The Hollywood film industry is designed to put out movies just good enough to keep the sheep buying tickets. When you account for inflation population growth and movies opening in more countries than in the past today's films dont hold a candle to old ones
I'm not sure that even Hollywood could squeeze another release out of BR. Raze is just gonna have to take his ball and go home on this one. Declare victory and depart the field.
About Vangelis, many may not know that he never learned to read musical notes, and also he plays by improvise. And still he creates all those masterpieces...
"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 the rain..." R.I.P. 🙏~ Rutger Hauer (1944-2019) Good video btw...
sorry for nitpicking, even David Peoples, as co writer, got it wrong, but Mr. Hauer said “like tears in rain", not “tears in the rain", but I think such a classic quote from such a great actor deserves it. cheers and have a nice day.
"Hey! Do you want to go out and see a movie tonight?" "I don't know. What's playing right now?" "Let's see." reads listing in newspaper "They got showings for E.T., Blade Runner, and The Thing."
Thank you for mentioning Sanderson's J.F. Sebastian. I've always loved how the replicants, who have a shortened lifespan, meet him and learn that this man, who has helped in their creation, has Methusalah Syndrome - accelerated aging. His line of "There's some of me in you" is just perfect, setting up their aging plight, and his interactions with Roy and Pris are underrated moments in the film for sure!
YES! The whole "Deckard is a replicant" business screws up his conflict and resolution with Roy. He has personality, emotion, and a long history that shaped his personality (rather than implanted memories). So he is a replicant with nothing in common with other replicants? What exactly would the point be?
Rachal didnt know she was a replicant at first and they tell us that over time they form their own human emotions. IMO it makes the end scene with Deckard and Roy even deeper.
I think the point is that there is no difference between them. How is roy battys life less worthy than any “human”. deckard having to question his own identity becomes whats the difference between him and his prey. Humans and replicants are so similar that it doesnt matter in the end what he is.
@@professorfukyu744 But none of that's in the movie, so none of it is relevant to this discussion. I was under the impression that there were several major differences between the two, so you can't really compare them. One was a man vs machine, and the other was man vs almost man in a tragic way. Correct?
As much as I hated my time in California, one thing they have that I missed was a cute little back-alley theater that only showed classic black & white noir films. God I wish we had something like that here in Arizona. And a good piano bar. Both of those things. :)
One of my favorite shots is when Deckard looks at Rachael's 'childhood' photo and it starts moving like it's real...gave me chills when I first saw it...filmography was so ahead of its time.
And like every such moment, it didn’t need, never needed, and never will need, a prequel to fill in all that backstory. And mercifully, it didn’t get one. Blade Runner’s slow burn probably saved it from suffering the fate of touch paper blockbusters like Star Wars, in that regard.
One of the reasons Blade Runner is so special to me is that it feels like a tiny, singular window into an endlessly fascinating world that looks completely different from our own, yet still feels perfectly real. Nothing breaks the illusion, and we don't get all the answers. Blade Runner is a titan of cinema which needs no sequel, no addendum, no prequel to explain why things are the way they are. Blade Runner isn't a franchise, it simply IS.
I have loved this film since before I even watched it. My dad went out on a date and saw this movie and though he didn't really care so much for it he was so enamored by the soundtrack that he promptly purchased the vinyl LP and brought it home and played it the same weekend. I fell in love with it immediately, listening to every track while looking at the promotional photos on the jacket. We didn't have a VHS player so I went and bought the paperback of the original story, now at the time published with more promotional photos from the movie. When I was 17 in 1989 I had just enough money from my paycheck as a US Army Private to purchase the VHS and I watched it in the dayroom of my barracks. I kept and played that tape for two decades until it finally broke. Both versions of the story, the book and film, helped launch my interest in cyberpunk and other science fiction. It helped me discover so much writing and film that inspired me, helped keep my candle lit when I was going through some of the most difficult times in my life, as a tactical MI soldier there are plenty of those. Even now it helps sustain me as I go through the kind of difficulties that only a disabled veteran can. Thank you for this retrospective. I very much enjoy your work.
Fantastic mini-documentary and brilliant take. Well done. If I may romantically recall my own experience with Blade Runner, I was 15 when it debuted. When I first saw it...wow. I was blown away. Particularly by Batty's dying scene, Vangelis' soundtrack, anguished volumes spoken by silent faces and the visuals.... just astonishing visuals. Simply hypnotizing. How does a film use endlessly colorful, brilliant neon lights that glaringly scatter off of rain soaked streets to convey piercing hopelessness, haunting detachment and emotional surrender so effectively? Using light to speak of the dark? Ethereal synth music to whisper forlorn resignation? How? In the late 80's I would say this was my favorite film of all time, and folks would look at me like I was emotionally ajar. By the 90's it became 'secret' cool film fodder for RTF students to effuse over. By the late 2010's, it fell under the claim of young hipster cinephiles, dragged along with their other predictable tokens of conceited enlightenment (Cinema Paradiso, Bicycle Thieves, The Seven Samurai, Battleship Potemkin, The Third Man, Metropolis, Hero, etc etc etc) to elevate their own status as 'The Cognoscenti'. These days, Internet wannabe-epicureans want to drag it into the current meme-culture mainstream of cyberspace 'dopeness' and reduce it down to nothing more than a lodge pin of their own imagined intellectual prowess. I kind of resent that. When a film shakes you to your core and evokes such a strong reaction in you, it stays with you for decades, it becomes almost an old acquaintance. But when it becomes appropriated by snotty, self-important, bohemian film psuedo-SME's, you feel a bit like you've been burglarized. Sure, everyone loves it *now*, that's easy. It's so unique it screams its brilliance at you with only a stare. But these days, say it's your favorite film and you get 20-something dweebs screeching "Of course you say that! Millions of us say that, you bandwagon jumper" clearly because that's exactly what they're doing. Sure, some really do 'get it', but most of what I see is just intellectual thievery. To so many these days, Blade Runner is just something to be chopped and up and used. BR:2049 is the pinnacle of this dynamic. H'wood saw the rising stock of the original and decided to whore it out in a sad retro cash grab to hawk a pathetic, soulless doppelganger of a sequel. And like Edward Hopper's 'Nighthawks', which came a gnat's eyelash away from being ruined through hyper-over expose by poster companies peddling millions of copies in malls everywhere for 30 years, Blade Runner took a brutal beating for daring to be iconic and, as a result, it got mercilessly wrung out for a few more pennies by the godless merchandizing machine of Tinseltown. I'm get it, I'm selfish. I want Blade Runner to stay what it was, not what pretenders today think it is or what some Socialist crusader thinks it ought to be. Even before Siskel & Ebert each passed away, they moderated their opinions of the film from "a bad, boring story pretty visuals and a lot of dull, unlikeable characters" and "a waste of time" over to the more trendy-acceptable "a significant achievement in science fiction" and "iconic" just to keep their movie street cred in tact. Well Hell, jump on the wagon boys. The tickets are cheap these days, all the cool kids are doing it now. But despite the overselling and the cultural hijacking, as an over-the-hill greybeard who was there when it was a new, fresh, cutting and soul saturating experience, it still is my favorite film of all time. Even now when I watch it, it still resonates with the same energy, power, artistry and gentle mesmerizing touch it had in 1982. Perhaps it captured me so profoundly because it's so deeply seeded, root and branch, in my own coming of age. I see it now as I saw it then. I'm fortunate because I got to be there when it emerged so completely unexpectedly, was so shockingly original and disarmingly beguiling. The fact that it was made in the zeitgeist of the very early 80's ensures its legacy as so much more than just a film. To borrow a phrase, it really is a moment in time; it hit the screens just as the digital age erupted overnight and transfigured our lives everywhere, in music, cars, technology, visuals and our own perception of what the future was supposed to be. Perhaps the online peanut gallery of blathering professional opinionators have actually helped a bit, because now it can never be minimized or forgotten. In 100 years, when every tacky, obnoxious CGI crapfest movie from the late 1990's and on has been rightfully flushed down the sewers of artistic irrelevance and the only people who remember the names of JJ Abrams and Michael Bay are their great-grandkids spending their money, people will still be watching Blade Runner, intoxicated by it's complex fabric of visuals, color, sound, emotion, poignancy and, ironically, it's humanity. I strongly suggest watching it again. But for maximum effect, please watch it on a large 4K screen by yourself, late on a cold, rainy night, with a blanket snugly huddled around your shoulders, a window open to let the atmosphere creep in and with about three fingers of Johnnie Walker Black Label glissading about inside of an Arnolfo di Cambio Cici tumbler..... Thanks for letting me blather myself. G'night all.
16:10 I love when the interview begins. Rachel asks does decard MIND if she smokes. He replies that it will not affect the test. She pulls a cig and start smoking. But he did not answer her question. She lit the cigarette without knowing if it would bother him. It's like a hidden empathy test.
There's also a nice Easter Egg in that scene. When he asks about the 'full-page photo of a girl', there's a distant echo of her having an 'orange body, green legs'. Later, when he reveals her memory about the spider outside her window is a facsimile, he mentions the spider had an orange body and green legs. He was deliberately using info from Rachel's file in the VK test to elicit a stronger reaction.
@@TheRageaholic Oh hell, it is. Amazing, every time I re watch it or talk about it with someone I find something new. I know its a plattitude, but It really applies here.
PKD cried when he read the last part of the movie script .... because like Roy who was dying as he made the Tears In Rain speech, the author himself was also dying of cancer ...
I long for another Film Noirchives installment from you, Razor. I’ve watched all of your Film Noirchives videos before constantly. They’re some of the best film analysis videos I’ve ever seen.
I interpreted Rachel asking if Deckard had ever performed the Voight-Kampf test on himself as implying that he had no empathy as a person, not necessarily was a Replicant himself.
I finally alloted the time to sit down and give this my full attention. Your past accolades for this film were brilliantly expressed, and you wore your heart on your sleeve. You sir, have outdone yourself. I am only 20 minutes in, and felt compelled to praise you for your efforts. I have a feeling I will be watching this more than once. From one huge fan to another, THANK YOU. 🤘☠🤘
8:49 Philip K. Dick's idea of SS death camp officers/androids with no empathy, parallels journalists learn to code mentality. Different magnitudes of callous indifference, but both demonstrate a lack of human empathy ... like an NPC
Can we film the operation? Is the head dead yet? You know the boys in the newsroom, got a running bet. Get the widow on the set. We need dirty laundry.
Don’t worry. You are not alone on the “Deckard is human” camp. 1) I have problems with the sole argument being based on “because I [Ridley Scott] said do”. And if people don’t, then they should accept religious authorities (same thing). 2) I’m not convinced with the shots made to make the point. a) The unicorn shot is really just a Kuleshov effect (the 1992 Director’s Cut is a much more poetic way of making the association). b) A big deal is made about the replicant eyes ... you don’t see it in Zora. c) Rachel’s retort to Deckard was more of a way to hurt him because she was hurt rather than “I know you are a replicant”. d) The origami has more to do with Rachel than him. The big giveaway is the recall of Gaff’s line: “It’s too bad she won’t live. But then again, who does?”. This appears in *all* versions. 3) Deckard being a replicant raises too many questions ... and questions concerning plot and general logic. Basically, why would you purposefully design a “Blade Runner” to be a bitter, cynical, ineffective alcoholic? (Remember, his ass was kicked by *every* replicant he “retired”) 4) As mentioned by others, it muddles greatly the strongest element of the film, which is its philosophical springboard. Like Frank Darabont rightly observed, Deckard undergoes an incredibly deep and profound arc. Having him be a replicant gets rid of it.
P.S. My favourite is actually the 1992 Director’s Cut as it strikes a nice medium between the 1982 theatrical releases and the 2007 “Final Cut” (and I love the restoration work done for it too). I had mentioned that the way the unicorn appears is more poetic there than in the Final Cut (cross-dissolves providing a lovely match-cut involving the head motions).
@@drewm3807 Even when Deckard is brought to (what turns out to be) a rogue police precinct run by andys who are there to play mindfuck games, that's done more to mess with his mind.
This, was incredibly well done. Razor may have just crafted his masterpiece. And if Terran did not only the drone footage and shots in the opening, but the music as well, I'd be willing to pay for his cover. Outstanding.
Astute observation on Razors part by taking the problem of isolation in 2019 and rightfully showing me another layer of the blade runner film I hadn't even noticed.
I'd been thinking about this very thing (in relation to upcoming Cyberpunk 2077, not Blade Runner - but Blade Runner presupposes the cyberpunk genre) recently.....but then again I've recently been watching "Soph" videos on youtube.
The Moral of Blade Runner: You are alive, but not for long. To live in cold isolation and without empathy is to not live at all. You must devote your life to something or someone, because its the only one you'll ever have. The Moral of Blade Runner 2049: Slavery bad. Racism bad. Robuts are gonna replace humans and you're not special.
perfect encapsulation of why Villeneuve's movies are overly stylized dogshit. I see his movies and i feel nothing.I see Ridley scotts blade runner and I feel so much it almost overwhelms me.
