|
Dark City (1998)
In co-writer/director Alex Proyas' visually-stunning,
labyrinthine and visionary sci-fi neo-noir - the bewildering and imaginative
tale effectively twisted unreal reality. Proyas' own story, a version
of Plato's Allegory of the Cave, was adapted into a screenplay by Lem
Dobbs and David S. Goyer. The challenge to the viewer was to extrapolate
from various random clues presented in order to form a comprehensive
explanation of the entire mysterious premise and bizarre puzzle underlying
the "Dark City." [Note: The film's theme of a disoriented
man on the run for a crime he didn't
commit, who retained recollections of a "Shell Beach" - the
film's MacGuffin - were both features of many Hitchcockian films. The
film's main motifs were spirals and mazes.]
The expressionistic
fantasy-mystery film (with stunning special effects, art/set design
and an imaginative script) was a box-office failure - on a budget of
$27 million, it only made $14.4 million (domestic) and $27.2 million
(worldwide). Nonetheless, it has since become a highly-respected cult-classic.
It was influenced by many elements, including German expressionism
(Nosferatu (1922), Metropolis (1927), and M (1931), etc.),
gumshoe detective film noirs (i.e., The Maltese Falcon (1941),
and some Kafka-esque qualities as well. It foreshadowed a film that
was released shortly afterwards, The Matrix
(1999), and undoubtedly influenced Inception (2010).
The film's main tagline enigmatically described the plot: "They
built the city to see what makes us tick. Last night one of us went
off." One amnesiac human individual, who had lost any sense of
his own true identity, awoke to find himself in a typical noirish situation
- he was a wanted murder suspect. The story commenced with the man's odyssey
through the mysterious, shadowy and dark metropolis as a fugitive, to clear
himself of crimes he didn't commit, and to literally find himself. He noticed
how he had somehow acquired the same psychokinetic powers (known as 'tuning')
as those possessed by ominous trench-coated Strangers who were searching
for him, and that he was able to use those powers to his advantage against
them. He attempted to save and remake the world (based on childhood memories)
and "fix" the darkness of the "city."
In part, a dystopian "dark
city" was similar to a huge space station
or satellite in space. It was revealed to be a
full-sized alien creation (or simulacrum) created by a huge imaging machine.
An entire race of dying, parasitic aliens, known as Strangers, who were
facing extinction had left their own planet en masse (due to their hive
mind or collective consciousness) and with their superior powers had
formed the immense and dark human city to run their experiments and try
to save themselves. Several thousand abducted humans, presumably from
Earth, had been transplanted into the
"dark city" as residents, but the humans remained unaware of
their true identities after having their memories regularly implanted
and changed at midnight. The Strangers, who disguised themselves in human
cadavers-corpses and were nocturnal due to their sensitivity to light,
had deliberately tilted the city away from the Sun and kept everyone
in perpetual darkness.
- the opening of the theatrical version (wisely removed
in the Director's Cut version) contained a voice-over narration (revealing
major spoilers!) delivered by Dr. Schreber, an expert psychiatrist
who had been forcibly conscripted to aid the aliens in their experiments
on humans in the "dark city" after the extra-terrestrials
had escaped from their own dying world. The psychologist's memories
had been erased, but he still retained his mind skills, identity
and powers, unlike the other inhabitants of the city, as he aided
the aliens to carry out their insidious objectives.
"First, there was darkness. Then came Strangers.
They were a race as old as time itself. They had mastered the
ultimate technology -- the ability to alter physical reality
by will alone. They called this ability "Tuning." But
they were dying. Their civilization was in decline, and so they
abandoned their world, seeking a cure for their own mortality.
Their endless journey brought them to a small, blue world in
the farthest corner of the galaxy. Our world. Here, they thought
they had finally found what they had been searching for. My name
is Dr. Daniel Poe Schreber. I am just a man. I help the Strangers
conduct their experiments. I have betrayed my own kind."
- the story commenced by looking downward into a noirish
cityscape reminiscent of the 1940s and 1950s; it introduced
the principal character John Murdoch (Rufus Sewell) - a test subject
with memory problems; he awoke naked in a bathtub (filled with murky
or clouded water) in a strange hotel; he was unsteady on his feet
on the slippery green-tiled floor, made worse by the shadows cast
from a swinging single unshielded light-bulb fixture; he noticed
blood droplets on his face before quickly dressing; as he left the
bathroom, he accidentally bumped into a small goldfish bowl and it
smashed onto the floor in pieces; to save the fish's survival, he
carefully picked up the floundering fish and placed it in the bathtub
water - now miraculously clear (and a safe environment for the fish
to survive) due to changes Murdoch unconsciously made to the water
without his knowledge [Note: there were metaphoric parallels to be
drawn between the trapped unnatural life of the goldfish in a bowl,
and the lives of the inhabitants in the controlled environment of
"Dark City"]
- in a suitcase (with the initials K.H.) filled with
clothes, he also found a colorful postcard: "Greetings from Shell Beach";
Murdoch had his first of many frequent flashes and fragments of childhood
memories, of being with his family in a coastal town named Shell
Beach; his sole quest in life became to discover this missing past
- he received a frantic phone call just after midnight
from Dr. Daniel Schreber (Kiefer Sutherland) with the film's first
lines of dialogue, spoken with breathless gasps and pauses; Murdoch
was essentially told about his dilemma regarding his total amnesia,
caused by his premature awakening in the middle of the night during
a memory-swapping, "tuning" event;
somehow, an experimental process had been interrupted and Murdoch
now had no memories at all: ("You are confused, aren't you?
Frightened. That's all right. I can help you...You have lost your
memory. There was an experiment. Something went wrong. Your memory
was erased. Do you understand me?"); with aborted and erased
memories, Murdoch was rightfully confused; Schreber urged him to
flee immediately into the dark city from those in pursuit: ("There
are people coming for you even as we speak. You must not let them
find you. You must leave now"); Dr. Schreber warned that Murdoch
was now being pursued as a wanted man and accused of committing a
series of brutal crimes
- as he struggled to make sense of the call, Murdoch
stumbled around his hotel room and noticed a
ritualistically-murdered, half-naked and mutilated call-girl on
the floor with spiral-shaped stab wounds, and a bloody knife; Murdoch
went on the run from his hotel room (# 614) down the stairs, as he
turned and noticed a group of three pale, bald,
malevolent trenchcoat-wearing, wide brim-hatted Strangers emerging
from the elevator; he successfully evaded and escaped their notice
- it was just after midnight, and in the downstairs
lobby, Murdoch observed a number of comatose (or unconscious) individuals
seated and in a phone booth; suddenly everyone revived at the chime
of a clock bell, including the desk-clerk manager (Ritchie Singer)
who warned Murdoch that he had overstayed his three week visit, and
needed to pay up: ("You only paid for 3 weeks and they was up
10 minutes ago") [Note: The significance of Room 614 - John
6:14 referred to the appearance of a miracle-worker or "Prophet"]
Hotel Desk Manager-Clerk
|
Murdoch: "I've been here 3 weeks?"
|
Hotel Guest Register
|
- after leaving his hotel room, Murdoch was
pursued and tracked in the nightmarish, retro 40s-style futuristic
city underworld (that was perpetually dark and at nighttime, due
to the angled "dark city") by the police and Strangers
- the group of trench-coated individuals with special powers (telepathy and telekinesis)
- sultry nightclub chanteuse and the film's femme fatale
Emma Murdoch (Jennifer Connelly) was introduced performing the song "Sway" -
a popular Dean Martin song in the mid-1950s: ("When
marimba rhythms start to play Dance with me Make me sway Like a lazy
ocean hugs the shore Hold me close Sway me more Like
a flower bending in the breeze Bend with me Sway with ease
When we dance you have a way with me Stay with me Sway
with me"); after her number, she was summoned to speak to her "husband's
doctor" - Dr. Daniel Schreber - who had left his business card
|
|
Nightclub Singer Emma Murdoch (Jennifer
Connelly)
|
- Emma met with "her husband's doctor" in
his office - a hunched over, slightly-crippled psychiatrist Dr. Schreber with stunted speech and
a deformed right eye; she had never heard mention of the doctor's
name, although Schreber explained how John had been a frequent patient
"grappling with feelings of betrayal stemming from your marital
difficulties"; it was claimed that three weeks earlier, John had packed up a suitcase
and separated from her due to their "marital difficulties" and
feelings of "betrayal"; apparently, after she had told
him that she had an affair, he abruptly broke up with her and stormed
out of their apartment
- Schreber diagnosed that John was suffering delusions,
complete memory loss, and a psychotic break and could potentially be
violent; he was "searching for himself" and that Schreber
must now be "the first one to reach him"; there was the implication that Murdoch was
like the rat in Schreber's experimental desktop-sized maze model
[Note: the circular rat maze was a metaphoric microcosm of the "Dark
City" itself]
World-Weary Police Inspector Frank Bumstead (William Hurt)
|
Husselbeck (Mitchell Butel)
|
Crazed Colleague - Detective Walenski (Colin Friels)
|
- world-weary and pensive Police Inspector
Frank Bumstead (William Hurt) arrived to investigate the hotel room
crime scene with talkative assistant cop Husselbeck
(Mitchell Butel); Bumstead had apparently taken over for his conspiracy-theorist
colleague Detective Eddie Walenski (Colin Friels) who had become
insane or unbalanced (the "heebie-jeebies") and was removed
from the serial killer case and was to be committed to an institution;
the front desk clerk (a different individual) was questioned about
Murdoch who had become the prime serial killer suspect for the most
recent call-girl murder (the 6th) that had been discovered in his
hotel room
- meanwhile, the disoriented Murdoch entered an all-night
Automat diner where he attempted to retrieve his wallet that he had
left there; to his own surprise, through his own psycho-kinetic mental
strength, he was able to snap open the locked automat door to retrieve
his wallet; a friendly, cool blonde hooker named May (Melissa George)
befriended Murdoch and led him away from two inquisitive and suspicious
beat cops to her upstairs apartment
- in the police department, Emma arrived in Bumstead's
office to file a "missing persons" report on her husband
to whom she had been married for four years; she was upset and immediately
left after learning that her husband was a possible murder suspect
for at least some of the six recent homicide cases - shown to her
typed on a piece of paper
|
|
Murdoch With Prostitute May: "What you do seems
kind of dangerous right now...How do you know I'm not the killer?"
|
- as May stripped down naked in her apartment, Murdoch
perused through his wallet to find his Driver's License ID (that
confirmed his name), told May his name was appropriately "John," and
creepily asked: "How do you know I'm not the killer?"; he noticed her young
daughter before leaving - without having a sexual encounter with
her; he left to search out the Shell Beach in the postcard; as he
stood before a rusting, creaky billboard, beckoning "Come
to Shell Beach - The Water if Fine" with a bathing beauty's
waving right arm, he pulled a wad of newspaper clippings from his
coat pocket about the serial killer at large; at the same time, he
was approached by the black-coated Strangers from the hotel, and
one of them named Mr. Hand (Richard O'Brien) tried the command: "Sleep
now!", but discovered that it was ineffective; Murdoch had acquired
their power to "tune"; as they pulled out knives to attack, he weakened the
floorboards underneath them and sent some of them to their deaths
in the billboard's series of pulleys, gears, and ropes beneath the
wooden platform; Mr. Quick's (Frederick Miragliotta) skull-cap was
sliced off by the waving arm of the Shell Beach billboard - the
most vulnerable part of the alien structure, and he quickly died
(with spindly parasites emerging from his brain)
The Strangers in an Underground Hive Meeting
|
|
|
- in the underground world where they lived, the malevolent
alien beings known as Strangers were alerted to the danger that Murdoch
posed for them. [Note: They resembled the vampirish Count Orlok in
F.W. Murnau's Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (1922), or the
Cenobites in the Hellraiser series.] The Strangers were
part of an endangered and dying race of fiendish alien parasites
(with a collective hive consciousness) who had abandoned their own
world to seek a cure for their own mortality. The Strangers had been
using their telekinetic "tuning" powers to secretly control
the city
- the 'dark city' was revealed to be an experiment set
up by the endangered aliens to alter reality in their determination
to understand the nature of the human soul by manipulatively treating
humans as guinea pigs or experimental rats; they transplanted false
memories each night into the inhabitants of the city;
the aliens later were found to be inhabiting corpses to disguise themselves;
through their experiments and their group or "hive" minds,
they were attempting to discover insights that would help their race
survive. During their mass "tunings," they would stop time
(at midnight) - when subjects were made to go comatose (or unconscious);
they could then completely alter and transform reality
The Strangers - Alien Beings Averse to Moisture and
Light
|
Mr. Hand (Richard O'Brien) - Commander in the Field
|
Mr. Book (Ian Richardson) - The Leader
|
- during their group-hive meeting, one of the lead Strangers
explained their dilemma to the group - Murdoch had become an anomaly
after he inadvertently awakened during one midnight 'tuning' imprinting
procedure, and since then, he was struggling and at a loss of understanding
who he was: ("On occasion the imprinting does not take. They
behave erratically when they awaken. We find them wandering like
lost children"); Mr. Book issued orders to seize Murdoch: "We
can know nothing until we possess him....We must have this man"
- John surprised Emma by meeting up with her in their
apartment, but he avowed that he was there only because he found
the keys in his pocket: ("I assume I live here"), and he
didn't know her: "You supposed to be my wife?"; she was
shocked: "You really don't know who I am, do you?"; he admitted that he was
living a "nightmare" and was on the run: "Maybe I have lost my mind, but whoever
I am, I'm still me and I'm not a killer"; she urged him to see
his psychiatrist, Dr. Schreber; as he fled into the hallway, gun-wielding
Inspector Bumstead stopped him; Murdoch tried to explain how he was
being pursued by aliens, but then gave up: "Who's gonna listen
to a madman?" before he was able to flee (due to Emma's help and his own 'tuning'
ability to create a doorway and then block his exit)
- Murdoch escaped in a cab with a driver (Justin Monjo)
who had a glass Shell Beach snow-globe souvenir on his dashboard,
and although he claimed that he had spent his honeymoon there, he
struggled with providing directions to get there
|
|
Dr. Schreber Confessing to Mr. Hand That He Had Fouled
Up Murdoch's Imprinting
|
- in a local men's bath/spa, Dr. Schreber, the Strangers'
human helper, was confronted by a threatening Mr. Hand, carrying Schreber's
syringe found in Murdoch's hotel room; the Stranger revealed how
he and his kind hated moisture: ("You
know uncomfortable we find all this moisture"); Schreber nervously
confessed that he had fouled up Murdoch's imprinting resulting in
his loss of memory; while injecting or imprinting him with the memories
of a serial killer, Murdoch had inadvertently woken up during their
midnight take-over process, knocked the syringe from his hand, and
had strangely acquired the Strangers' own superpower ability to "tune" (alter
reality at will): "I tried to imprint him, but he woke up, he knocked the
syringe right out of my hand. I tried to stop him but he was too
fast"; Shreber was ordered to produce another complete template
of Murdoch's original memory imprint for their nefarious purposes
- Murdoch, who had been trailing Schreber, listened in to their conversation and
learned that Shreber had been conspiring with the Strangers to switch
memories and identities each midnight; the Strangers were searching
for Murdoch because he had disruptively acquired
their extraordinary powers; Murdoch watched as Schreber used his own
'tuning' ability to create a doorway through a brick wall leading
to the Strangers' lair
|
|
|
Walenski to Bumstead: "It's
all just a big joke! It's a joke!"
