I remember throwing in the towel on the Scanners series after being particularly underwhelmed by Scanners 2: The New Order, and subsequently kept my distance when Scanners 3: The Takeover, Scanner Cop and Scanner Cop 2 (aka Scanners: The Showdown) all appeared on the video rental shelves. Maybe I was a little premature on calling time on the series though, as finally catching up with it nearly thirty years later, Scanners 3: The Takeover unexpectedly turned out to be lots of fun.
Colin Fox (star of the legendary Canadian horror soap opera 'Strange Paradise') essentially has the Patrick McGoohan role in this one, playing the scientist father to a pair of scanner siblings. The son, Alex grows up to go all Rambo 3, attempting to find himself by living among Buddhist monks. Daughter, Helena on the other hand becomes the Guinea Pig in her father's experiments which transform her from the meek and mousy type to a megalomaniac vixen who uses her scanner powers to climb the corporate ladder.
After two sombre sequels, Scanners 3 really beats you about the head with the silly stick, as naughty Helena uses her scanner powers to make a chauvinistic colleague perform a striptease at a well-to-do restaurant, forces a talk show host and his star guest to make horny fools of themselves on live TV, while a pigeon learns the hard way that it is not wise to poop on a scanner. Helena also has male scanner followers, who once mobilised, start dressing like prohibition era gangsters, and an oversexed nurse scanner who seems to think she is acting in a parody of a porn film.
Considering how tonally different this all is to the first Scanners film, there is a surprising amount of callbacks to early Cronenberg movies here. The flirty behavior on the live talk show recalls the James Woods/Debbie Harry antics of Videodrome, dead bodies end up in a garbage truck à la Rabid, and on the basis of this and Rabid (original and remake),Canadians must really have it in for men dressed as Father Christmas.
As Helena, polish actress Liliana Komorowska drops into the film with all the subtlety of a megaton bomb, playing a mixture of Joan Collins and Donald Trump, while sporting an accent so thick that it feels like she was on a one woman war against the English language. The long-of-name Komorowska easily overshadows the bland 1990s pretty boy playing her sibling/adversary, as the series ventures into the era of male ponytails, corporate villains, erotic thrillers and yes even kick-boxer movies.
Scanners III: The Takeover
1991
Action / Horror / Sci-Fi
Plot summary
A young female scanner turns from a sweet young thing into a murderous, power-crazed villain after she takes an experimental drug developed by her father. Her brother, who is also a scanner, is the only one powerful enough to stop her.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
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Scanners3
Surprisingly Decent
A young female scanner turns from a sweet young thing into a murderous, power-crazed villain after she takes an experimental drug developed by her father. Her brother, who is also a scanner, is the only one powerful enough to stop her.
We start out with the standard good and evil plot, brother against sister... but, in all fairness, this is a plot structure that works. From there, it actually gets much more creative, introducing the use of Eastern meditation to control the scanning and the use of TV to more widely broadcast scanning.
Some memorable moments are here, too, including the mind-control dance scene, the Taiwanese boxing and plenty of firefights and explosions, including an arm that flies off.
As with "Scanners II", this definitely could have been a series, even more than the last film. The ideas developed here really set up a broader picture of good scanners against bad ones, and how such powers could be used not just on a combat level, but to actually infiltrate and dominate society. There is much potential.
Still fresh
SCANNERS III: THE TAKEOVER is the last of the trilogy and it's refreshing to see that it's still introducing interesting ideas and plot thematics to the series; the one thing you can say about these films is that they don't repeat themselves. Christian Duguay returns as director for another fresh adventure about a new kind of mind-control patch that controls all of the negative aspects of 'scanning' - but has unforeseen consequences to boot. There's a new female villain, and the only one to stop her is her scanner brother who's fled to a Buddhist sanctuary in Thailand for some much-needed r&r.
THE TAKEOVER focuses much more on the comedy and action this time around, with a lot of creative duels and set-pieces and at least one crowd-pleasing head explosion. It's a bit unusual to see so much humour here, with the villain dropping regular wisecracks a la Freddy Krueger and lots of goofball moments, but at least it's lively and never dull. The action has a B-movie feel but with a welter of FX work and death, it's always entertaining, and I found particularly interesting the anti-feminist subtext (the perils of a female executive in the boardroom?) and the use of broadcast television to sinister effect; this feels like a SCANNERS meets VIDEODROME crossover at times.