Pubdate: Thu, 19 Oct 2006 Source: Argosy, The (CN NK Edu) Copyright: 2006 Argosy Publications, Inc. Contact: http://argosy.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2655 Author: William Wolfe-Wylie TERROR DRUGS A Scanner Darkly Attacks the War on Terror, Drugs, And Poverty What if terrorism came in pill form? What if the War on Terror and the War on Drugs became one and the same? With not-so-subtle references to these ideological wars, as well as to homegrown terrorism, Richard Linklater's adaptation of Philip Dick's acclaimed novel has one clear message: it is impossible to wage a war on the symptoms without first addressing the underlying causes. The militant war on drugs portrayed in the film is intricately tied to the need to cut off terrorists' cash flow. But the clients are everyday Americans, and the US, through its own misdirected use of force, becomes the agent of its own downfall. Substance D is the elusive drug which circulates through the film. Arriving in small red pills, which strangely resemble Advil, it is derived from a small blue flower which is grown and sold by "terrorists" to finance their operations. In essence, the highly addictive and ultimately brain-destroying drug is being sold to Americans so that the proceeds from those drugs may be used to wage a war against them: a brilliant double-edged sword. Keanu Reeves plays the dual character of Bob Arctor (drug addict and good friend) and Fred (undercover narcotics officer). Unfortunately for Bob/Fred, one of the side effects of his Substance D addiction is a division between the left and right hemispheres of the brain, which slowly begin to compete with one another for supremacy. Eventually, Bob/Fred loses his ability to differentiate between his work as a police officer and the drug culture in which he and his friends take part. "Calculatedly addicted to Substance D for profit by drug terrorists," explains Fred, speaking about the fate of America's children. He continues in the same speech: "Our military and their associates are actively engaged in countries where it is believed the organic component of Substance D, a small, highly-toxic flower, originates. Our troops are down there fighting for us." Kind of sounds like poppy farming in Afghanistan, doesn't it? Or cocaine in Colombia? Against this backdrop of international drug-financed terrorism is a social message. The overarching theme of the movie is that it is impossible to attack the symptoms of any social problem - in this case drug addiction - without first attacking the sources of the discontent and poverty which led to the drug culture in the first place. In this sense, the film bears much resemblance to 2000's drug film of the year, Requiem for a Dream. The viewer sits dumbfounded as the characters on the screen pop pills all the way to the devil's doorstep. Each of them recognize their own addiction but are powerless to stop their descent. "The drive of unliving things is stronger than the drive of living things," says one character in a rehab clinic near the end of the film. But the message goes beyond this to politics, policy, and belief systems. A Scanner Darkly is a unique voice in the War on Terror and The War on Drugs: it criticizes the logic of both without directly mentioning either. While Reeves is less than convincing as a strung-out and recovering addict, his co-stars - Robert Downey Jr. and Woody Harrelson - are impeccable, and their characters are as unique in their idiosyncrasies as Reeves is bland and stereotypical in his. The animation technique of the film uses the same software, "Rotoshop", that was used in Linklater's Waking Life, another life-like animation film produced in 2001 with similar philosophical notions about drugs and politics. Rotoshop is a computer program, similar to Adobe Photoshop, which is used to animate over top of filmed cells and then analyze how the film changed between each of the cells and animate those "in-between" cells as well. The technique, however, is very labour intensive and requires approximately 500 hours of work per minute of film. The end result is a tripped-out wander through a troubled society in the not-so-distant-future, seen through the eyes of a young drug addict who has become both a victim of, and a soldier in, the War on Terror. It is a film about the future that relates so much to our present that the viewer is tempted to just wait and see if it might not come true. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine