Because of the relative obscurity and "high tech" nature of retinal scans, they are frequently used as a device in fiction to suggest that an area has been particularly strongly secured against intrusion. Some notable examples include: • In the movie
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982), Admiral Kirk gains access to top secret computer files by use of a retinal scan. • In the science fiction novel
The Long Result by John Brunner (1965), a retinal scanner is used to access a Remote Control Centre at a spaceport. • In the movie
Batman (1966), Batman describes to Robin how the tiny vessels in the retina are unique to the individual, and by utilizing the portable retina scan device in the Batmobile, they confirm the identity of the Penguin. • In the comic book film series
X-Men Charles Xavier uses a retinal scanner to unlock Cerebro. This is bypassed by the
shape-shifter Mystique assuming his form and William Stryker using an unknown mechanism. • In the
Half-Life video game series, the scientists of Black Mesa are frequently shown operating retinal scanners to access locked doors or hidden devices. • Characters in the films
Never Say Never Again (1983),
GoldenEye (1995),
Mission: Impossible (1996),
Barb Wire (1996),
Entrapment (1999),
Minority Report (2002) and
Paycheck (2003) and ''
Charlie's Angels (film)'' (2000) utilize or try to deceive retinal scanners. • In the
Splinter Cell video game series, retinal scanners are used to identify agents within the Third Echelon and guards within military/business complexes. • In the 2012 film
The Avengers, characters gain access to a quantity of very rare
iridium by using two devices: one which apparently hooks onto a victim's eyeball, and another which receives signals from the first to holographically reconstruct the retina to fool the scanner. • In the 1993 film
Demolition Man (film), Simon Phoenix deceives a retinal scanner by taking the eyeball from a prison doctor. • In the video game
Doom (2016), a retinal scanner linked with a mutilated researcher is utilized to gain access to the
BFG 9000. ==Uses==