*they deserved better* Blade Runner MOVIE REACTION (first time watching)
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- Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
- Instagram - / aria.chanson
Second Channel - / @ariachanson02
Intro - 00:00
Reaction - 01:20
Review - 30:36
blade runner
movie reaction
first time watching Развлечения
extremely sorry for the microwave quality audio, I thought for a long time if I should edit & upload this but I loved the movie and wanted to share it, I tried my best to make it sound alright. My brother used the camera and changed the settings which I did not notice before I started recording, so let's just all collectively blame my brother at the count of 3......
2, 1, ..... Thank you brother for having such a good soul as sister sharing her movie adventures with us!
No worries. 👍
Don't sweat the sound quality. I think it's far more important we see your reaction to a groundbreaking film.
I suggest watching Corridor Crew's video where they talk about how some of the filming was done. Take the opening sequence with the car flying over the city. They masked off sections of the film and exposed select areas to do the effects. It took something like 34 passes of the camera over the model to make the composite shot seen in the film.
Films that look like this will simply never be made again because of the cost in time and labor.
And he inserted the lines himself. I read that it wasn't even in the script
i liked it...sounded vintage
"All those moments will be lost in time like... tears in the rain. Time to die." One of the most legendary monologues in cinema history!
improved by Rutger himself!
Yes, and overall one of those "not only good but outstanding" performances of cinema history.
@@johnbernhardtsen3008Not just improved. Rutger wrote it as improv very close to shooting this scene.
@@dan_hitchman007 Ummm… improv is not written, and that monologue was not improvised.
@@markhamstra1083 Yes and No. There was a short version but was completely different. Scott had gave Rutger free reign to play with it. Rutger spent time the night before the shoot to rework and refine the line. There are interviews with Scott and Rutger speaking out it.
A masterpiece! And my personal favourite. A nice reaction, thank you. It's about humanity and what defines who is human.
Btw. "Note: Don't talk over dialogue... or you miss important shi*. Just hit the pause button...then talk. Then resume playing the movie."
It's basically a classic style Film Noir set in the future. There are some great neo noirs that were made in the 1970's including Chinatown and The Last Goodbye.
Agree.
Late 90s and early 2000s as well. Usual Suspects, Way of the Gun, and my favorite - Memento.
He said 'It's too bad she won't live.' at the end referring to Rachel thinking she had a expiration date like the others but she didn't.
it's also a reference to her status as a rogue Replicant. Like Deckard said, either he kills her or they keep sending people who will. To Gaffe it must seem like a given that she'll die sooner rather than later.
In the end it was Roy who was the most human character.. beautifully ironic.
I'm so glad you watched the Final Cut! It's clearly the best out of all the different versions.
However, the original cinematic cut has voiceovers that make certain aspects of the movie make sense, and there's a scene after Deckard and Rachel leave his apartment.
Rutger Hauer's monologue near the end considered one of the best in cinematic history. It was Rutger's rewrite of the script done within a day before filming the scene.
The soundtrack was done by Vangelis, who won an Oscar for the soundtrack of "Chariots of Fire". His music was also famous by its use by Carl Sagan in the original PBS "Cosmos" series. He has released a quite a few acclaimed solo albums and collaborations with Jon Anderson of the rock group "Yes". However, the album containing the music of "Blade Runner" is not the original recording; it was redone by an orchestra.
Rutger has done a lot of fun and interesting stuff, including "Batman Begins", "Sin City", "Nighthawks", "Blind Fury", and the original "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" movie. But my second favorite of his (after "Blade Runner") is the fantasy film "Ladyhawke", with Michelle Pfeiffer and Matthew Broderick, which has a unique tragedy of its own.
Rutger Hauer was a fantastic actor, and too overlooked today
It's one of my favorite movies of all time. I saw this in the theater as a kid and still love watching it. BTW Zora was the replicant that was shot running through the glass. The way I always interpreted the ending and the reason why Roy saved Deckard was that in his final moments he cherished life so much and he wanted to share his final thoughts. I never thought Roy was a villain or bad guy, he just wanted to live.