This movie is is one of the most important motion pictures ever made. When I was little the opening fire in the eye shot got me. You think Harrison Ford, and this is going to be I don't know Han Solo, Indiana Jones, and instead really takes it's time, and gives you a good story. Straight up I think the first few shots, are the mutiny, Roy Batty was talking about, at the end in The Tears in Rain Speech. Only then does the seeing things through other eyes, which indicates true empathy. This video got me into Moebius, and The Incal, before The Bande Desiness one. Thank you Razorfist. You drove my other friend insane by studying the sacred geometric futurist designs of Syd Mead. No joke he carved a corner of his bedroom, to look like, Deckard's apartment. There is Star Wars, Star Trek, and Og Blade Runner ruunning things before any film reboot revivals.
end the text scroll at the beginning with: and it is I, Terran Gell, his chronicler who alone can tell thee of his saga! LET ME TELL YOU OF THE DAYS OF NOIR!!!!
Been waiting for you to cover this for a long time, some of your observations on noir and Blade Runner were inspirations of a few parts of my dissertation covering Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.
Brilliant video, as always, Great Sir. My only complaint about the voice overs (other than the happy ending in the original) was Deckard's "I don't know why he saved my life..." blather right after Batty's death. Even watching it as a teenager, I remember thinking "He just freakin' told you why he saved your life! He just freakin' told you!" Deckard failed the empathy test right there.
This is a brilliant piece of content that showcases what information the Internet can bring us through dedicated, well-spoken, and thoughtful advocates. Everything you said about Blade Runner in this video had been in my head since I saw the film on HBO back in the late 80s - but I had never "realized" it until you pointed it out.
Also, Syd Mead's work on this film can NEVER be praised enough. He truly shaped a realistic future that has helped shape the world of sci-fi for decades. In the same year he gave us cool designs for TRON as well. Mead is a treasure!
The climax of the film was Batty having an epiphany and developing a characteristic that replicants should not have: empathy for human beings. What most people miss about this movie is the very thing that triggered the events that make this plot happen: a group of replicants have developed empathy for each other. They have formed a sort of "family". This impels them to escape the system that didn't allow them to do that. This is shown in Deckard's investigation. This was the beginning of a process that ended in Batty achieving the thing that always disqualified him from being a "real boy": He learned to have empathy for ALL living things, not just himself and his kind. He finally understood and appreciated what humans feel from mortal terror. He had an epiphany that humans actually fear death even more than him, because they love life more than him.
This is one of the best things I have ever seen on TH-cam. Or anywhere else for that matter. You should be given some sort of award for this piece of art.
It took me multiple viewings and me watching the making of Blade Runner aka Dangerous Days to fully appreciate and come to really enjoy the movie and realize just how influential and ahead of it's time it truly was/is. I don't have an issue with Harrison's performance in the movie, I can't quite picture anyone but him in the role and I think there's a subtle Harrison Fordy like charm/personality that shines through in certain scenes. Good video Razor:)
One of the rare movie soundtracks I listen to outside of the movie itself. This Vangelis jam is just beyond epic. I get goosebumps... Fortunate enough to have seen this in the theatres. Like 3 times.
51:10 "Deckard dawns on the realization that the nature of his biological existence is less important than what he chooses to do with it." great writing
As someone whose autistic This was very profound and very simplistic in writing narration analysis, and the editing was great and very complimentary to your deep dive analysis of this movie, really shows reverence and respect for being a fan of noir and pulp storytelling. Thank you!!
I saw this film in the theater when it was first released and really liked it. My cousin's son and his friends were into science fiction and could not understand why audiences did not embrace it. Good to see that the film has found its audience over the years and decades since 1982.
My friend. Your work is as good as gold. I can't remember or even imagine a documentary, on the subject of BLADE RUNNER as being so immensely great. I take my hat off to you.
I prefer the theatrical version with the narration and the happy ending and I never considered Deckard to be a replicant. Blade Runner is a masterpiece from stem to stern and it's simply one of the best films ever made imo.
Thanks so much for such an eloquent and informative colloquium on my, yours and so many others favourite film Razor. It was Absolutely Fantastic. It rained today and I watched this out on the deck, and while doing so managed to viciously stub my toe in meanderings too and fro and quite literally shed tears in rain... could not have been better. Must acknowledge and vigorously tip my hat to the superb intro too, very well done as always Mr. Terran Gell. Many thanks to you both once again, this was magnificent and much appreciated. 🤘
This movie allows us to perhaps question our own existence to the extent of self awareness and self worth. We are blinded from everyday life and very seldom do we look inward to exploit and understand what is it to be a human being and to be alive. This film is a near perfect example of that.
Masterful, just like the movie itself. Your knowledge of both the film's production and general film making practices really make this review stand out from all the others I've seen.
"I'd rather be a killer then a victim....and that was exactly what Bryant's threat about little people meant." That is one of my favourite lines in the whole film. And without the narration, that is gone.
I feel like the smoking throughout this film actually adds a depth to it. Not only in the lighting and how amazing it looks, but it adds to the characters themselves. It makes them seem more real because they have a vice, a habit.
Does anyone else feel that the original countryside ending is getting too much hate? There's this issue of "Why would anyone live in this hellscape city when there's this beautiful countryside" argument. I say - take a look around you. Most cities have devolved into being similar shitholes and yet people still want to live there.
@nymersic The scene obviously wasn't handled well at all, but I think the idea isn't as bad as people say it is. Even if Blade Runner is a nuclear wasteland, that wouldn't mean it would look like a landfill. Chernobyl is a good example.
The problem is that it begs explanation right at the end of the film. Never, ever introduce questions at the end of your film unless the question is the key to the message of the film (Inception). Here the question is just "wait I thought people were fleeing Earth, but then there's all this nice shit right here? Why's that? What's the explanation?" The question doesn't enhance the film, it just detracts from the ending. The elevator ending also has a question, two actually: Is he an android and do they escape? But those are good questions because they sum up the message of the film.
It was forced wish fulfillment bullshit shoved into a bleak as fuck movie. "The Robot Girl found out she could live a normal and they ALL lived happily ever after" Fuck this fairy tale shit, this is BLADE Runner universe we're talking about.
I’d actually forgotten how fucking atrocious it was. That “no termination date” bullshit line. No uncertainty, just happy, happy, joy, joy. I didn’t know BR2049 doubled down on that mushy saccharine trash, now I definitely have no plans to check it out.
Saw Blade Runner in 1982. It was mind blowing. I wanted to talk about it with my friends. But no one had seen it. The film was a secret garden that only I knew about.
I remember going to see this with my father when I was nine or ten years old. I was blown right out of my seat! The mood, the music, the production! This put Empire Strikes Back to shame! The really telling thing is, even at that age, the story resonated. I didn't quite get ALL of it, but I got enough. It was my first taste of real science fiction, and I've never looked back. Thank you, Razor, for reminding me I was once a little kid looking up in wonder as a visionary director tried to tell me it's okay to be a human being. Yeah, i said it, the STORY! I got it!
