How different will the new 
Total Recall reboot be from Paul  Verhoeven and Arnold Schwarzenegger's classic Mars mystery? The answer  is "entirely." At least that's what we got from the few glimpses of new  footage screened at New York Comic Con.
Director Len Wiseman popped by the New York Comic Con (via  pre-recorded video) to show off some brand new, never-before-seen,  definitely not screened at San Diego Comic Con footage. Sadly, the bulk  of the footage was the 
Rekall Center spa visit that we were shown in July.  But just after the violet brain jack (or was it?) the audience was  bombarded with oodles of new footage, and holy hell, is this slick *****  a horse of a different color. In fact, it's more of a shiny robot horse  who knows kung-fu. This is what we noticed:
 -  Future cars everywhere! You've seen the countless Total Recall set  shots with Jessica Biel (Melina) and Colin Farrell (Quaid) smashing into  other futuristic cars, well now we got to see them in action. It was  short but it felt very 
Minority Report, what with fast, possibly flying cars that could drive on the top and the bottom of a bridge.
  - Girl fights! Jessica Biel and Kate Beckinsale are seen slapping  each other for a brief moment but most of the lady time in this  "trailer" was dedicated to Beckinsale. She's seen kissing Quaid, kicking  Quaid, getting all sultry in a dark apartment, pointing a gun right at  Quaid's head, and storming down a white hallway in black leather (very  reminiscent of Vader's entrance in 
Star Wars A New Hope).
 
But the biggest thrill was watching Bryan Cranston's first appearance  as Vilos Cohaagen. Sporting a suit with some sort of flak jacket,  Cranston leers at Quaid and says something about how Quaid's memory or  mind isn't the most reliable thing. It was hard to hear over all the  screaming, although it was still pretty bad-ass. After all was said and  done, you could tell this was a slick future with heaps of fighting.  It's absolutely nothing like Verhoeven's past work, but hopefully that  won't be a bad thing.