Paycheck by Philip K. Dick
Before the bullets and the doves, there was just a man, a wiped memory, and a handful of junk that might save his life.
Our Review
Published February 11, 2011
This week, Stuart continues our movie reviews of Philip K. Dick’s Paycheck and discusses the original short story on which the movie is based. Dick’s 1953 short story is about a technician who trades his memory for a payout, only to discover he’s left himself a series of seemingly mundane objects instead of cash. As he pieces together why, the story unfolds into a tight, paranoid puzzle about free will, corporate control, and whether knowing the future is a gift or a trap. Later adapted into a Ben Affleck movie, the original tale is leaner, sharper, and far more focused on existential dread than action spectacle. Stuart breaks down how Dick’s version stacks up and whether the short story delivers a bigger payoff than its big-screen counterpart.

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