Film Review
Now hailed as one of the most influential science-fiction films of all
time,
Blade Runner was pretty
well reviled on its first release, by both critics and filmgoers.
Its bleak vision of a dystopian future in which humans and androids are
virtually indistinguishable helped to completely redefine the sci-fi
movie in the early 1980s, bringing a degree of realism and
sophistication that was nothing less than a revolution. The film
was directed by Ridley Scott, who had recently scored a hit with
another equally influential sci-fi film,
Alien (1979),
and was based on Philip K. Dick's short novel
Do
Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, unquestionably one of the
most important works in science-fiction literature.
Although Dick died just before the film was released, he was allowed to
view a rough cut of the film and he stated that it accurately reflected
the world he had created.
The most striking thing about
Blade
Runner, and what still makes it so impressive today, is its
stark visual design, which combines futuristic sci-fi concepts with the
familiar trappings of classical American film noir. The future is
presented not as some perfect Utopian dream but rather as a vision of
Hell in which high technological advancement sits alongside abject
decrepitude. It looks like a variant on the Dorian Gray
principle: as mankind gets smarter, the world gets uglier. Dick
referred to it as the First Law of Kipple.
The film differs from the novel in many important respects (it is
reported that Ridley Scott had only read part of the novel before
making the film). One thing that isn't dwelt on in the film is
that virtually all animals have become extinct, so that owning an
animal has become the ultimate status symbol for any human being.
Another omission is the humans' dependence on an empathy box which
provides people with a quasi-religious bonding with a simulated Deity,
without which their lives would have no meaning. It can be argued
that by omitting some of these metaphysical and philosophical
complexities, the film is diminished in both its humour and its
integrity. However, the film does succeed in capturing the
novel's central themes: the relationship between memory and identity
and what it means to be human. The question we are asked to
ponder is whether there is an equivalence between human life as we
understand it (or think we understand it) and the quasi-existence of an
intelligent machine. (If there is, then every time we switch off
our computer or our washing machine, we are committing wilful murder...)
One of the strengths of
Blade Runner
is Harrison Ford's down-to-Earth portrayal of android killer Rick
Deckard. Ford had played similar roles in three hugely
successful blockbusters,
Star Wars (1977),
The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
and
Raiders of the Lost Ark
(1981) but he approached the part of Deckard quite differently.
Rather than the two-dimensional gung-ho action hero of these earlier
films, Ford shows us a more contemplative and believable character, a
man who is visibly tormented by the work he is required to do.
Although he manages to give one of his best performances, one that combines
a brooding intensity with a poignant vulnerability, the actor did not enjoy working
on the film at all. He fell out with Ridley Scott at an early
stage (he resented the use of voiceover narration, which he felt
weakened the film) and there soon came a point when the two men hated
one another so much that they simply gave up talking to one
another. Had other crew members not intervened, Scott could very
well have gone the same way as Rick Deckard's replicant victims...
Since it was first released,
Blade
Runner has undergone several revisions, the most significant
alteration being the removal of the voiceover narration. It was
not until the film's 25th anniversary in 2007 that Ridley Scott was
finally able to put together his definitive director's cut, which
corrected many of the perceived deficiencies of the earlier
versions. This so-called
Final
Cut is unquestionably Scott's masterpiece, a film that
satisfactorily captures the spirit of Philip K. Dick's great
novel whilst offering a chilling vision of our
future world, where the distinction between humans and machines
is on the verge of disappearing altogether. Just what makes
you so sure
that you are not a Nexus-6
replicant?
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Ridley Scott film:
1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992)
Film Synopsis
Los Angeles, 2019. Android technology has now become so sophisticated
that robotic humans have become almost indistinguishable from real humans.
Indeed, the only way to tell these so-called 'replicants' apart from humans
is a test that gauges their emotional reactions to a series of questions.
Concern is growing that a group of replicants manufactured by the Tyrell
Corporation are seeking to extend their lives beyond their present four-year
lifespan - something that may pose a serious threat for the future of humanity.
Former police officer Rick Deckard is brought out of retirement to hunt down
four of these rogue replicants and deactivate them. Deckard begins
his assignment with a visit to the Tyrell Corporation, and is surprised when
he discovers that the boss's assistant, Rachael, is a replicant, although
she is not aware of this as she has implanted memories that make her believe
she is human. What ensues is a desperate race against time. As
Deckard discovers, there is nothing the replicants will not to do to earn
their right to go on living...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.