Paycheck: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{work}}
{{work|wppage=Paycheck (film)}}
Michael Jennings has a great job. He's a reverse engineer, paid huge sums of money to figure out how rival technology works and improve on it. In exchange for his massive paycheck, he must have his memory wiped to prevent any information leaks. Life is good.
Michael Jennings has a great job. He's a reverse engineer, paid huge sums of money to figure out how rival technology works and improve on it. In exchange for his massive paycheck, he must have his memory wiped to prevent any information leaks. Life is good.


Line 10: Line 10:
* [[Aerosol Flamethrower]]
* [[Aerosol Flamethrower]]
* [[Call to Agriculture]]
* [[Call to Agriculture]]
* ~Chekhov's Armoury~: The envelope that Jennings substituted for his paycheck, though this one borders on [[Deconstruction]].
* [[Chekhov's Armoury]]: The envelope that Jennings substituted for his paycheck, though this one borders on [[Deconstruction]].
* ~Chekhov's Gun~: Every item in the envelope, including a single bullet but no gun. Gets fired anyway, of course.
* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: Every item in the envelope, including a single bullet but no gun. Gets fired anyway, of course.
** Also, the remote-controlled grabbing device in Rachel's lab, along with her thunder, lightning, and wind effects.
** Also, the remote-controlled grabbing device in Rachel's lab, along with her thunder, lightning, and wind effects.
* ~Chekhov's Skill~: In the beginning of the film there is a short scene of Jennings training at the gym, hitting targets with a staff. Guess how he beats up mooks near the ending?
* [[Chekhov's Skill]]: In the beginning of the film there is a short scene of Jennings training at the gym, hitting targets with a staff. Guess how he beats up mooks near the ending?
* [[Cool Bike]]: The BMW R 1150R Rockster utilized in a chase scene. Which, of course, Jennings had bought ahead of time.
* [[Cool Bike]]: The BMW R 1150R Rockster utilized in a chase scene. Which, of course, Jennings had bought ahead of time.
* [[Disturbed Doves]]: Goes without saying. [[John Woo]]'s trademark.
* [[Disturbed Doves]]: Goes without saying. [[John Woo]]'s trademark.
Line 50: Line 50:
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Paycheck]]
[[Category:Paycheck]]
[[Category:John Woo]]
[[Category:Science Fiction Films]]
[[Category:Films Based on Short Stories]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]
[[Category:Film]]

Latest revision as of 01:29, 3 October 2020

Michael Jennings has a great job. He's a reverse engineer, paid huge sums of money to figure out how rival technology works and improve on it. In exchange for his massive paycheck, he must have his memory wiped to prevent any information leaks. Life is good.

His latest project at Allcom was supposed to be his biggest yet, lasting three years and earning him enough money to finally retire - but something has gone wrong. His 8-figure payment has been replaced by a manila envelope full of random odds and ends. The FBI wants to talk to him about his apparent involvement in the death of another engineer. And a lot of people are trying to kill him. Now Jennings finds himself in the strange position of having to reverse engineer his own future... before time runs out.

Paycheck (2003) is a film adaptation of the Philip K. Dick short story of the same name, starring Ben Affleck, Uma Thurman, Paul Giamatti, and Aaron Eckhart, and directed by John Woo. It was received poorly by critics, but made about $30 million more than its budget back at the box office.

Tropes used in Paycheck include: