised to learn that Jennings managed to escape the FBI, and starts an investigation of how Jennings was able to escape. He discovers that Jennings left a message to Rachel to meet at a cafe that day, and attempts to fool Jennings with a similarly looking decoy. Jennings is saved from the encounter by the real Rachel, and together they escape both Rethrick and the FBI. Jennings comes to learn of his past romance with Rachel. As the two sort through the remaining items in the envelope, they encounter a microdot on one of the stamps on the envelope; up close, the dot reveals images, most of newspaper headlines that outline Allcom's rising success due to a device that can predict the future and political battles over the technology, leading to self-fulfilling prophecies and a final image showing a planet devastated by nuclear war. The two come to realize that Jennings must have been working on this time predictive device while at Allcom, reverse engineering the details from Dekker, and that Jennings, having discovered this grim future, took steps to try to prevent it, including providing himself with all the needed items to stay out of danger after using the device to see into his own immediate future. Jennings also had managed to sabotage the device just prior to leaving Allcom, rendering it useless for Rethrick to attempt to use to trace him down.

Jennings and Rachel use the remaining items in the envelope to infiltrate Allcom and discover the machine. Jennings is able to find the circuit that he had previously altered to fail the unit, and uses the device once more, but sees a vision of himself being shot by an FBI sniper. The two rig the system to explode and then try to escape, but are cornered by Rethrick armed with a gun. Before Rethrick has a chance to shoot him, an alarm from a watch from Jennings' envelope of miscellaneous items goes off, allowing Jennings to duck just in time before the FBI fires, causing the bullet to fatally strike Rethrick. Jennings and Rachel escape just before the time prediction machine explodes. The FBI agents allow Jennings to go free after investigating the wreckage of the machine. Jennings, Rachel, and Shorty begin a greenhouse operation, and come to realize that Jennings had used the device one last time while working at Allcom to secure a winning lottery ticket worth over $90 million, hidden in Rachel's birdcage.

Cast

Affleck as Michael Jennings

Trademarks

The movie features several of director Woo's trademarks, including two Mexican standoffs and the appearance of a dove.

Reception

Paycheck was negatively received by most critics, earning a rating of 27% on Rotten Tomatoes[1] and 43 out of 100 on Metacritic.[2] Scott Tobias of The Onion's A.V. Club gave the film a positive review, calling it a "smart thriller" and praising "Woo's wonderful sense of timing and rhythm."[3] Chris Barsanti of Film Threat also praised Paycheck, calling it "one of the more competent and reassuring action movies to come out for quite some time."[4]

Roger Ebert gave the film two stars (out of four), saying that he "enjoyed the movie" but felt that it "exploits [Philip K. Dick's story] for its action and plot potential, but never really develops it."[5] K. J. Doughton of Film Threat called the film "John Woo lite," and a "neutered variation on his earlier, superior works."[6] James Berardinelli gave the film one and a half stars out of four, calling it "a bad film, complete with lackluster acting, brainless writing, and uninspired direction."[7]

Ben Affleck won Worst Actor from the Golden Raspberry Awards for his work in the movie, as well as in Gigli and Daredevil. After asking why he did not get his trophy, he was presented the Razzie live on Larry King Live a week later, which he promptly broke. The broken Razzie sold on eBay for enough money to cover the hall rental for the following year's ceremonies. While hosting Saturday Night Live, Ben Affleck commented that he would have walked out of the premiere and asked for his money back until he realized he was in the movie.

References

  1. ^ Paycheck Reviews at Rotten Tomatoes
  2. ^ Paycheck Reviews at Metacritic
  3. ^ Review by Scott Tobias, The A.V. Club
  4. ^ Review by Chris Barsanti, Film Threat
  5. ^ Review by Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times
  6. ^ Review by K. J. Doughton, Film Threat
  7. ^ Review by James Berardinelli, ReelViews

External links


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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Paycheck (film)" Read more