Overdrawn at the Memory Bank


Overdrawn at the Memory Bank is a 1983 American television film, starring Raúl Juliá and Linda Griffiths. It was produced by Canada's RSL Productions in Toronto. Financing was provided by WNET and NJTV, which had hoped to create an entire science fiction series adapting famous works; but, because of lack of funding, this was the last of three productions after The Lathe of Heaven and Between Time and Timbuktu.
The script was based on a 1976 John Varley short story.

Plot

In a future dystopia, Aram Fingal is a lowly programmer working for Novicorp. Arts are prohibited, and he is caught watching the classic film Casablanca on his workstation. To rehabilitate him, the company transfers his mind into a wild baboon. For a few minutes, Juliá narrates over footage of wild animals, and Fingal begins to enjoy his baboon existence until he finds his peaceful perch in a tree threatened by an elephant shaking it for fruit. He activates an escape clause that is supposed to return his mind to his original body. Unknown to Fingal, however, his body has been maliciously tagged for transfer to a separate wing for a sex change; and, with the computer unable to return him to his body, Fingal's mind must be kept active by storing it in Novicorp's central computer – the HX254, which controls everything from finances to the weather – until his body is located. His mind can only be maintained in such a way for a limited time before it is destroyed.
Fingal's disappearance is reported to a rival corporation. The news is broadcast worldwide, causing Novicorp's share price to crash. Majority shareholders force Novicorp's Chairman to divert resources to keep Fingal alive and find his body. Apollonia James, a computer controller, is assigned to locate Fingal and keep him from hacking into Novicorp's mainframe. With Apollonia's help, Fingal creates a virtual world where he encounters characters from Casablanca, including a version of Humphrey Bogart's character, Rick. While only minutes pass in the real world, days pass in the virtual one. Rick grows bored, and plots to bring down Novicorp's finances without being removed and killed. Apollonia tries to keep Fingal out of trouble, placing herself in opposition to Novicorp's leaders, especially when she finds herself falling in love with Fingal and develops a conflict of interest.
With Apollonia's considerable help, Fingal eventually "interfaces" with the mainframe and defeats his antagonists. He also returns to his body, which has been discovered before undergoing the aforementioned sex change operation. Finally corporeal and reunited with his accomplice, Fingal has taken complete control of the HX368. After ordering bonuses and stocks for every employee, committing Novicorp's Chairman to a month of "compulsory rehab" via doppeling and changing both his and Apollonia's identity to those of Rick and Ilsa from Casablanca, Fingal vows to fight against the dystopian government. The film ends with the new couple walking out the door and, now free from Novicorp's oppression, talk about opening a club on the other side of town: Rick's Place.

Reception

The production was not a critical success. It has earned a 20% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

MST3K

It was satirized by Mystery Science Theater 3000 in 1997, complete with a spoof of a public television pledge drive.