|
- Inspector Bumstead visited at the house of his
crazed colleague Inspector Walenski and his frail and worried wife
Kate (Maureen O'Shaughnessy); Walenski had gone completely insane,
spending his time riding in circles on the city's subways, writing
on his walls, and discovering the truth about things - about how
the Strangers were creating, unraveling and destroying his memories
and identities: ("Thinking in circles. There's no way out... I don't know who any of us are");
he had begun to realize that all of his past memories were unreal:
("It's like I've just been dreaming this life, and when I finally wake up,
I'll be somebody else. Somebody totally different!...It's all
just a big joke! It's a joke!")
- in the next sequence, the Strangers were shown working
and living underground to manufacture items that bolstered their
illusions of a past that didn't exist; on an assembly line, the aliens
were told by an announcer: "Tonight's requirements are
12 family photo albums, 9 personal diaries, 17 love letters,
assorted childhood photographs, 26 wallets, ID's and
social security cards"; Dr. Shreber assisted in concocting various
test tubes of ingredients for imprint injections: "The recollections
of a great lover? A catalog of conquests?...A touch of unhappy childhood...A
dash of teenage rebellion....a tragic death in the family"
- during an intense interrogation, Mr. Book was upset
that Shreber had failed and set loose Murdoch to disrupt their plans;
Shreber tried to explain how Murdoch might be the evolutionary answer
to their search: "Maybe he's a step up the evolutionary ladder. A-A freak of
nature. He's adapting to survive"
- Shreber speculated
about the reason why the Strangers had taken over the
dark city; due to the fact that they had only collective memories
and a hive-mentality, they were desperately questing for
the secrets of humanity (with its unique human identities and individualities)
that they believed existed within the individual human soul, and
most of all, they were hoping that they could assimilate those qualities
for themselves through their imprinting experiments: "Weren't
you looking for the human soul? That's
the purpose of your little zoo, isn't it? That's why
you keep changing people and things around every night"
- as midnight approached, the hour at which time was
stopped and imprinting occurred (signaled by a clock's chiming),
memories and identities of the city's inhabitants were reprogrammed
and changed as all signs of human life went unconscious or comatose
for the mass "tuning" transformations to occur; by
the aliens' will alone, they could also change the physical layout
and landscape of the city, by literally melting buildings and replacing
them with new emerging structures; unaffected by the changes and
awake, although he was unable to awaken anyone else, Murdoch watched
as the miraculous metamorphoses took place
- Murdoch watched as Schreber oversaw the transformation
of one low-class, impoverished tenement-building couple, Jeremy and
Sylvia Goodwin (Terry Bader and Rosie Traynor) and their children
Jane and Matthew (Naomi van der Velden and Eliot Paton); they were
instantly converted into high-class rich snobs overnight, with a
newly-lengthened dining table sitting under a chandelier, as a result
of Dr. Schreber's meddlings and injections from a syringe: ("The
rich get richer. Probably have maid's quarters before the night is
through")
<
Murdoch to Schreber: "Why are they trying to kill
me?"
|
Schreber's Stunned Reaction: "You have their power"
|
- outdoors, Murdoch loudly and angrily confronted the
sniveling Dr. Schreber, asking: "What is happening here? Why
is everyone asleep?...Why can't I remember anything? What have
you done to me?...I want some answers now! Who are they? Why are
they trying to kill me? Answer me!"; as Murdoch grabbed Schreber's
coat lapels and demanded answers, his "tuning" power kicked
in, and Schreber was repelled several yards backwards onto his back;
Shreber marveled at Murdoch's power: "You have their power. You can
make things happen by will alone. They call it tuning. That is how
they make the buildings change. Just now you acted out of self-defense.