Bravo sir, sorry you couldn't hear my applause. Now I know why my old man dragged me to see this opening night. He was a Connoisseur of the old films. This is one of my all time favorite movies and a good reflection of my old man.
One thing a lot of people glance over in Blade Runner is why it's almost always raining. Ridley Scott believed in the future, we would have transitioned to hydrogen power, and the process of hydrogen combustion creates a shit ton of water, hence the flaming towers of power plants in the opening shot and why the city is always damp, wet and rained on.
This was utterly fantastic. Thank you for making the time to make this. There were things I never saw before and I have watched behind the scenes of this movie too.
was looking at some of your Bladerunner 2049 videos and stumbled across this gem - a thoughtful, eloquent documentary made with love and respect - a timeless film with themes so relevant today.
I had the pleasure of watching this amazingly well structured and intricate retrospective upon it's initial release, it reappeared in my feed today and once again I found myself enthralled in your brilliant analysis of one of the finest films of all time. You also illustrate how incredible a purely black & white version of this film would be. Think that's the way I'll be watching it upon my next viewing!
1. Blade Runner is the best movie ever made. 2. Deckard was NOT a replicant or this movie makes no sense. 3. The theatrical release with Deckard's innner monologue was the best version. I saw this movie in the theater, it was my first R rated movie. When I saw Blade Runner 2049 in the theater, I felt like I'd come full circle. Is there some way to buy this video on DVD from you, Razorfist, or can I only watch it on TH-cam?
You can get TH-cam Premium. That has a feature that allows you to download YT videos. It could be essential because YT is taking down videos it doesn’t like.
@@MCCrleone354 Even if you download it on Premium, once TH-cam takes it down, you won't be able to watch it. To keep the video you'll need to get a TH-cam downloader.
Excellent essay. "Sometimes the design IS the statement" --epigraph, attributed to Ridley Scott, in Paul Sammon's book. The mise en scene and the sound score were the main "characters." Eldon Tyrell and Roy Batty, the Father and the Son, and we are left there looking for the Holy Ghost, without even knowing just what we are looking for..
Finally, a Razor video that isn't just him screaming and being condescending, but just talking about something he's passionate about. Enjoying this style so much more.
Beautifully done study of a magnificent film. As a fellow fan of Film Noir, I will be watching the others you've done, and I hope you will continue to do them.
I'd argue you'd lose too much of the depth of the background environment with just b&w. A flash of neon through the fog wouldn't be as effective without the colour.
I had the pleasure to meet Mr D8ck at a sifi convention in 1978, & we talked for a while, & he signed the book 5hat had my first pro story in it. It was one of those times in your life that you will always remamber.
When Razorfist produces better content than all of hollywood.
I'd rather watch a Razorfist/Eve/T Boogie film than any of the shit that Hollyfail has produced recently!
That's not a high bar for modern Hollywood... But the opening a minute and 30 seconds in is still pretty damn good.
The cream does not always rise to the top in Hollywood. Razor is too true to himself for that town.
The Hollywood film industry is designed to put out movies just good enough to keep the sheep buying tickets. When you account for inflation population growth and movies opening in more countries than in the past today's films dont hold a candle to old ones
@@hariman7727 REEEEE must conflict to be cool REEEE
The epic score of Vangelis cannot be underestimated. It's close to genius.
yeah its perfection
literally the opening credits, the tears in rain scene gave me sensations and goosebumps
I’d love to have a version that doesn’t include dialogue from the movie. Probably out there, somewhere. This reminds me to go look for it again.
@@Activated_Complex Director and Final Cut?
Music and imagery.
This should be added to future editions of Blade Runner as a special feature
Yeah, but Hollywood.
@@scowler92 Fuck Hollywood. Get em' Razor...get em'.
@Dubious Fizzgig I know, I've got the box set with every version of the movie plus all the documentaries from 2007
Agreed.
I'm not sure that even Hollywood could squeeze another release out of BR. Raze is just gonna have to take his ball and go home on this one. Declare victory and depart the field.
Best documentary and analysis of Blade Runner out there.
Here, Here! Well Done, Sir RazorFist.
More insights than a viewfinder on the Empire State
And I love that it ends with the closing elevator.
Pretty silly decision to rob a film known for its colors if its colors but ok
@@CitizenScottand get it taken down by copyright bots?
About Vangelis, many may not know that he never learned to read musical notes, and also he plays by improvise. And still he creates all those masterpieces...
"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 the rain..."
R.I.P. 🙏~ Rutger Hauer (1944-2019)
Good video btw...
sorry for nitpicking, even David Peoples, as co writer, got it wrong, but Mr. Hauer said “like tears in rain", not “tears in the rain", but I think such a classic quote from such a great actor deserves it. cheers and have a nice day.
@@adolfnoise4673
Initially I was about to say "you should be sorry" jajaja, but did not know that fun fact! Cheers!
Perhaps ppl reading this know alredy... mr Rutger H. wrote this words himself... for himself.
it's even sadder that he died in 2019 just like his character roy.. in a way, Blade Runner predicted his own demise
"Hey! Do you want to go out and see a movie tonight?"
"I don't know. What's playing right now?"
"Let's see." reads listing in newspaper "They got showings for E.T., Blade Runner, and The Thing."
Thank you for mentioning Sanderson's J.F. Sebastian. I've always loved how the replicants, who have a shortened lifespan, meet him and learn that this man, who has helped in their creation, has Methusalah Syndrome - accelerated aging. His line of "There's some of me in you" is just perfect, setting up their aging plight, and his interactions with Roy and Pris are underrated moments in the film for sure!
There is no underrated moments in this film, from begening to end it is so close to perfection that it hurts
YES! The whole "Deckard is a replicant" business screws up his conflict and resolution with Roy. He has personality, emotion, and a long history that shaped his personality (rather than implanted memories). So he is a replicant with nothing in common with other replicants? What exactly would the point be?
Rachal didnt know she was a replicant at first and they tell us that over time they form their own human emotions. IMO it makes the end scene with Deckard and Roy even deeper.
I think the point is that there is no difference between them. How is roy battys life less worthy than any “human”. deckard having to question his own identity becomes whats the difference between him and his prey. Humans and replicants are so similar that it doesnt matter in the end what he is.
No, deckard is accused of being an android by an android police department. Read the book. Its good.
@@professorfukyu744 But none of that's in the movie, so none of it is relevant to this discussion. I was under the impression that there were several major differences between the two, so you can't really compare them.
One was a man vs machine, and the other was man vs almost man in a tragic way. Correct?
@@professorfukyu744 I have,it’s a great read
As much as I hated my time in California, one thing they have that I missed was a cute little back-alley theater that only showed classic black & white noir films. God I wish we had something like that here in Arizona.
