Topic: Blade Runner: The Final Cut [Spoilers]

Typing this late at night without any sort of outline, so be kind. tongue

I'm a huge fan of Philip K. Dick (Ubik, A Scanner Darkly, and VALIS especially), but I had never watched the film adaptation of his novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? until tonight. I know, I'm horrible. Now that I've seen such a huge piece of nerd culture, I have to say my reaction was more mixed than I thought it would be.

Positives first: this film has to be the most gorgeously shot that I've ever seen. The cinematography is absolutely beautiful, ranging from the dim and frightening Bradbury building to the dreamlike, sun-bathed Tyrell Corporation. Perhaps the best-looking shots, in my opinion, take place in the latter location, in which Deckard interrogates Rachel through a haze of cigarette smoke. Outstanding. I can't say, having never seen the theatrical cut, whether the visual effects were significantly spruced for the Final Cut version, but the model and miniature work was nothing short of awe-inspiring; with the exception of a handful of close-ups on the Tyrell building, the miniature cityscape holds up perfectly. The score by Vangelis, ethereal and beautiful, is one of the few instances where a score that is predominantly synthesized does not feel dated but instead works for the tone of the film. The performances range from good to excellent; Ford doesn't have a lot to work with in his portrayal of Deckard, but what he does he does well; Hauer is alternately magnificently unnerving and touching as Batty; Daryl Hannah's Pris is both childlike and alluring, and Sean Young's Rachel is stunningly beautiful. The film's pace is slow, but never feels sluggish; some have called it self-indulgent, but I felt the long shots of the cityscape added to the atmosphere. And when the pace does ramp up, the final confrontation in the apartment building is tense and unsettling (though Batty's wolf-howls verged perilously close to the humorous).

The bad? While I agree that Deckard's narration would be largely unnecessary for most of the film, I can't help feeling that one or two lines regarding the whole matter of the origami animals would go a long way toward explaining things. Even as someone who has read the source novel multiple times, I wasn't sure what exactly the point of that whole plot element was; I know from osmosis that it fuels the speculation as to whether Deckard is a replicant or not, but I never got the sense as to why that was while I was watching the film. Perhaps it's better explained in cuts other than the Final one; as is, I found it just a bit too nebulous.

In the end, I enjoyed the film. I admire it intensely on a technical and aesthetic level, but in terms of story I still prefer the novel (which, though nowhere near as good as Dick's later work, is definitely worth the read, and expands significantly on the movie's themes—or rather, the movie compresses the book's themes [particularly those regarding religion]). Is it one of the best films of all time? I wouldn't say so. One of the most influential and technically impressive? Without a doubt.

Last edited by Abbie (2013-08-11 05:58:16)

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Blade Runner: The Final Cut [Spoilers]

I think Blade Runner plays better on 2nd viewing than 1st viewing, so I'd say give it another watch in a year and see if it grows on you.

I happen to fall in the "it's a masterpiece" camp. That the visuals/music/art-direction are mind-meltingly amazing goes without saying at this point, but what I really love is how the movie fucks with genre conventions in terms of heroes and villains. Deckard is essentially a total piece of shit, completely burned out by the job, dead inside. Batty is just a guy fucked over by the system desperately clawing to stay alive, and yet he still saves Deckard in the end. I've always seen the final scene as a turning point, where Batty's death gives Deckard a renewed sense of humanity and breaks him out of this terrible cycle. I think this is what messes with people a lot on first viewing, that they go in expecting Ford to be playing the hero, when Batty is the real protagonist of the movie. It's like if Return of the Jedi was the 1st Star Wars movie, and we followed Vader the whole time until Luke turns him around at the end.

As for the origami, I kind of never pay too much attention to it. To me, it's like the top at the end of Inception, it's just a beat to add a little ambiguity to the ending, but in my mind Deckard is always human, since that both makes more sense and works better thematically.

This is my favorite edition of the score, if you ever just want to zone out for 2 hours:

Last edited by bullet3 (2013-08-11 07:55:09)

Thumbs up +1 Thumbs down

Re: Blade Runner: The Final Cut [Spoilers]

I knew Blade Runner since I was 10 (I even had a black & white comic book adaptation). Back then, I thought it's horribly boring. Now I'm 31 and it's one of my favorite sci-fi movies. You just have to grow up to appreciate it wink

Notice how Ridley Scott recycled some of the themes (with less success) in Prometheus.

So honor the valiant who die 'neath your sword
But pity the warrior who slays all his foes...

