Answers
How does the setting of blade runner effect deckard?
I am watching it and have some pretty good ideas but this is a hard movie to watch as i really am not in to this type of movie anyhelp
THE DARKNESS OF THE FILM, PRACTICALLY NO SUNSHINE! GIVES, THE EFFECT OF BAD NEWS TO COME AND HORROR AROUND THE FACTORY MACHINES! LOVE, DARYL HANNAH, DOING THE GYMKATA! SHE, CAN KICK BUTT! GOOD LUCK!!!!!
I was planning on buying Blade Runner because of all the good things I've heard, but there's about 10 versions out there. Which version is the best one for me to buy? And which is the original?
Forget the original, as it has some major crappy narration.
Look for Final Cut, which is what the director wanted
Hi, Blade Runner happens to be one of my favorite movies and I can't wait to get my hands on this set, the only question is that will it be better to buy the blu-ray version over the DVD version as I doubt I will buy a blu-ray player but will have a PS3. Will it be the same audio/sound quality as it would be coming from a stand alone player. As I want the best quality for this class movie
Thanks!
I don't think there's much of a difference between HD DVD and Blu-ray except for the fact that Blue-ray players cost more. I would just buy a regular DVD version, but if ur already going to get the PS3, then go for the Blu-ray version so u don't have to spend more money on an HD DVD player
I have the Blade Runner DVD, then I recently saw it on direct TV, but it had a different ending with a narrative by Harrison Ford. Are there two different endings?
Blade Runner is infamous for the conflicts between the producers, who didn't understand the film, and the director, Ridley Scott. For the original theatrical release, the producers tacked on a voice-over narration (which Harrison Ford reads in a completely deadpan monotone) to "help" explain the film, and a "happy ending" in which Deckard and Rachel drive off into the sunset. About ten years later, Ridley Scott had some input on a Director's Cut that eliminated the narration and dropped the happy ending. Now, the film ends ambiguously, with the elevator doors slamming shut on Deckard and Rachel. Since then, Scott was able to spend a few years preparing a Final Cut, which is on DVD and Blu-ray in stores now.
So I watched Blade Runner and I did not understand. Does anyone feel like explaining basically everything to me?
Deckard is a Blade Runner, a police man of the future who hunts down and terminates replicants, artificially created humans. He wants to get out of the force, but is drawn back in when 4 "skin jobs", a slang term for replicants, hijack a ship back to Earth. The city that Deckard must search for his prey is a huge, sprawling, bleak vision of the future. This film questions what it is to be human, and why life is so precious.