A reflex"; he then offered to ingratiate himself to Murdoch: "But
I can teach you to control your power consciously. Let me help you,
John. Together we can stop them. We can take the city back"; as Murdoch
fled with the approach of the Strangers, the tuning event ended and
life went back to normal
- at her nightclub gig, Emma sang "The Night Has 1000
Eyes," as Inspector Bumstead stared at her from a distance at the
bar: ("'Cause the night Has a thousand eyes And a thousand eyes Can't
tell, but see If you are true to me So remember When
you tell those little white lies That the night has a thousand
eyes A thousand eyes")
- during the Strangers' evaluation of the previous night's
'tuning,' Mr. Book learned that the process was rendered incomplete
due to "a lack of control" - attributed to Murdoch's "opposing
influence on the machines"; Mr. Book surmised: "He's
becoming like us. So we must become like him" - Mr. Hand took
a sacrificial risk and volunteered to be injected with Murdoch's
original memory imprint (as the Strangers'
"only opion"), to help predict Murdoch's location and track
him down: ("Everywhere he goes, everyone he seeks out will be
known to us"); Mr. Hand experienced a rush of Murdoch's memories
going back to his childhood
|
|
|
|
|
|
Murdoch's Childhood Memories
|
- other flashes of memory extended toward the present
when Murdoch fell in love with Emma, but also had a bloody encounter
with a prostitute; Mr. Hand creepily noted to Mr. Book: "I
have John Murdoch in mind"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
More Recent Memories with Murdoch Replayed
|
- Murdoch read the back of the colorful Shell Beach
postcard from his suitcase: "Johnny - I
found this postcard among your mother's things. Brings back
memories, doesn't it? Stop by sometime. We';ll see if
we can't hook ourselves another mermaid. Love to Emma. Karl"; Karl Harris (with
K.H. initials on the suitcase) was John's uncle who
raised the orphaned boy after a destructive beach house-fire; at
a newsstand, Murdoch noticed that the newspaper stand vendor (Ritchie
Singer), who claimed he was a 25 year employee there, was the same
individual who demanded John's overdue payment at the hotel desk
in the film's opening - evidence of tampering with identities
- in a Blue Line subway car, Murdoch noticed that "Shell
Beach" was pictured on a map on the coast, and was at the end of
the Green Line on the Met-Rail subway system; however, he frustratingly
couldn't find any way to reach his destination; a disheveled bum
at the station, actually Detective Walenski, offered his interpretation
of what was happening in the "dark city" - similar to what had happened
to Murdoch: "They steal people's memories, you know? Then they swap them around between us. I've
seen them do it. Back and forth, back and forth, till no one knows
who they are anymore....Once in a while,
one of us wakes up while they're changing things. Its
not supposed to happen, but it does. It happened to me. They'll
come looking for you, Murdoch, just like they'll come looking for
me. But that's OK. I figured a way out" - and then he suicidally
threw himself in front of one of the trains
- meanwhile, the Strangers - led by the terminally-decaying
Mr. Hand, reached a dead-end in their pursuit of Murdoch after visiting
prostitute May and threatening her; Hand suggested a better strategy
to find Murdoch by recalling Emma's unfaithfulness: "If I were Murdoch,
I would remember how my wife had hurt me by sleeping with another
man. And then I would look for a way to hurt her in return"; he was
proposing to murder May and thus pin the murder and mutilation
on Murdoch - he pulled out his knife and she was killed (off-screen)
- Mr. Hand stalked Murdoch's wife Emma and found her
seated by a canal waterway (where coincidentally John and Emma had
first met); he hinted that he was an alien who didn't have his own
individual memories, and was looking for "something different, something
better": ("Imagine a life alien to yours in which your memories were
not your own but those shared by every other of your kind. Imagine
the torment of such an existence, no experiences to call your own");
Mr. Hand was beginning to show a personal fascination with Emma,
and manipulatively used some of Murdoch's own words and memories
about a lit-up ferry ("like a floating birthday cake") to entice
her to believe in him
- in Neptune's Kingdom, an aquarium, Murdoch broke into
the entrance and located his long-lost uncle Karl Harris (John Bluthal)
living inside; together they viewed a slideshow of pictures
taken at Murdoch's supposed boyhood home at Shell Beach with his
family; as with others, Karl could not remember how to navigate to
Shell Beach; the slides were a replay of many of the images that
had been transferred into Mr. Hand's memory; John learned that his
parents died in a house-fire and that afterwards, Karl took care
of him as an orphaned young boy; however, Murdoch distrusted the
pictures and called them falsified ("all lies"); he believed that
the existence of Shell Beach and other images had solely been planted
in his mind by the aliens
|
|
|
Prostitute May's Murder - Witnessed by Her Young Daughter
|
- in another part of the city, Emma was prompted to
visit May's apartment, where Bumstead (who had been tailing her)
encountered her searching for her husband; both discovered her dead
and mutilated body (with spiral designs) - killed not
by Murdoch but by the Strangers; Emma found May's young daughter
hiding under a bed, with a drawing of the Strangers stabbing her
mother to death
- afterwards, as Inspector Bumstead was taking Emma
back to her place, she noticed a decorative accordion in his car's
back seat, but he couldn't recall when his deceased mother had gifted
it to him: ("It's a funny thing, though. I can't
remember when she gave it to me. How do you think I could forget
a thing like that?"); Emma asked the film's most pointed question:
"What's happening, Inspector?"; he answered: "I'm
not sure I know anymore"
- as Karl was showing Murdoch his old room when they
lived together, Murdoch questioned why it was still dark and nighttime:
("How can it be night already? What happened to the day? How’d
I miss it?"); as Murdoch looked around the room and found a Guidebook
he had created years earlier about Shell Beach (strangely with only
blank pages), Karl was secretly phoning Emma who had just arrived
back at her house after being driven there by the Inspector; Karl
shared information on John's location and his peculiar delusional
behavior: ("He's here, he's acting mighty peculiar"); she admitted
she would be there soon to pick him up: "I know, he's not himself.
Keep him there and I'll be right over"; the call also alerted Mr.
Hand to Murdoch's location
- at that very moment, midnight struck again and the
"tuning" process commenced; Murdoch found the ominous Strangers now
attempting to capture him; to avoid them, he raced across rooftops
while pursued by the group of Strangers as buildings and
landscapes were emerging and changing around them; Mr. Hand appeared
in front of him and cautioned him: "Mr. Murdoch, you’ve
been the cause of much distress"; Murdoch punched out Hand, stole
his knife, and threatened Hand at knife-point to explain himself
- the Stranger told Murdoch to quit evading them since
they already had the upper hand, and had been creating false memories
for decades: "There's no need for this. There's
no escape. The city's ours. We made it"; he explained
their motivation to change the city each night: "We fashioned this
city on stolen memories, different eras, different pasts
all rolled into one. Each night, we revise it, refine it, in
order to learn....about you, Mr. Murdoch, you and your fellow
inhabitants, what makes you human....We need to be like you"; Mr.
Hand revealed that he knew all of Murdoch's falsified personal memories:
("I remember that which you do not, what you've
been missing. The ocean, yes, running along the waves as
a child, meeting Emma at the river. That first kiss
that followed"), and then grotesquely added: "We use
your dead as vessels"
- the unpredictable growth of a new roof under them
separated the two of them, and Murdoch was forced to catch his fall
by grabbing onto a fire escape railing; he watched as one Stranger
was crushed between two moving buildings; Murdoch
fled through a EXIT doorway leading to nowhere, and found himself
clinging by his fingers from the edge of the building;
he was ultimately able to evade the Strangers and save his life when
the 'tuning' event ended; when cornered, Inspector Bumstead came
to Murdoch's rescue by pulling up in his vehicle, and as they sped
off, Murdoch gratefully hugged Emma in the front seat
- back at police headquarters, Murdoch was grilled by
Bumstead about his confused state and his many alibis and confusions:
"I have this jigsaw puzzle in front of my face and every time I try
to rearrange the pieces, it still doesn't make any
sense"; Murdoch had no answers for why Bumstead had in his possession
a copy of Murdoch's childhood Guidebook to Shell Beach (this time
with colored pages); Murdoch decided to ask two crucial questions
of his own: (1) "You heard of a place called Shell Beach?...You know
how to get there?", but Bumstead couldn't remember its location,
and (2) "When was the last time you remember seeing it [daylight]?";
Murdoch mentioned how it seemed like the nights never seemed to end
in the city: " I don't think the sun even exists in this place"
- Murdoch had realized that the Strangers were controlling
everything, and that his two concerns were problems for
everyone: "It's not just me. It's all of us. They're
doing something to all of us"; Bumstead was troubled: "There has to
be an explanation"; Murdoch also demonstrated his telekinetic powers
by floating his Shell Beach guidebook in the air
- in a conversation with Emma through
a plate-glass window, Murdoch told her that her memory of having an
affair was only a manufactured, lab-crafted fake memory implanted
in her: ("You didn't do it...I don't believe it ever happened");
he even went so far as to question whether
they were really husband and wife: "What if we never knew each other
before now?" and that all of their memories might never have happened;
after Emma vowed that she loved him: "I love you, John. You can’t
fake something like that," John used his "tuning" powers
to shatter the window dividing them, and they kissed to show their love for each other
- by the time the pursuing Strangers arrived at the
police station and put everyone to sleep (plus murdered the police
chief), Murdoch and Bumstead had already left; the two kidnapped
Dr. Schreber at the local spa, and forced him at gunpoint to take
them to Shell Beach; on their quest to the beach while rowing a boat
on the canal, Dr. Schreber reiterated to them the voice-over quote
(in the theatrical version) that opened the film - with further already-established
details about how John had been given the memories of a "serial killer"
as an experiment:
"First there was darkness. Then came the Strangers.
They abducted us and brought us here. This city, everyone in
it is their experiment. They mix and match our memories as they see fit, trying
to divine what makes us unique. One day, a man might be an inspector.
The next, someone entirely different. When they want to study a
murderer for instance, they simply imprint one of their citizens with a new personality, arrange
a family for him, friends, an entire history, even a lost
wallet. Then they observe the results. Will a man, given the history
of a killer, continue in that vein? Or are we, in fact, more than
the mere sum of our memories? This business of you being a killer
was an unhappy coincidence. You have had dozens of lives before
now. You just happened to wake up while I was imprinting you with
this one.... It is our capacity for individuality, our souls that makes us
different from them. They think they can find the human soul if
they understand how our memories work. All they have are collective
memories. They share one group mind. They’re dying, you see?
Their entire race is on the brink of extinction. They think we
can save them."
"You are different, John. You resisted my attempt
to imprint you. Somehow you have developed their ability to tune.
That is how they change things. That is how they built this city.
They have machines buried deep beneath the surface that allow them
to focus their telepathic energies. They control everything here,
even the sun. That's why it's always dark. They can't stand the light."
- and then Shreber described why he had been singled
out and chosen to help the aliens in their diabolical plan, as an
"artist":
"When they first brought us here, they extracted
what was in us. So they could store the information, remix it like
so much paint and give us back new memories of their choosing.
But they still needed an artist to help them. I understood the
intricacies of the human mind better than they ever could, so they
allowed me to keep my skills as a scientist because they needed
them. But they made me delete everything else. Ah! Ah! Can you
imagine what it is like being forced to erase your own past?"
- Murdoch was also informed that everyone's past history
was non-existent, as well as mementos, such as his guidebook with
drawings: "You still don't understand, John. You were never a boy, not in this place.
Your entire history is an illusion, a fabrication, as it is with
all of us. You made those drawings happen with your gift"
- simultaneously, Mr. Hand confronted Emma after
her release from police custody, and threatened to remake her as
a new individual named Anna, but first he kidnapped her and took
her as his captive hostage
- Murdoch's quest for the mythic Shell Beach with Schreber and Bumstead ended
up coming upon a fake beach billboard plastered on a brick wall at
the edge of the city - Dr. Schreber explained: "There is no
ocean, John. There is nothing beyond the city. The only place home
exists is in your head";
frustrated by the dead end, Bumstead and Murdoch grabbed crowbars and
attempted to bash through the brick wall; the
hole revealed that the 'dark city' existed as a contained force-field
environment in the vast void of starry outer space; Murdoch was confronted
by a group of the Strangers led by Mr. Hand ("And now you know the
truth!")
|
|
|
Bumstead and Murdoch Breaking Through the Wall and
Discovering They Were Floating in Outer Space - Bumstead and One
of the Strangers Were Ejected Through the Hole
|
- during a physical struggle, Bumstead
and Mr. Wall (Bruce Spence) were ejected through the hole and drifted
off into space, revealing a better view of the floating "dark city"
(a gigantic space-ship); Mr. Hand forced Murdoch to surrender
by threatening to kill Emma; Murdoch allowed
himself to be put to sleep, and was transported into the underworld
for a new "final phase" research experiment; the other human subject
testing no longer needed to be observed
- although the masses declared that Murdoch must die, Mr.
Book declared that while the "evolved" Murdoch was powerful and
dangerous, he must be implanted with the Strangers' collective
memories to become one of them, to enable him to share his secret
of human individuality with them: ("He can also lead us to what
we seek. What the doctor calls the soul....It is time to be one with
John Murdoch"); Dr. Schreber was ordered to implement the exchange,
but Dr. Schreber cleverly betrayed the Strangers; Mr. Book didn't
notice how Dr. Schreber deftly switched syringes and implanted memories
other than the collective memories of the Strangers into Murdoch's mind
Captive Murdoch Put to Sleep In Underworld For
a New "Final Phase" Imprinting
|
Dr. Schreber's Switching of Syringes During the Implantation
|
The Rush of Childhood Memories Into Murdoch's Mind After the Injection
|
|
|
|
Dr. Schreber Had Also Been Inserted
into John's Memories to Teach Him to "Prevail"
|
- as the memories rushed into his consciousness, it
was clear that the Doctor had inserted childhood memories of John's
early life, but in this case, he had also included himself as a character
in John's childhood who would provide specific training: ("All of
these memories have been fabricated to teach you about the Strangers...You
will find strength within yourself and you will prevail") - to teach
John how to fully utilize and control his superpowers
and abilities, and learn how to fight the Strangers and defeat their machines
- after awakening, Murdoch engaged in a one-on-one stand-off
against their advanced leader Mr. Book, illustrated by destructive
flashes of lightning between their two minds; Murdoch was able to
eventually destroy the underground world and machines of the Strangers
and defeat Mr. Book after a psychokinetic, aerial battle of massive
proportions that ended up high above the city; he was able to repel
a knife thrown at his forehead, and reverse its direction back toward
Mr. Book's chest, whose body then struck a major water tower explosion
that marked the end of most of the Strangers; as Mr. Book met his
demise, a growling red parasite emerged from his mouth
- Dr. Schreber congratulated Murdoch for his overwhelming
victory: "I knew you could do it, John. You have their power now.
You control their machines"; but then, Murdoch learned from Schreber
that Emma had been re-imprinted with a new identity as a theater
ticket clerk named Anna and wouldn't know him (and couldn't be changed
due to his destroyed memory storage lab facility); Murdoch was determined
- as a god-like being - to create a new world with his awesome powers
("I can make these machines do anything I want. Make this world anything
I want it to be. Just so long as I concentrate hard enough")
- Murdoch then began using his unique powers to 'recreate'
his dreamy past of Shell Beach by flooding the area within the force
field with water and forming mountains and beaches surrounding the
city; he was able to reestablish the ocean and coastal areas
- the Fremont movie theater where Anna worked as a
ticket clerk had been showing "The Evil," but "Coming Soon" would
be featuring "Book of Dreams"; at the end of her shift, she boarded
a bus to "SHELL BEACH"
- Murdoch continued to modify the landscape by creating
a promontory stretching out into the ocean with a lighthouse on top
and its revolving searchlight - the eponymous Shell Beach; Murdoch
was interrupted for one final conversation with Mr. Hand, who suddenly
appeared from the shadows and asked what John was doing; John answered
that he was "just making a few
little changes around here, is all"; Mr. Hand admitted that
he was dying from having been implanted with Murdoch's memories: "Your
imprint is not agreeable with my kind. But I wanted to know what
it was like, how you feel"; Murdoch reminded
Mr. Hand that his implanted memories were not his, but that they
were all manufactured and fake, and advised that the aliens had been
looking in the wrong place all along for the secret of humanity: "You
wanted to know what it was about us that made us human. Well, you're
not going to find it - in here. (He pointed to the middle of his
forehead) You went looking in the wrong place"
Encounter With Last Remaining Stranger, Mr. Hand
|
Murdoch to Mr. Hand: "You're not going to find it
- in here"
|
Tilting the City Toward Sunlight from a Star
|
- as Murdoch turned away, he continued
to improve and modify the entire city by tilting it to bring
sunlight and warmth from a star; as he opened a door that led out
of the city, Mr. Hand was blinded by a sudden burst of sunlight; Murdoch
was able to vanquish any remaining Strangers
who were hiding or may have retreated underground and would die from
light exposure
- the open door led John onto a long pier over the sparkling
ocean that touched a white-clouded blue sky in the distance; he
was reunited with Emma in the bright sunlight at the far end of the
pier;
however, with new memories and identity as a woman now named Anna,
she had no recollections of his old identity. They strolled together
down the pier in search of Shell Beach to restart their relationship:
Anna: It's so beautiful here. So bright.