And a good piano bar. Both of those things. :)
The million dollar idea.
One of my favorite shots is when Deckard looks at Rachael's 'childhood' photo and it starts moving like it's real...gave me chills when I first saw it...filmography was so ahead of its time.
Seems like it's a little video embedded in the photo, as if it's common in that time.
@@afrosheenix Yeah, but it's overlooked these days because of the "Harry Potter" films.
I always thought the line, “We need the old Bladerunner.” Was, itself brilliant. It implies an entire pre-story that the viewer can only imagine.
And like every such moment, it didn’t need, never needed, and never will need, a prequel to fill in all that backstory. And mercifully, it didn’t get one. Blade Runner’s slow burn probably saved it from suffering the fate of touch paper blockbusters like Star Wars, in that regard.
@@Activated_Complex I'm torn between wanting one, but also knowing that it could never compare to my own imagination.
One of the reasons Blade Runner is so special to me is that it feels like a tiny, singular window into an endlessly fascinating world that looks completely different from our own, yet still feels perfectly real. Nothing breaks the illusion, and we don't get all the answers. Blade Runner is a titan of cinema which needs no sequel, no addendum, no prequel to explain why things are the way they are. Blade Runner isn't a franchise, it simply IS.
Kojima copies this with Solid Snake.
'Wake up! Time to die.' Is one of the best lines ever.
I have loved this film since before I even watched it. My dad went out on a date and saw this movie and though he didn't really care so much for it he was so enamored by the soundtrack that he promptly purchased the vinyl LP and brought it home and played it the same weekend. I fell in love with it immediately, listening to every track while looking at the promotional photos on the jacket. We didn't have a VHS player so I went and bought the paperback of the original story, now at the time published with more promotional photos from the movie. When I was 17 in 1989 I had just enough money from my paycheck as a US Army Private to purchase the VHS and I watched it in the dayroom of my barracks. I kept and played that tape for two decades until it finally broke. Both versions of the story, the book and film, helped launch my interest in cyberpunk and other science fiction. It helped me discover so much writing and film that inspired me, helped keep my candle lit when I was going through some of the most difficult times in my life, as a tactical MI soldier there are plenty of those. Even now it helps sustain me as I go through the kind of difficulties that only a disabled veteran can. Thank you for this retrospective. I very much enjoy your work.
How you know Blade Runner is sci fi: It's 2019 LA and people can smoke indoors.
Maybe it's really Philadelphia, where there are still a few dozen bars where smoking is allowed...
It's clearly Indiana, the last bastion of civilization.
Great point. 👍
Considering how cali is currently handling lawbreakers, whod stop you if you did?
@@TOAOM123 the squeaky Karens go after the low hanging fruit?
The shots in the Bradbury building are some of the most beautiful set to film. Cinematography and lighting for those sequences were flat out amazing.
That cinematography in that part, alongside the soundtrack gives me massive chills every time...
I could be wrong but wasn’t that building also used for the finale in the Charles Bronson film Murphy’s Law?
Fantastic mini-documentary and brilliant take. Well done.
If I may romantically recall my own experience with Blade Runner, I was 15 when it debuted. When I first saw it...wow. I was blown away. Particularly by Batty's dying scene, Vangelis' soundtrack, anguished volumes spoken by silent faces and the visuals.... just astonishing visuals. Simply hypnotizing. How does a film use endlessly colorful, brilliant neon lights that glaringly scatter off of rain soaked streets to convey piercing hopelessness, haunting detachment and emotional surrender so effectively? Using light to speak of the dark? Ethereal synth music to whisper forlorn resignation? How?
In the late 80's I would say this was my favorite film of all time, and folks would look at me like I was emotionally ajar. By the 90's it became 'secret' cool film fodder for RTF students to effuse over. By the late 2010's, it fell under the claim of young hipster cinephiles, dragged along with their other predictable tokens of conceited enlightenment (Cinema Paradiso, Bicycle Thieves, The Seven Samurai, Battleship Potemkin, The Third Man, Metropolis, Hero, etc etc etc) to elevate their own status as 'The Cognoscenti'. These days, Internet wannabe-epicureans want to drag it into the current meme-culture mainstream of cyberspace 'dopeness' and reduce it down to nothing more than a lodge pin of their own imagined intellectual prowess. I kind of resent that.
When a film shakes you to your core and evokes such a strong reaction in you, it stays with you for decades, it becomes almost an old acquaintance. But when it becomes appropriated by snotty, self-important, bohemian film psuedo-SME's, you feel a bit like you've been burglarized. Sure, everyone loves it *now*, that's easy. It's so unique it screams its brilliance at you with only a stare. But these days, say it's your favorite film and you get 20-something dweebs screeching "Of course you say that! Millions of us say that, you bandwagon jumper" clearly because that's exactly what they're doing. Sure, some really do 'get it', but most of what I see is just intellectual thievery. To so many these days, Blade Runner is just something to be chopped and up and used.
BR:2049 is the pinnacle of this dynamic. H'wood saw the rising stock of the original and decided to whore it out in a sad retro cash grab to hawk a pathetic, soulless doppelganger of a sequel. And like Edward Hopper's 'Nighthawks', which came a gnat's eyelash away from being ruined through hyper-over expose by poster companies peddling millions of copies in malls everywhere for 30 years, Blade Runner took a brutal beating for daring to be iconic and, as a result, it got mercilessly wrung out for a few more pennies by the godless merchandizing machine of Tinseltown.
I'm get it, I'm selfish. I want Blade Runner to stay what it was, not what pretenders today think it is or what some Socialist crusader thinks it ought to be. Even before Siskel & Ebert each passed away, they moderated their opinions of the film from "a bad, boring story pretty visuals and a lot of dull, unlikeable characters" and "a waste of time" over to the more trendy-acceptable "a significant achievement in science fiction" and "iconic" just to keep their movie street cred in tact. Well Hell, jump on the wagon boys. The tickets are cheap these days, all the cool kids are doing it now.
But despite the overselling and the cultural hijacking, as an over-the-hill greybeard who was there when it was a new, fresh, cutting and soul saturating experience, it still is my favorite film of all time. Even now when I watch it, it still resonates with the same energy, power, artistry and gentle mesmerizing touch it had in 1982. Perhaps it captured me so profoundly because it's so deeply seeded, root and branch, in my own coming of age. I see it now as I saw it then. I'm fortunate because I got to be there when it emerged so completely unexpectedly, was so shockingly original and disarmingly beguiling. The fact that it was made in the zeitgeist of the very early 80's ensures its legacy as so much more than just a film. To borrow a phrase, it really is a moment in time; it hit the screens just as the digital age erupted overnight and transfigured our lives everywhere, in music, cars, technology, visuals and our own perception of what the future was supposed to be. Perhaps the online peanut gallery of blathering professional opinionators have actually helped a bit, because now it can never be minimized or forgotten.
