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Scanner Darkly Trivias
In the novel, Philip K. Dick mentions that the scramble suit's fictional
creator will appear every so often, for a fraction of a second, as one of
its faces. In the movie, Dick appears for a split second as a face on the
scramble suit.
The film has been rated R by the Motion Picture Association of America for
"drug and sexual content, language and brief violent images".
Though several popular films based on Philip K. Dick's writing have been
released since the first, 1982's Blade Runner, A Scanner Darkly is the first
American-made adaptation since Blade Runner to be based on one of Dick's
full novels instead of a short story. 1992 saw the release of Confessions
d'un Barjo, based on the novel Confessions of a Crap Artist.
Alex Jones makes a cameo appearance in the film. The director, Richard
Linklater, has been interviewed by Jones regarding how he associates real
life with the movie, and how he was inspired by some of Jones' core
ideologies.
A long-running rumor suggested that Radiohead was composing the score for
this film. This is untrue; however, the song "Black Swan" by Radiohead
frontman Thom Yorke and other songs such as the Radiohead B-side "Fog" are
featured in the film. The song featured in the original theatrical trailer
is "Teen Angst" by electronica band M83.
During the trailer, a quick shot of a woman wearing Philips headphones shows
the words "Phil D." for a logo; this would seem to be an abbreviation for
Philip (K.) Dick. The words streaming across the screen she's looking at are
from the Blade Runner script.
Both Woody Harrelson and Robert Downey Jr play drug addicts. In real life,
Downey has been arrested on multiple occasions for drug possession, and
Harrelson is a marijuana/hemp activist.
The first 24 minutes of the film are available for free viewing at IGN
Filmforce.During the first psychological test, the 'dog' and 'pyramid' cards
disappear from the table after Bob puts them down.
When Bob wakes up and reaches over Connie, he is wearing blue boxer shorts.
But in the footage that he watches later, he is naked.At New-Path, the pool
of Bob's vomit disappears and reappears between shots.
When Barris is served in the diner, french fries are scattered over his
plate. When seen again, the french fries are replaced with vegetable
sides.When Ernie lifts the bike, he picks it up by the top wheel. When he is
shown carrying the bike a second later, he is holding it by the lower bar.
While Bob/Fred is giving a speech at the NewPath building, he takes his arms
off the Podium and turns his side to the crowd. In the next shot, he's
facing forward and his hands are on the podium again.Donna's earrings
disappear and reappear while she is drinking coffee in the restaurant.
Robert Downey Jr. wrote most of his lines down on post-it notes and
scattered them around the set so he could read off them while filming a
scene. The rotoscoping team simply animated over the notes to remove them
from the film during post-production.In Arctor's kitchen there is a drawing
of a head in a box next to the phrase "Time to Thaw Walt". This is a
reference to the urban legend that animator Walt Disney had himself
cryogenically frozen.
When Arctor is going through the second phase of testing with the medical
deputies, the laptop-like machine on which he is being tested is branded as
V K mk1. V K stands for Voight Kampff, the test used in Do Androids Dream of
Electric Sheep by Philip K. Dick, where the test is used to measure the
response time of subjects to certain questions and determine whether they
are humans or androids.
When Freck goes to the liquor store to buy wine, one of the brand names
being advertised is St. Ubik. This is a reference to Dick's novel
"Ubik".When Arctor sits on the stage waiting to give his speech to the Brown
Bear Lodge, one of the images his scramble suit displays is Philip K. Dick.
The title comes from a paraphrasing of the letters of the Apostle Paul in
the New Testament. Paul writes on "looking into a mirror darkly".Based on
Philip K. Dick's personal drug experiences.
Terry Gilliam originally wanted to make a motion picture version of the
novel in the early 1990s.Charlie Kaufman wrote a screenplay adaptation of
the novel. When the project changed hands, Kaufman's script was no longer
involved.
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