A Scanner Darkly [Blu-ray] (2006)
Genre Animation; Crime; Drama; Mystery; Sci-Fi; Thriller
Studio Warner Home Video
Movie Release Date 7/28/2006
Country USA
Language English
Audience Rating R (Restricted)
Running Time 100 mins
Format Blu-ray Disc
Color Color
IMDb Rating 7.2
Cast
Rory Cochrane Charles Freck
Robert Downey Jr. James Barris
Mitch Baker Brown Bear Lodge Host
Keanu Reeves Bob Arctor
Sean Allen (II)
Sean Allen Additional Fred Scramble Suit Voice
Cliff Haby Voice from Headquarters
Steven Chester Prince Cop
Winona Ryder Donna Hawthorne
Natasha Valdez Waitress
Mark Turner Additional Hank Scramble Suit Voice
Woody Harrelson Ernie Luckman
Crew
Richard Linklater
Philip K. Dick
Richard Linklater
George Clooney
Ben Cosgrove
Erwin Stoff
Shane F. Kelly
Graham Reynolds
Anne Walker-McBay
Plot
How well you respond to Richard Linklater's A Scanner Darkly depends on how much you know about the life and work of celebrated science fiction writer Philip K. Dick. While it qualifies as a faithful adaptation of Dick's semiautobiographical 1977 novel about the perils of drug abuse, Big Brother-like surveillance and rampant paranoia in a very near future ("seven years from now"), this is still very much a Linklater film, and those two qualities don't always connect effectively. The creepy potency of Dick's premise remains: The drug war's been lost, citizens are kept under rigid surveillance by holographic scanning recorders, and a schizoid addict named Bob Arctor (Keanu Reeves) is facing an identity crisis he's not even aware of: Due to his voluminous intake of the highly addictive psychotropic drug Substance D, Arctor's brain has been split in two, each hemisphere functioning separately. So he doesn't know that he's also Agent Fred, an undercover agent assigned to infiltrate Arctor's circle of friends (played by Woody Harrelson, Winona Ryder, Rory Cochrane, and Robert Downey, Jr.) to track down the secret source of Substance D. As he wears a "scramble suit" that constantly shifts identities and renders Agent Fred/Arctor into "the ultimate everyman," Dick's drug-addled antihero must come to grips with a society where, as the movie's tag-line makes clear, "everything is not going to be OK."

While it's virtually guaranteed to achieve some kind of cult status, A Scanner Darkly lacks the paranoid intensity of Dick's novel, and Linklater's established penchant for loose and loopy dialogue doesn't always work here, with an emphasis on drug-culture humor instead of the panicked anxiety that Dick's novel conveys. As for the use of "interpolated rotoscoping"--the technique used to apply shifting, highly stylized animation over conventional live-action footage--it's purely a matter of personal preference. The film's look is appropriate to Dick's dark, cautionary story about the high price of addiction, but it also robs performances of nuance and turns the seriousness of Dick's story into... well, a cartoon. Opinions will differ, but A Scanner Darkly is definitely worth a look--or two, if the mind-rattling plot doesn't sink in the first time around. --Jeff Shannon
Features
Commentary by Keanu Reeves, Writer/Director Richard Linklater, Producer Tommy Pallotta, Author Jonathan Lethem and Philip K. Dick's Daughter Isa Dick-Hackett One Summer in Austin: The Story of Filming A Scanner Darkly The Weight of the Line: Animation Tales Theatrical Trailer
Personal Details
Seen It Yes
Index 343
Collection Status In Collection
Purchase Price $28.99
Links Amazon US
IMDB
A Scanner Darkly at Movie Collector Connect
DVD Empire
Storage Device
Edition Details
Distributor Warner Home Video
Barcode 012569829664
Region Region 1
Release Date 4/10/2007
Packaging Keep Case
Screen Ratio 1.85:1
Subtitles English; French; Spanish
Audio Tracks Dolby Digital 5.1 [English]
Layers Single Side, Dual Layer
Nr of Disks/Tapes 1
12/30/2008 11:18:25 AM