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And so buzzclikverifyme found his special edition Total Recall DVD, listened to the Arnold Schwarzenegger audio commentary, and he did know what to do.
The new Total Recall is a total waste of time. If you have even a modicum of love for the 1990 original, then get your ahss to Mars and stay the hell away from this remake. It’s awful.
Total Recall 2012, Sony, PG-13, $31; DVD+Blu-ray, $41 Colin Farrell stars as a factory worker on post-apocalyptic Earth, who discovers that he is really a secret agent with false memories implanted.
Sony Pictures’ “Total Recall,” a remake of the 1990 adaptation of a Philip K. Dick story, was the most rented movie the week before Christmas, according to Rentrak Corp.
The 1990 movie “Total Recall” (some say Arnold Schwarzenegger’s best work) is released this week, timed to coincide with the release of the remake starring Colin Farrell, which opens Friday.
Total Recall has what you are looking for in a Verhoeven movie, as well as an interesting story. It is still one of my favorite sci-fi movies, and its great to have a new DVD of it.
Total Recall will hit Blu-ray with a 1080p transfer, mixed in 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio. There will be two releases -- a single-disc version and a two-disc Blu-ray/DVD combo pack.
With its extra features, the DVD is perfect for people who eagerly devour behind-the-scenes details that don't take away the magic of the film by revealing its tricks but only enhance the overall ...
So when he provided commentary for the Total Recall DVD, it was no surprise that he did so in the same dull, literal (and inadvertently hilarious) tone you might hear on C-SPAN. [Gawker] ...
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