PEAK Ridley Scott. Peak Harrison Ford. And, of course, peak Rutger Hauer: his final scene--- is the greatest exit monologue in movie history.*
Thank you, Aria!
*A character named HAL 9000--- in a flick by the name of "2001"--- is a close second. :D
"All those moments ...." It was the actor Rutger Hauer himself, who came up with these lines because he didn´t like the script.
People wonder why Roy saved Deckard ? In those last seconds Roy had left life was so precious even deckard's life .
The origami of a unicorn at the end is a reference to Harrison Ford's dream of a unicorn, signifying that he is a replicant :)
18:32 Deckard's apartment wouldn't have to be expensive since so many people have left Earth behind to live in the off-world colonies. J.F. Sebastian has an entire apartment building to himself.
Ryan Gosling was one year old when this was released
Interestingly, the actor Rutger Hauer, who plays the main villain, died in 2019 - the same year in which the movie is set, and he dies at the end.
As did Syd Mead, the concept artist and legendary industrial designer who came up with all the great vehicles and scenery, he also passed away in 2019.
Im here for the Aria ASMR Best movie commentary ASMR on the internets! 🎉
Frankly the movie audio can be a little jarring. If Aria starts another channel where she just reads books or something, I'd be subscribed and going to sleep most every night listening to her.
I always get giggly when I see such a young William Adama.
In the original theatrical release, the final scene is them driving north together. In the narration by Deckard (which was not in this version and which I particularly liked as a mood-setter), he reveals what Tyrell told him - that Rachel was special in that she had no expiration date. So Gaff's assumption that "she won't live" was incorrect and letting her go was a mistake.
Absolutely great reaction!!!
Blade Runner is a lesson to humans. In that, the Replicants show more value for life than we do. They live a shorter life do to their programmed inception date. We waste a lot of time because we can and don't share the same restriction. Roy was trying show Deckard the desperation of wanting more life to those who don't appreciate an open-ended time to live.
Rachel has no such restriction. So, Deckard ran off with her to have some kind of life either her for as long as she eould live. And before someone else came looking for her. Make sure you watch the sequel. It isn't a Ridley Scott film, but it is a stunning piece of cinema.
Keep going and enjoy
Absolutely love the soundtrack for this film 🎵
Absolutely love aria and the soundtrack ❤😊
The best of them all… Vangelis produced over four hours of material for the film, a lot of it unreleased. The soundtrack didn’t come out until 12 years after the film, and was only one disc. A 3-disc version came later, but still incomplete. Bootlegs of the entire soundtrack became its own little industry, numerous versions available. The “29th Anniversary” bootleg collection is the most complete.
Vangelis often composed on-the-fly, as he watched scenes from the film. Often in one take. We won’t see his kind again. RIP
The look, feel and theme of this movie strongly influenced a whole genre of dystopian cyberpunk that emerged in the 1980s and throughout the 90s in movies, novels and comic books. Technologically advanced but socially depressed societies, which ironically with every passing year become more of a reality than fiction. These works were quite prophetic in many ways.
Blade Runner is my favorite Sci-Fi movie of all time.
The original version had a voice over (which Ford hated) and was different enough from the final cut.
This, what you saw (the final cut), is the definitive version and a true masterpiece.
Very different from the book (Do androids dream of electric sheep? by Phillip K Dick) so you can say that Blade Runner is more inspired by the book than an exact adaptation.
Later on Scott has suggested that Deckard could be a replicant (proved by the fact that Gaff makes an origami of a unicorn that Deckard only dreamt about) and the sequel, Blade Runner 2049 also heavily hints.
However, Ford disagrees with this interpretation and for him Deckard always has been a human and in the book, Deckard definitely is, there is no doubt about it.
This film is undoubtely one of the most influential in cinema history.
The look Scott created, this mix of washed up, dirty city, with futuristic neon drenched landscape, film noir film mixed with artificial beings or humans artificially augmented is what defines the sub-genre of sci fi known as cyberpunk.
The novel that came to define cyberpunk, Neuromancer by William Gibson, was influenced by Blade Runner as he already had written a third of the book when he saw the film and did some rewrites to match the tone and esthetic of it.
All the big shots of cyberpunk: Akira, Ghost in the Shell, Strange Days, Dark City, The Matrix and so on, would probably not have existed without the influence of Blade Runner.
The music by synth Greek artist Vangelis nails the Noir/futuristic tone of the movie and is one of my favorite of all times.
Having those reactions and after-movie thoughts is what we have science fiction *for*!
Nobody ever gets that Zora was one of the replicants they showed him at the beginning
Roy wanted so much to live that at the end he saved Deckard's life.
Zora is the most interesting of the replicants to me despite her limited screen time.
She's a murder android, but takes no part in Batty's revenge scheme and doesn't even kill Deckard when she has the chance. That strikes me as not wanting to be a killer anymore. She just wanted to dance until she died 😭😭😭
Rutger Hauer, (Roy) came up with the tears in the rain speech himself.
Here is another reason why Deckard is human: the original Philip K. Dick novel that inspired the world of "Blade Runner": "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?"
The whole point of Dick's story is role reversal, so that the author can hold up a mirror to the reader and they can reflect on themselves. This was a similar technique used in the 1968 sci-fi classic, "Planet of the Apes." As artificial people start gaining their humanity, real humans are on the brink of losing theirs.
Deckard has to come to terms with his own inner morality as an actual human since his job is an assassin of those artificial people. He regains his own sense of humanity and ethicality when he falls in love with Rachel, one of the types of artificial persons he is sworn to kill. He must acknowledge that they are no different from humans. That means he is actually a murderer, not a bounty hunter retiring unthinking, unfeeling things.
If you cannot distinguish between humanoids and humans, then the lines have become blurred. Neither is superior nor inferior to the other.
No worries everyone who sees this movie becomes obsessed with those lines😂RIP brilliant actor Rutger Hauer❤
The actor who plays ' Tyrel " was also in " The Shining " as the bartender .
"Deckard, you have always been a replicant".
Also watch " The Hitcher " from 1986 👍. Same actor who plays " Roy " in " Blade Runner ".
It doesn't show it in this version, but the original release which had narration, it was stated that Rachel was different. She didn't have an expiration date.
One of my favorite movies. It was so ahead of it's time. and the music!. gosh, its perfect. It has that retro futuristic vibe to it. If you liked Blade Runner, you'll love Ghost in the shell if you haven't seen the two animated movies already. I also recommend watching The Crow. Different king of movie but totally awesome. A special edition Blu-ray is being release for the 30 years anniversary of the film.
Pretty much a star cast from back in the days. And a beautiful synth score by late master Vangelis. This movie inspired so many later media products and visuals later with the dark burning cyberpunk backdrop.
In the end you wonder why Roy didn't kill Deckard, is the power to decide otherwise the human factor? Also Deckard sounds a lot like Descartes.
You may have caught it later on in the movie, Aria, but Replicants are not robots. They are genetically engineered and enhanced humans. Hence the term "more human than human." They are grown as adults and so they need artificial memories of a past childhood and adolescence implanted prior to awakening or they will quickly go insane. It's like a baby born as a fully formed person without the benefit of morals, knowledge, and maturity that only come to older people through life experiences. Roy Batty and his crew were older models without these fake back stories "installed," so they acted childlike and became uncontrollable and ultimately dangerous. The Tyrell Corporation finally figured out they needed memory implants in the newer model line Rachel came from.
I think the confusion comes from the phrase "robot evolution entered the Nexus phase..."
@@josiahferrell5022 I think the scroll at the front of "Blade Runner 2049" spells this out out more clearly.
Music can make or break a movie. Vangelis did the music for this and hit it out of the park. You must have done a good job fixing the sound; I didn't notice anything amiss.
Thanks for your reaction Aria. It's good to hear from you.
The replicants developed an appreciation of life.
This one is very much the more “important” and influential film, and it is great, but I enjoy watching 2049 so much more. One of the best original script sequels made, especially with such a long time between them. Granted Villeneuve is easily my favorite working director so I really enjoy his style, but it’s such a beautiful movie that also has some really great concepts it examines and questions it asks the audience. After the original a lot of people debated whether Decker is a replicant, a take I really like is that instead of answering that question the sequel asks another- “Should it matter?”
"I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate. All those moments will be lost in time... like tears in rain... Time to die."
Deckard is NOT a Replicant. First off, he gets his ass handed to him by other Replicants. Two, Deckard's arc starts with him hating Replicants and then ends with him falling in love with one. That arc would be meaningless if Deckard is himself a Replicant. Three, even the book makes it very clear he's human.
By the way, I love Rachel (Sean Young). She has this WWII secretary aesthetic style that is REALLY doing it for me. 😍
Fun Fact: Zhora was at ease with the snake around her neck because it was actually Darling, Joanna Cassidy's actually pet Burmese Python.
Shine Job Fact: Director Sir Ridley Scott and director of photography Jordan Cronenweth achieved the famous "shining eyes" effect by using the "Schüfftan Process" technique invented by Fritz Lang. Light is bounced into the eyes off of a piece of half mirrored glass mounted at a forty-five-degree angle to the camera.
Authentic Battle Damage Fact: After Pris (Daryl Hannah) first meets J.F. Sebastian (William Sanderson), she runs away from him, skidding into his car and smashing the window with her elbow. This was a genuine mistake caused by Hannah slipping on the wet ground. The glass wasn't breakaway glass, it was real glass, and Hannah chipped her elbow in eight places. She still has the scar from the accident.
Scott presumed Deckard to be a replicant and the scriptwriter decided that he wasn't. They both thought it was obvious and neither one mentioned it to the other. I'll give you another fact, the chess game is the 'immortal game' which was played in 1851 by Adolf Anderssen and Lionel Kieseritzky.
"Word Of God" doesn't mean anything if there's nothing in the movie to back it up. Sir Ridley Scott is an overrated hack.
Go in Peace and Walk with God. 😎 👍
@@BigGator5 Um--- that was kind of a *gear shift.* :) :D
He doesn't understand his own material! I mean, look at the recent Alien movies that he made!
Go with God and Be Safe from Evil. 😎 👍
1) Deckard not having superhuman strength does not mean that he is not a replicant. It only means that he doesn’t have some of the abilities of some of the Nexus 6 replicants. It is entirely possible that Deckard is a replicant designed with other abilities (e.g. super investigator skills and longer life) that would require different engineering trade-offs than those of the Nexus 6 that resulted in their short lives, according to Tyrell. 2) Deckard’s arc is not meaningless if he is a replicant; it just has a different meaning - and apparently one that you are heavily biased against even though both the book and the movie are clearly playing with and challenging our narrative expectations. 3) The book and the movie are not at all the same on many points, so the fact that Deckard is definitely a human in the book doesn’t tell us anything definitive about Deckard in the movie or what the people who wrote, directed and performed in the movie intended for Deckard.
IMO (and in the words of the writers of this movie and the sequel), it is fundamental to the story that the question of whether Deckard is a human or a replicant remains open and unresolvable - which, apparently, is something that the members of both the “Deckard is definitely a human” and the “Deckard is definitely a replicant” camps cannot countenance.
Blade Runner(1982,) the movie that gave birth to the Cybepunk-genre.
Like tears in rain.
Sean Young was awesome.