John: Do you know if Shell Beach is around here?
Anna: I think that's it just over there. I'm headed that way myself.
Would you like to join me?
John: Sure.
Anna: I'm Anna, by the way. What's your name?
John: John, John Murdoch.
Anna and John Meeting on a Sunny Pier Near Shell
Beach
|
|
|
|
|
John Murdoch (Rufus Sewell) Awakening in a Seedy Hotel
Bathtub
Murdoch Saving a Goldfish Floundering on the Floor
Finding a Colorful Postcard in a Suitcase: "Greetings from Shell
Beach"
Murdoch's Momentary Childhood Memory of Shell Beach
A Warning Phone Call Received by John Murdoch From Enigmatic
Psychiatrist Dr. Schreber (Kiefer Sutherland)
Murdered Call Girl Discovered in Murdoch's Room - With
Mysterious Spiral-Shaped Stab Wounds
Emerging From the Elevator, Three Bald, Malevolent Alien
Beings Known as The Strangers Concealing Themselves With Coats and
Hats
Psychiatrist Dr. Daniel Schreber's Business Card - Meeting with Emma
in His Office
Murdoch in Automat - Befriended by Cool Blonde Hooker May (Melissa
George)
The Names of the Six Previous Serial Killer Homicide Victims Each With
Similar Stab Wound Patterns
John's Magnified Fingerprint Pattern - Found in Wounds Carved Into
Homicide Victims
John Murdoch - His ID in His Retrieved Wallet
Creaky Billboard for Shell Beach
Wad of Newspaper Clippings
Stranger - Mr. Hand (Richard O'Brien): "Sleep now!"
About Murdoch: "He can tune!"
The Death of Mr. Quick, Whose Brain Erupted With Parasites
John Meeting Up With Femme Fatale Emma - But He Didn't Know Her
Murdoch's Attempted Arrest by Inspecter Bumstead in the Hallway
The Elusive Shell Beach
Underworld Assembly Line to Manufacture Illusory Items
Dr. Shreber - A Traitorous Ally Working For the Strangers
The Underworld's Gigantic Machine
The Collective Hive-Consciousness
Midnight - The Time For Imprinting and Altering Reality
Murdoch Wandering Around the 'Sleeping' City During a Mass 'Tuning'
Event
Buildings Replaced With New Structures
An Imprinting Syringe Injection to Change Social Class Identity
Mr. Hand Imprinted With Murdoch's Memories, In Order to Track Him
The Creepy Mr. Hand: "I have John Murdoch in mind"
Murdoch Reading the Back of the Shell Beach Postcard, Sent by His Uncle
Karl Harris (John Bluthal)
News-Stand Vendor = The Hotel Desk Manager (Ritchie Singer)
Subway Rail System Map - Location of Shell Beach
A Flashed Memory of Emma's Unfaithfulness
Mr. Hand's Suggestion to Find Murdoch - Murder the Prostitute and
Pin it on Murdoch
Detective Walenski Speaking to Murdoch Before His Suicidal Leap In Front
of a Subway Rail Train
Mr. Hand's Fascination With Emma Murdoch
Murdoch's Uncle Karl Harris in Neptune's Kingdom
Murdoch's Childhood Home - Shell Beach
Bumstead's Gift of an Accordion From His Mother
Mr. Hand Held At Knife-Point by Murdoch - And Forced to Explain The Aliens'
Plans ("We Need to Be Like You")
Murdoch Clinging to the Edge of a Building
In Police Station, Murdoch Speaking to Emma - and Breaking Glass to
Kiss Her
Dr. Schreber's Explanation to Murdoch and Bumstead of the Motives of
the Strangers To Swap Memories in Their Experimental Human Subjects
Flashback: Schreber Forced to Delete His Own Memories
The Discovery of a Fake Shell Beach Billboard on a Brick
Wall, At the Outer Perimeter of the "Dark City"
Mr. Hand Holding Emma Hostage to Force Murdoch
to Surrender
The Revelation of the "Dark City" Space-Ship Floating In the Void of
Space
The "Tuning" Battle of Minds Between Murdoch and Mr. Book
Murdoch Repelled a Knife and It Reversed Itself and Struck Mr. Book in
the Chest
A Growling Red Parasite Emerged From Mr. Book's Mouth
|