In 100 years, when every tacky, obnoxious CGI crapfest movie from the late 1990's and on has been rightfully flushed down the sewers of artistic irrelevance and the only people who remember the names of JJ Abrams and Michael Bay are their great-grandkids spending their money, people will still be watching Blade Runner, intoxicated by it's complex fabric of visuals, color, sound, emotion, poignancy and, ironically, it's humanity.
I strongly suggest watching it again. But for maximum effect, please watch it on a large 4K screen by yourself, late on a cold, rainy night, with a blanket snugly huddled around your shoulders, a window open to let the atmosphere creep in and with about three fingers of Johnnie Walker Black Label glissading about inside of an Arnolfo di Cambio Cici tumbler.....
Thanks for letting me blather myself.
G'night all.
16:10 I love when the interview begins.
Rachel asks does decard MIND if she smokes.
He replies that it will not affect the test.
She pulls a cig and start smoking.
But he did not answer her question. She lit the cigarette without knowing if it would bother him. It's like a hidden empathy test.
There's also a nice Easter Egg in that scene.
When he asks about the 'full-page photo of a girl', there's a distant echo of her having an 'orange body, green legs'.
Later, when he reveals her memory about the spider outside her window is a facsimile, he mentions the spider had an orange body and green legs.
He was deliberately using info from Rachel's file in the VK test to elicit a stronger reaction.
@@TheRageaholic Oh hell, it is. Amazing, every time I re watch it or talk about it with someone I find something new. I know its a plattitude, but It really applies here.
Also, during Philip K. Dick's screening of the scene, they played Vangelis's score for him.
He is amazed as he had already seen that footage in his mind during the book writing. PKD was special.
Dick was just another communist who got off on dehumanizing nazies.
PKD cried when he read the last part of the movie script .... because like Roy who was dying as he made the Tears In Rain speech, the author himself was also dying of cancer ...
I long for another Film Noirchives installment from you, Razor. I’ve watched all of your Film Noirchives videos before constantly. They’re some of the best film analysis videos I’ve ever seen.
21:45 when Roy Batty starts reciting his poetic religious existentialism you know someone's about to die.
I interpreted Rachel asking if Deckard had ever performed the Voight-Kampf test on himself as implying that he had no empathy as a person, not necessarily was a Replicant himself.
I finally alloted the time to sit down and give this my full attention. Your past accolades for this film were brilliantly expressed, and you wore your heart on your sleeve. You sir, have outdone yourself. I am only 20 minutes in, and felt compelled to praise you for your efforts. I have a feeling I will be watching this more than once. From one huge fan to another, THANK YOU. 🤘☠🤘
R.I.P. Vangelis.His music in Blade Runner was unique and amazing.
Rachel coming to realise she's a replicant, "I'm not in the business: l am the business," is really sad
8:49 Philip K. Dick's idea of SS death camp officers/androids with no empathy, parallels journalists learn to code mentality. Different magnitudes of callous indifference, but both demonstrate a lack of human empathy ... like an NPC
SAY IT LOUDER PLLSSSSSS
I find it odd that Dick says they're dehumanizing, while dehumanizing them himself.
Phil was the original red pill dispenser.
Can we film the operation?
Is the head dead yet?
You know the boys in the newsroom, got a running bet.
Get the widow on the set.
We need dirty laundry.
The projection always reveals itself in time.
RIP Rutger Hauer. The Hitcher was probably the first film I saw him in, one of his best. I’ll have to play the Observer as well.
Don’t worry. You are not alone on the “Deckard is human” camp.
1) I have problems with the sole argument being based on “because I [Ridley Scott] said do”. And if people don’t, then they should accept religious authorities (same thing).
2) I’m not convinced with the shots made to make the point. a) The unicorn shot is really just a Kuleshov effect (the 1992 Director’s Cut is a much more poetic way of making the association). b) A big deal is made about the replicant eyes ... you don’t see it in Zora. c) Rachel’s retort to Deckard was more of a way to hurt him because she was hurt rather than “I know you are a replicant”. d) The origami has more to do with Rachel than him. The big giveaway is the recall of Gaff’s line: “It’s too bad she won’t live. But then again, who does?”. This appears in *all* versions.
3) Deckard being a replicant raises too many questions ... and questions concerning plot and general logic. Basically, why would you purposefully design a “Blade Runner” to be a bitter, cynical, ineffective alcoholic? (Remember, his ass was kicked by *every* replicant he “retired”)
4) As mentioned by others, it muddles greatly the strongest element of the film, which is its philosophical springboard. Like Frank Darabont rightly observed, Deckard undergoes an incredibly deep and profound arc. Having him be a replicant gets rid of it.
P.S. My favourite is actually the 1992 Director’s Cut as it strikes a nice medium between the 1982 theatrical releases and the 2007 “Final Cut” (and I love the restoration work done for it too). I had mentioned that the way the unicorn appears is more poetic there than in the Final Cut (cross-dissolves providing a lovely match-cut involving the head motions).
P.P.S. Telling someone to feel something contrary to what you may feel is akin to “being in the wrong” ... that’s kind of fascistic, isn’t it? ;) =D
Yes, it never made sense to me him being a replicant and getting beaten by everybody.
This is one reason I will always like the novel more. They make it very clear that Deckard is human.
@@drewm3807 Even when Deckard is brought to (what turns out to be) a rogue police precinct run by andys who are there to play mindfuck games, that's done more to mess with his mind.
Dude, Why the hell are you just a TH-camr? This platform doesn't deserve you. Magnificent work.
Couldn't have said it better.
35:59 "There's only so much poetry you can get rid of." -Rutger Hauer
RIP good sir.
This, was incredibly well done. Razor may have just crafted his masterpiece.
And if Terran did not only the drone footage and shots in the opening, but the music as well, I'd be willing to pay for his cover.
Outstanding.
Just what my afternoon needed, a Razorfist video!
Astute observation on Razors part by taking the problem of isolation in 2019 and rightfully showing me another layer of the blade runner film I hadn't even noticed.
I'd been thinking about this very thing (in relation to upcoming Cyberpunk 2077, not Blade Runner - but Blade Runner presupposes the cyberpunk genre) recently.....but then again I've recently been watching "Soph" videos on youtube.
The Moral of Blade Runner:
You are alive, but not for long. To live in cold isolation and without empathy is to not live at all. You must devote your life to something or someone, because its the only one you'll ever have.
The Moral of Blade Runner 2049:
Slavery bad. Racism bad. Robuts are gonna replace humans and you're not special.