Interestingly, the replicants are not actually robotic is the way of being basically mechanical. They are bioengineered--so have (most)working organs, blood, and flesh. The later versions are built to be physically stronger than humans and have emotions.
🤖 Now that you've seen this and "Total Recall," be sure to check out the other two great films that are based on novels by Philip K Dick, "Minority Report" (2002) and "A Scanner Darkly" (2006). 😎👍
also The Adjustment Bureau and the Amazon Prime series Man in the High Castle. She's already seen Total Recall. PKD short stories and novellas became a treasure trove for Hollywood.
They guy who does the eyes, that's James Hong. He's brilliant. :)
Oh gosh, now I'm getting Big Trouble in Little China flashbacks. 😅
He said, "it's too bad SHE won't live". "But then again, who does"
The story telling style was in the noir old Mike Hammer private detective novels and radio plays.
This came out just a few years after Alien and I thought the replicants were robots like Ash. I was so confused when Zora was shot and it was red blood and not white but they're flesh and blood and it's more genetically engineering. Which is why one of the biggest questions is what makes them different from people, what make a human a human?
How many times in the history of humanity, have we said that some people have no true emotions and are just animals, to have the excuse of oppressing them or even killing them? So yes, in the film they say that they are not real emotions, but the oppressors say that.
Rutger Hauer was a fantastic actor. RIP.
Split Second (1992) is another nice movie with Rutger Hauer and Kim Cattrall. It's a AA sci-fi horror action movie.
I remember there were debates for years on if Deckard is a replicant as well. Great vid. Thanks!
Aria is so beautiful ❤
2nded, 100%☑
You might want to react to Rutger Hauer in his earlier work.
THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND,
and NIGHT HAWKS starring Sylvester Stallone. But Blade Runner is probably his most popular film with fans. Including you, it seems.
Edward James Olmos was in Stand and Deliver. Good film.
Replicant are primarily used for dangerous jobs. Jobs you would not send in a human to do. Oh and Vangelis did the score. He did the score for Charoits of Fire.
I see someone needs to see Ladyhawk
Can you react to the Saban's Power Rangers (2017). The movie is becoming popular again because of the movie revolving around characters suffering with real-world problems and try and overcome it...and also the actors. This movie stars these actors.
Actors:
- Dacre Montgomery, plays Billy in Stranger Things.
- Naomi Scott, plays Jasmine in the live-action Aladdin movie.
- Becky G, famous for song Shower.
- Ludi Lin, plays Liu Kang in live-action Mortal Kombat movie.
- RJ Cyler, plays Elijah in The Book of Clarence.
- Elisabeth Banks, I think we all know her.
- Bryan Cranston, plays Walter White in Breaking Bad
So, can you react to it pleaseee🥺🥺🥺
Will do, Thankyou:)
Hey, welcome back, I care and I hope your holiday was fantastic. Zora who you kept thinking was Roy was the snake lady that kicked Dekards ass. If you want to see another terrific performance from Rutger Hauer (Roy), check out The Hitcher 1986. Keep up the good work, looking forward to the next one.
9:39 While Rachel thinks she is human her appearance is just too perfect and emotionally cold. But once she realizes she is a replicant, she gets outwardly disheveled and more human.
1. Joe Turkel/Tyrell played Lloyd (bartender) in "The Shining".
2. Roy/Rutger Hauer😇 plays in "Blind Fury" a great first time/share.
3. Leon/ Brion James in "Tango and Cash". Much bigger role first time/share also.
4. Deckard/Harrison Ford two overlooked must first time/share "Witness" and "Force 10 from Naverone".
5. In the original Roy tells Tyrell, "I want more life FUCKER" not father.
6. Ford disliked almost everything about this movie (including Sean Young). He mostly disliked the voiceover. He refused to even watch it until it was "fixed".
7. Daryl Hannah cut her elbow when she ran into that van window
8. Philipe K Dick first came up with the idea for his novel "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
9. The original release has a different end sequence.
10. You must watch Blade Runner 2049.
Great reaction. The guy who plays Roy is a big 80s actor named Rutger Hauer. He is an awesome actor. If you're interested in watching another movie with him, check out Wanted Dead or Alive. Great movie, with Gene Simmons from the rock band KISS who plays a terrorist, and plays it very well. Theres also another movie called Lady Hawk, with him and Matthew Broderick... 80s classic... Anyway, thank you for the reaction. ❤
Hubby swears that he hoped for a Rachel doll every Christmas and every birthday. "Oh, but that was before I met you. Of course. " Uh huh... "Long long before..." Oh? (I did not press him on this. I suspect those letters to the North Pole and Santa Claus might still have one on his list.)
Watch 'Interstellar' Aria, AI/ Robots not always portrayed as a negative. Enjoyed your reaction, thank you.
One of the best movies ever made, and Rutger Haeur's performance is incredibly moving. Creating robots with human emotions and a short life expectancy is as cruel as it gets. He doesn't want to lose what he has come to love. As humans we tend to have longer lives but that's not always the case. Many children die young and I find that just as hard to come to terms with.
The effects were cool for the time. I got another Sci-Fi movie you might want to react to it's one of favorites, The Final Countdown (1980) The U.S.S. Nimitz goes back to December 6th, 1941. It's filmed on the Nimitz. It's like Top Gun meets Back to the Future.
4:55, the policeman who like origami is named Gaff. He is played by veteran actor Edward James Olmos.
Fun fact, over 20 years after Bladerunner Olmos starred on the SyFy channel series Battlestar Galactica. On this show a race of robots known as the Cylons decimate the human race across twelve planets. He played Commander William Adama the leader of the last human warship the Battlestar Galactica.
Like the replicants of Bladerunner, the Cylons were created by humans. The early models of Cylons looked like big metal bipedal robots. However, later on a new breed of Cylon was created that looked perfectly human. These new Cylons could eat, sleep, sweat, fall in love and have sex. Their internals organs looked just like those inside of human beings. As an homage to Bladerunner , the human models were called skinjobs
Older folks remember Olmos as Lt Castillo (Marty) from Miami Vice 1984-1989
Edward James Olmos you might have seen in Miami Vice or Battlestar Galatica. He actually did those origamis for real and he improvised it.
Daryl Hannah took inspiration on the white and dark eyes make-up from Klaus Kinski in the Werner Herzog remake of Nosferatu. I believe she said she accidently gave Harrison Ford nose bleed when she stuck her fingers in his nose in the fight scene between them.
Rutger Hauer improvised the white dove part, but when he was suppose to release it the dove got so wet that he couldn't fly so they used another dry white dove instead. And I've heard that he also improvised some of the lines on the monologue he has at the end and my god it is one of the greatest monologues I've heard and seen in a movie, one of my favorites!
Wanna see another scary, but great performance by Hauer? Watch the original 80's version of The Hitcher =)
i like rutger hauer in anything, but i recommend the hitcher
in my all time top ten, and I absolutely hated it the first time i watched it!
I remember thinking it was just O-K as a kid--- 'cause, you know, different versions...
Rutger Hauer is now in the rain... RIP.
Please understand, replicants are not machines or robots, they are 100% living flesh and blood with no mechanical parts at all. They have been engineered organically to be stronger, faster and smarter than humans but with a shortened lifespan of only 4 years so they can't become a threat to humans and start a revolution. When Tyrell said they gave replicants memories so they could control them better it was implying that obviously they can't be completely controlled replicants because they wouldn't need Blade Runners or implanting false memories into replicants.
Though if you want to see Rutger Hauer in his prime as a villain against Sylvester Stallone in his prime in a cop/terrorist movie, there's a forgotten movie called Nighthawks you'll like
Great reaction 💙. I believe you have fully understood the themes of this masterpiece (not everyone has). Now you MUST see Blade Runner 2049, it's an amazing sequel.
