Freejack (1992)
5/10
An intriguing enough hook that's quickly sidelined for repetitive chases and shootouts
24 June 2022
In 1991, Formula One racer Alex Furlong (Emilio Estevez) is a promising rookie with a loving girlfriend in Julie Redlund (Rene Russo). When Alex Furlong's race car is involved in a fatal collision, Alex is spared death thanks to the efforts of Bonejackers (the movie's name for human gathering mercenaries) lead by Victor Vacendak (Mick Jagger) who teleport Alex to the future of 2009 intent on delivering him to a wealthy client who will transfer his consciousness into Alex's body. When the process leaves Alex conscious, he uses the momentary confusion of the Bonejackers to escape into the dystopian New York of 2009 as a "Freejack" (a man from the past who should have died and is now essentially property) finding 18 years have passed and Julie now working at international conglomerate Mac Corp under Ian McCandless (Anthony Hopkins).

Freejack is a loose adaptation of the 1959 science fiction novel Immortality, Inc. By Robert Sheckley. Written and produced by Ronald Shusett whose credits adorn such genre classics as the first Alien movie and Total Recall the film was a tumultuous production as director Geoff Murphy's initial cut of the film proved disastrous leading to Shusett reshooting 40% of the film. Released in the dump month of January in the U. S., Freejack made only about $17 million against its $30 million budget and only $37 million worldwide making the film a disappointment. The movie was also not well received by critics who unfavorably compared the film to Robocop, Total Recall, and Blade Runner. Freejack takes a promising enough premise and squanders it on dull and generic chase cliches.

The movie wastes no time in getting the ball rolling as Freejack throws the audience into this world it's created with not much prior establishment. After firing past the section set in 1991, the movie zips into the future of 2009 with Estevez' Alex running through standard cyberpunk 101 with corporate greed ruling the world while everyone else on the bottom rung fights for scraps (I think, there's honestly not all that much established regarding the poor and working class of this world other than they wear ragged clothes and shoot at each other). The future isn't all that unique as it's basically a remix of elements from Total Recall, Blade Runner, and Robocop smushed together with no real imprints of its own until the last 10 minutes where it finally plays with the ideas presented by its premise of manufactured and acquired immortality at the broadest and most surface level it can. Despite 18 years having passed between the "present" and the "future", none of the people Alex comes across look like they've aged a day. Rene Russo in particular has a major moment where she tells Alex how nearly 20 years have passed for her, but when they play footage from 1991 Russo's appearances between the two time periods look virtually identical with maybe only her hair being a little different. I will say that Mick Jagger was much better than I expected as the Bonejacker leader Vacendak as there's history of rock stars not doing all that well with genre crossovers (just look at Gene Simmons in Runaway for example) but Jagger despite being a little stiff does lend a bit more humor to the role than I was expecting.

Freejack is a generic sci-fi action thriller that's more concerned with cramming in interchangeable shootouts and chase sequences rather than actually exploring the ideas or themes it presents. There's nothing all that wrong with Freejack, but there's nothing all that right with it either. Freejack is the type of movie that feels like it was tailor made to take up cable air time in 2 a.m. Showings and that's probably the best way you can experience this film.
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