Perfect.
perfect encapsulation of why Villeneuve's movies are overly stylized dogshit. I see his movies and i feel nothing.I see Ridley scotts blade runner and I feel so much it almost overwhelms me.
Spot. Fucking. On.
Perfect example of film snobbery lol 2049 is a great film goslings a better actor than ford
🤣🤣🤣
This movie is is one of the most important motion pictures ever made. When I was little the opening fire in the eye shot got me. You think Harrison Ford, and this is going to be I don't know Han Solo, Indiana Jones, and instead really takes it's time, and gives you a good story. Straight up I think the first few shots, are the mutiny, Roy Batty was talking about, at the end in The Tears in Rain Speech. Only then does the seeing things through other eyes, which indicates true empathy.
This video got me into Moebius, and The Incal, before The Bande Desiness one. Thank you Razorfist. You drove my other friend insane by studying the sacred geometric futurist designs of Syd Mead.
No joke he carved a corner of his bedroom, to look like, Deckard's apartment. There is Star Wars, Star Trek, and Og Blade Runner ruunning things before any film reboot revivals.
end the text scroll at the beginning with:
and it is I, Terran Gell, his chronicler who alone can tell thee of his saga!
LET ME TELL YOU OF THE DAYS OF NOIR!!!!
Fuckin' A. Please do that.
Cue Basil Poledouris………..
Been waiting for you to cover this for a long time, some of your observations on noir and Blade Runner were inspirations of a few parts of my dissertation covering Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.
Brilliant video, as always, Great Sir. My only complaint about the voice overs (other than the happy ending in the original) was Deckard's "I don't know why he saved my life..." blather right after Batty's death. Even watching it as a teenager, I remember thinking "He just freakin' told you why he saved your life! He just freakin' told you!" Deckard failed the empathy test right there.
I've just finished watching this for the third time in the past three years. Truly one of Razor's best pieces of work.
Eight minutes in and this is a fantastically informative piece already.
This is a brilliant piece of content that showcases what information the Internet can bring us through dedicated, well-spoken, and thoughtful advocates. Everything you said about Blade Runner in this video had been in my head since I saw the film on HBO back in the late 80s - but I had never "realized" it until you pointed it out.
Also, Syd Mead's work on this film can NEVER be praised enough. He truly shaped a realistic future that has helped shape the world of sci-fi for decades. In the same year he gave us cool designs for TRON as well. Mead is a treasure!
The climax of the film was Batty having an epiphany and developing a characteristic that replicants should not have: empathy for human beings. What most people miss about this movie is the very thing that triggered the events that make this plot happen: a group of replicants have developed empathy for each other. They have formed a sort of "family". This impels them to escape the system that didn't allow them to do that. This is shown in Deckard's investigation.
This was the beginning of a process that ended in Batty achieving the thing that always disqualified him from being a "real boy":
He learned to have empathy for ALL living things, not just himself and his kind.
He finally understood and appreciated what humans feel from mortal terror. He had an epiphany that humans actually fear death even more than him, because they love life more than him.
This is one of the best things I have ever seen on TH-cam. Or anywhere else for that matter. You should be given some sort of award for this piece of art.
It took me multiple viewings and me watching the making of Blade Runner aka Dangerous Days to fully appreciate and come to really enjoy the movie and realize just how influential and ahead of it's time it truly was/is. I don't have an issue with Harrison's performance in the movie, I can't quite picture anyone but him in the role and I think there's a subtle Harrison Fordy like charm/personality that shines through in certain scenes. Good video Razor:)
One of the rare movie soundtracks I listen to outside of the movie itself.
This Vangelis jam is just beyond epic. I get goosebumps...
Fortunate enough to have seen this in the theatres.
Like 3 times.
51:10
"Deckard dawns on the realization that the nature of his biological existence is less important than what he chooses to do with it." great writing
Ohhh one of my fav movies of all time. And RazorFist. This is going to be epic. **drops everything to watch**
Solid research on PKD’s influences, Ridley Scott’s motivations, etc.
You’ve done some excellent scholarship here.
As someone whose autistic This was very profound and very simplistic in writing narration analysis, and the editing was great and very complimentary to your deep dive analysis of this movie, really shows reverence and respect for being a fan of noir and pulp storytelling. Thank you!!
Rest in peace Vangelis, bladerunner would not be the same without you
I saw this film in the theater when it was first released and really liked it. My cousin's son and his friends were into science fiction and could not understand why audiences did not embrace it. Good to see that the film has found its audience over the years and decades since 1982.
>see notification
>see video length
Time to get comfy I guess ☕
See title
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Change into comfortable shorts
See title
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Wait until I can watch it all in one shot the next day
My friend. Your work is as good as gold. I can't remember or even imagine a documentary, on the subject of BLADE RUNNER as being so immensely great. I take my hat off to you.
I prefer the theatrical version with the narration and the happy ending and I never considered Deckard to be a replicant. Blade Runner is a masterpiece from stem to stern and it's simply one of the best films ever made imo.
Thanks so much for such an eloquent and informative colloquium on my, yours and so many others favourite film Razor. It was Absolutely Fantastic. It rained today and I watched this out on the deck, and while doing so managed to viciously stub my toe in meanderings too and fro and quite literally shed tears in rain... could not have been better. Must acknowledge and vigorously tip my hat to the superb intro too, very well done as always Mr. Terran Gell. Many thanks to you both once again, this was magnificent and much appreciated. 🤘
I've watched this documentary 3 times now. Well done, Mr Fist. 👏
This movie allows us to perhaps question our own existence to the extent of self awareness and self worth. We are blinded from everyday life and very seldom do we look inward to exploit and understand what is it to be a human being and to be alive. This film is a near perfect example of that.
This could well be Razorfists magnum opus/masterpiece. This was a joy to watch and re-watch.
Masterful, just like the movie itself. Your knowledge of both the film's production and general film making practices really make this review stand out from all the others I've seen.
"I'd rather be a killer then a victim....and that was exactly what Bryant's threat about little people meant." That is one of my favourite lines in the whole film. And without the narration, that is gone.
Wow. I thought I knew everything about Blade Runner. Great job Razorfisr.
Probably my favorite film review you have done man. This film has been one of my favorites since I was a kid.
I feel like the smoking throughout this film actually adds a depth to it. Not only in the lighting and how amazing it looks, but it adds to the characters themselves. It makes them seem more real because they have a vice, a habit.
Like tears in rain...
Time to die.
Top tier intro. You’ve done a man’s job, sir!
Does anyone else feel that the original countryside ending is getting too much hate? There's this issue of "Why would anyone live in this hellscape city when there's this beautiful countryside" argument. I say - take a look around you. Most cities have devolved into being similar shitholes and yet people still want to live there.