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Blade Runner: The Final Cut [Spoilers]

A couple of random thoughts on the Final Cut version:

(1)  The new edit of the chase scene between Deckard and Zhora is for me is a big improvement.  In all previous versions, I find that sequence almost totally incoherent, in terms of understanding who's where, what the street looks like, how the chase progresses, where they are relative to each other, etc.  In the Final Cut it's clear.  Zhora's here and Deckard's there, she runs across the street, Deckard follows her, she ducks into the subway, etc. etc.   If you wanted to complain, I guess you could say that the previous version provides a surreal, kaleidoscopic impression which mirrors the confusion and desperation in the characters' minds, but I'm not sure that's what they were actually going for.

(2) The revisions to the effects are nice and well-done, except for one that completely ruined the picture of the film that I had in my head.  I loved the fact that after Roy Batty dies, his dove flies off into a clear blue sky that looks nothing like the set they've been on. I thought it was a beautiful and very moving 'subjective' shot, indicating that Batty's soul, his nobler instincts, were rising toward a better place, somewhere that didn't have the problems of their world, the grit, the rain, the darkness, etc. I was totally heartbroken to hear Ridley Scott say that it was just a shot they stuck in because they didn't have the time to do it properly.

bullet3 wrote:

As for the origami, I kind of never pay too much attention to it. To me, it's like the top at the end of Inception, it's just a beat to add a little ambiguity to the ending, but in my mind Deckard is always human, since that both makes more sense and works better thematically.

I would go even more strongly here.  I think for Deckard to be a replicant almost completely undercuts the central theme of the film, namely "what does it mean to be human?".  Essentially the key criterion that the film offers, which is referenced explicitly in the descriptions of the Voight-Kampf test, is empathy -- the ability to understand that another object in the world is, in a fundamental way, like you or the same as you.  The way I read the film, this is what Roy Batty understands at the end, and why he rescues Deckard.  And this is why Deckard is able to be redeemed through his relationship with Rachael.  If Deckard is a replicant, then kind of none of this matters or is relevant.  For this reason actually, I've drifted back toward the original theatrical version, warts 'n' all, as my preferred version (though I do stop the film after the elevator doors close).

You do then have to say something about the origami, and you can always make up whatever I guess.  Continuing the theme of Gaff's origami as making observations about Deckard (doing the chicken as Deckard shows reluctance to come back to the Blade Runner unit, for example), my thought was that it's saying that Deckard is living in a fantasy world.  It's just as impossible for a human to have an actual relationship with a replicant as it is for there to be unicorns.

[Edit:  And just to show what you can make up off the top of your head, you could also relate the origami unicorn to Gaff's comment after the fight with Batty.  Unicorns are traditionally kind of 'girly', so he's sort of impugning Deckard's masculinity.  But then after he sees him defeat Batty he says "you've done a man's job, sir", meaning "you're not as much of a wuss as I accused you of being."]

Anyway, the fact that Ridley Scott has, as far as I know, always said he intended Deckard to be a replicant at least shows that Prometheus was not an aberration. He needs to go back to making perfume ads.

Last edited by sellew (2013-08-11 19:31:52)

For the next hour, everything in this post is strictly based on the available facts.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Blade Runner: The Final Cut [Spoilers]

I have to wonder what Dick would have thought of the whole "Deckard is an android" thing had he lived. In the novel, Deckard actually has someone else perform the Voight-Kampff test on him, and he checks out as human--no ambiguity there. (Also, it was interesting to me that Rachel's VK was the only scene in the film that really corresponded to any specific scene out of the book, and was practically word for word the same).

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Blade Runner: The Final Cut [Spoilers]

Ya, I dunno, although he was very in love it visually, at least the stuff he got to see early. http://www.blastr.com/2013-3-26/read-ph … ers-impact

Also, I always saw the dove flying away as just a production mistake, so I really liked that they fixed it in the final cut, though your reading is a pretty decent justification for it.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Blade Runner: The Final Cut [Spoilers]

Darth Praxus wrote:

I know from osmosis that [the origami] fuels the speculation as to whether Deckard is a replicant or not, but I never got the sense as to why that was while I was watching the film. Perhaps it's better explained in cuts other than the Final one; as is, I found it just a bit too nebulous.

Just realized that I didn't mention this specifically.  In the Director's and Final Cut, the origami unicorn is a callback to the scene when Deckard's at the piano and has a (day)dream about a unicorn running through a forest glade.  (He's clearly asleep in the Director's cut, but looks awake in the Final Cut, iirc.)  If Gaff knows the content of Deckard's dreams or images that are of some personal significance to him, then Deckard must be a replicant, mirroring the scene with Rachael when Deckard tells her about a memory that she's never shared with anyone.  However, like I say, if Deckard's not a replicant, then you have to come up with some other explanation for the unicorn, in the context of Gaff's origami in general being comments about Deckard.

For the next hour, everything in this post is strictly based on the available facts.

Thumbs up Thumbs down