EXCELLENT REACTION! 👍
I always rewatch this movie to appreciate its depth. The only part I dislike is that they kill Sebastian (in the book, he survives, instead).
30:05 He's not doing the (Star Trek) Vulcan salute.
Roy broke two of his fingers and he's used tape to immobilize them.
I know😂😅 it just made me think of that
Congratulations on watching one of the best movies ever made. Go for the 2049 next, it's really good.
If you appreciate the style of Blade Runner, you would probably also feel Cowboy Bebop. A ton of beautiful homages to this. Some that even go past this.
Roy Battie is the leader. Zhora was the dancer with the snake.
the 1982 theatrical version is the best
See if you can find an episode of Animatrix called "The Second Renaissance Part 1&2" It shows how the machine war with the humans in the Matrix started.
- Personally, I prefer the version with Deckard's inner monologue, it makes the movie easier to understand.
- The soundtrack is one of the very best records ever made:
Vangelis: Blade Runner: ruclips.net/p/PL3ABE2FBA2900C03E
(Just like with the movie itself, there's many versions of it).
- Blade Runner is based on the book by Philip K. Dick: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheeps?
The book is quite different from the movie. Audio book: ruclips.net/video/qusXSHkcQZg/видео.html
- There's no robots in Blade Runner, replicants are artificial biological people, a bit like Frankenstein's monster.
- Tears in rain monologue: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tears_in_rain_monologue
- Syd Mead was essential in designing the futuristic world of Blade Runner: ruclips.net/video/edVznYyqpJU/видео.html
- Blade Runner 2049 and the short films are great too: ruclips.net/video/Ffxo_6Cg0Cw/видео.html All three Prequel Short Films in chronological order.
My favorite movie, final cut.
Nice dress Aria!
Ok⁉️Seen tons of reactions of this movie 🍿🎥 and so far not ONE person seems to know who Rutger Hauer is!! IF anyone (Patreons) happens to read this PLEASE recommend BLIND FURY! One of 3 movies I know with him besides LADY HAWK and WANTED, DEAD OR ALIVE which also has Gene Simmons from KISS!! Great Channel Miss Aria!! Peace 🕊️☮️♾️😎
Thanks!
Thankyou❤️
Without Roy's final speech at the end, him saving Deckard and releasing that bird, this would have been a forgettable sci fi movie
The real evil , the real monster was Tyrell .
In the book by Philip K. Dick, it's explained that the Earth is so polluted that everybody who can leave, does. Only the poor and the damaged are left behind, which is why so many apartments are vacant. The human race lives on with sick bodies and stunted emotions but despite the many differences (btw, the book is a great read) the themes are the same: what does it mean to be human?
You have a deep soul.
Please watch second one you will love it!
One of my favorite movies. I love it so much.
Roy is the true protagonist of this story. Deckard is a grey man, living a grey life. He's so pathetic he can't even get four pieces of fish with his noodles. He's shown what it means to live by a combat toaster, and he learns how to love from a machine. It's a deep story at the core, like most things PKD wrote. This is also why Scott's idea that Deckard should be a replicant (which nobody else in production or cast agrees to, for good reason) is not only utterly baffling, but also concept destroying. It would make the plot broken in so many ways, and it would obliterate the theme of the movie.
"Do androids dream of electric sheep"?
7:18 Exactly Rachel’s very presence on Earth is a violation of the law. Deckard or Gaff should technically be retiring her.
The replicants must be manufactured somewhere. If it's in that pyramid that Tyrell lives in, then there must be a loophole in the law. In any case, Deckard was given the task of retiring Rachel after she escaped.
God, this woman is gorgeous..
Great choice Ma’am, thanks for sharing 😊👍✌️🇺🇸
She got a lot out of the movie. Interesting. Props to Rutger Hauer, RIP. Blade Runner 2049 has to be on the agenda now.