@nymersic The scene obviously wasn't handled well at all, but I think the idea isn't as bad as people say it is. Even if Blade Runner is a nuclear wasteland, that wouldn't mean it would look like a landfill. Chernobyl is a good example.
The problem is that it begs explanation right at the end of the film. Never, ever introduce questions at the end of your film unless the question is the key to the message of the film (Inception). Here the question is just "wait I thought people were fleeing Earth, but then there's all this nice shit right here? Why's that? What's the explanation?" The question doesn't enhance the film, it just detracts from the ending. The elevator ending also has a question, two actually: Is he an android and do they escape? But those are good questions because they sum up the message of the film.
It was forced wish fulfillment bullshit shoved into a bleak as fuck movie. "The Robot Girl found out she could live a normal and they ALL lived happily ever after" Fuck this fairy tale shit, this is BLADE Runner universe we're talking about.
I’d actually forgotten how fucking atrocious it was. That “no termination date” bullshit line. No uncertainty, just happy, happy, joy, joy. I didn’t know BR2049 doubled down on that mushy saccharine trash, now I definitely have no plans to check it out.
Nope. The happy ending makes no sense.
You've done an extremely good man's job, sir. Thank you Razör.
Best RazörFist video yet. Absolutely stupendous analysis from someone you can truly tell loves this film beyond measure. Great job man!
Saw Blade Runner in 1982. It was mind blowing. I wanted to talk about it with my friends. But no one had seen it. The film was a secret garden that only I knew about.
I remember going to see this with my father when I was nine or ten years old. I was blown right out of my seat! The mood, the music, the production! This put Empire Strikes Back to shame!
The really telling thing is, even at that age, the story resonated. I didn't quite get ALL of it, but I got enough.
It was my first taste of real science fiction, and I've never looked back.
Thank you, Razor, for reminding me I was once a little kid looking up in wonder as a visionary director tried to tell me it's okay to be a human being.
Yeah, i said it, the STORY! I got it!
Bravo sir, sorry you couldn't hear my applause. Now I know why my old man dragged me to see this opening night. He was a Connoisseur of the old films. This is one of my all time favorite movies and a good reflection of my old man.
One thing a lot of people glance over in Blade Runner is why it's almost always raining. Ridley Scott believed in the future, we would have transitioned to hydrogen power, and the process of hydrogen combustion creates a shit ton of water, hence the flaming towers of power plants in the opening shot and why the city is always damp, wet and rained on.
I'm continually impressed by how well-edited and put together these mini-documentaries are. Nicely done!
I love Blade Runner - and this is the best breakdown I've ever seen. Kudos to you.
This was utterly fantastic. Thank you for making the time to make this. There were things I never saw before and I have watched behind the scenes of this movie too.
Rewatching this video post-Covid, the dehumanizing and social aspects of the movie from Razor's perspective hit that much harder.
RazörFist, As much as I love your style choices, I'd legit pay for this particular episode in colour. Seriously. 💖
I'm impressed by all the research done for this. It's my favorite film as well. Nice work!
was looking at some of your Bladerunner 2049 videos and stumbled across this gem - a thoughtful, eloquent documentary made with love and respect - a timeless film with themes so relevant today.
I'm thrilled you finally got to this and thankful you took your time to do it. The wait was well worth the end result.
Best Blade Runner documentary i've seen.
Great video. I had to watch this in two sessions, because in the middle I realised I had to watch Blade Runner for the x teenth time.
I had the pleasure of watching this amazingly well structured and intricate retrospective upon it's initial release, it reappeared in my feed today and once again I found myself enthralled in your brilliant analysis of one of the finest films of all time. You also illustrate how incredible a purely black & white version of this film would be. Think that's the way I'll be watching it upon my next viewing!
1. Blade Runner is the best movie ever made. 2. Deckard was NOT a replicant or this movie makes no sense. 3. The theatrical release with Deckard's innner monologue was the best version. I saw this movie in the theater, it was my first R rated movie. When I saw Blade Runner 2049 in the theater, I felt like I'd come full circle.
Is there some way to buy this video on DVD from you, Razorfist, or can I only watch it on TH-cam?
Isnt that why they made the main character in the new blade runner a replicant because they wanted it in the original?
You can get TH-cam Premium. That has a feature that allows you to download YT videos. It could be essential because YT is taking down videos it doesn’t like.
@@MCCrleone354 Even if you download it on Premium, once TH-cam takes it down, you won't be able to watch it. To keep the video you'll need to get a TH-cam downloader.
F X
Ah. What I have done is use OBS for YT videos I like. But it might result in a larger file than using a TH-cam downloader
Excellent essay. "Sometimes the design IS the statement" --epigraph, attributed to Ridley Scott, in Paul Sammon's book. The mise en scene and the sound score were the main "characters." Eldon Tyrell and Roy Batty, the Father and the Son, and we are left there looking for the Holy Ghost, without even knowing just what we are looking for..
"My bank account was trying to crawl under a duck." That is the most abstract way of saying I was broke, that I've ever heard. Lol 😆
Blade runner will echo down the ages. Its peerless, and will never be surpassed.
Rageman...best documentary ever!!!! 🙏 i do hope they’d release this in sepia-tone!!!
Oh yes. I remember being a wee lad when my dad bought the VHS director's cut in '92 and how much this changed my world. Beautiful.
Brilliant review and analysis of the movie, my good sir. Blade Runner is my all-time favorite movie. You really executed this video.
A review so in depth and honest, it makes one want to watch the movie. Very well done, Mr. Fist.
Finally, a Razor video that isn't just him screaming and being condescending, but just talking about something he's passionate about. Enjoying this style so much more.
Clearly you've not watched any of the noirchives. All the vids in the noirchive vids is in this style.
Beautifully done study of a magnificent film.
As a fellow fan of Film Noir, I will be watching the others you've done, and I hope you will continue to do them.
Thank you! Excellent curation of this important archive of collective art and craft known as film, man. Good evening, RF.
One of the most well articulated dialogues on this flick i've seen in such a short amount of time. Hails, truly killer.
blade runner looks almost better in black and white
J W
Almost...
It was made to be watched in b&w if you so desired, just like raiders of the lost ark. You can tell by the cinematography and the lighting.
I agree with concept for a bit....but no................ it is the only color Film noir Scifi classic of all time!!!!!
I'd argue you'd lose too much of the depth of the background environment with just b&w. A flash of neon through the fog wouldn't be as effective without the colour.
@@butthz8850 Try it, you'd be surprised how well it works
Top notch editing, writing, everything was perfect.
I had the pleasure to meet Mr D8ck at a sifi convention in 1978, & we talked for a while, & he signed the book 5hat had my first pro story in it. It was one of those times in your life that you will always remamber.
Hit the thumbs up before the video loaded. One of my favorite films ever. Nice job