On the Edge of Blade Runner

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Cardini Ripchip

Cardini Ripchip

11 жыл бұрын

About the epic film "Blade Runner", giving insights into it's history with interviews of Ridley Scott, the writers and nearly all the cast. Interviews with production staff, giving details into the creative process and turmoil during pre-production.

Пікірлер: 543
@davydevilution3483
@davydevilution3483 5 жыл бұрын
BLADE RUNNER (1982) should be shown worldwide in Cinema Theatres for 2019..
@YesYouAreAbsolutelyCorrect
@YesYouAreAbsolutelyCorrect 10 жыл бұрын
Blade Runner isn't just a masterpiece. It's a unique breathing creature.
@landryprichard6778
@landryprichard6778 5 жыл бұрын
Beautifully said. ❤️
@zenpaganwarrior
@zenpaganwarrior 2 жыл бұрын
And to me, what you have eloquently stated here is the reason for the unicorn symbology. Ironic in a film about "look-alikes".
@MontagZoso
@MontagZoso 7 жыл бұрын
Aside from the fact that Ridley Scott makes amazing movies in general, Blade Runner is so gorgeous to look at, I could watch the thing with the sound off and still be fascinated at the sheer look of the film. You can tell this gem of a movie is such a close cousin to Ridley's masterpiece, "Alien" from 1979.
@DZ-bj3yx
@DZ-bj3yx 3 жыл бұрын
The score tho 😍
@nonsensicon
@nonsensicon 8 жыл бұрын
Rutger Hauer is a Boss. Seen this movie many many times but i just want to see it again
@MercantilismEnjoyer911
@MercantilismEnjoyer911 7 жыл бұрын
Jimmy Go ä ö ä
@oddyseus91
@oddyseus91 5 жыл бұрын
RIP Rutger Hauer, He passed a few days ago :( Like Roy Batty he died in 2019
@nem447
@nem447 5 жыл бұрын
RIP Rutger Hauer "All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain."
@oliverw1636
@oliverw1636 5 жыл бұрын
We're all back here again celebrating a wonderful movie which many of us were too young to appreciate at the time. Everything about Rutger was coolness, may he rest in peace
@moriahmolotovschroeder-hug5632
@moriahmolotovschroeder-hug5632 4 жыл бұрын
this is such a painful truth every being must wrestle with... ultimately everything we do and experience wash away like tears in the rain, everything is transient
@douglas787
@douglas787 7 жыл бұрын
Alien and Blade Runner are the two best sci-fi movies ever made bar none. Ridley Scott is a genius.
@sonicboom20078
@sonicboom20078 5 жыл бұрын
Replace Alien with 2001 and you'd be much more accurate.
@TheMeJustMe75
@TheMeJustMe75 10 жыл бұрын
I liked the movie as a kid, but I love it as an adult. I remember going to the theater to see it. I expected Harrison Ford's character to be like Han Solo, I was wrong.
@wjarnock44
@wjarnock44 8 жыл бұрын
Brilliant totally original film - great soundscape, no car chases, nobody fighting on public transport, nobody running away from explosions, no cinematic cliches whatsoever. This and 2001 my favorite films.
@The_Real_bubbazaneti
@The_Real_bubbazaneti 10 жыл бұрын
Is and will always be one of the best SciFi movies in my book. Mind you the Directors cut. Still remember as a teen seeing it for the first time.....Mind blowing....The visuals, the music....the acting.....Superbly put together by the genius directing by Ridley Scott!!! ....i have seen Blade Runner over 200 times i think....still never get tired of seeing it.
@andrefjbernardo
@andrefjbernardo 10 жыл бұрын
A film that makes you love Cinema.
@mullcrumthesage6303
@mullcrumthesage6303 8 жыл бұрын
A masterpiece of film, I notice something new every time I experience it.
@callumdevereux1823
@callumdevereux1823 8 жыл бұрын
"He gets a gun to his head and then he fucks a dishwasher" ohh myyy gooddddd xD
@myopenmind527
@myopenmind527 8 жыл бұрын
One of my favourite movies of all time. Great visuals, original concept, many deep themes, immortal words at the end "tears in the rain" & it improves with every viewing.
@anthonyfins7519
@anthonyfins7519 9 жыл бұрын
I was able to visit the Bradbury, absolutely stunning in person and definitely has the 'Blade Runner' feeling.
@MatteoPrezioso
@MatteoPrezioso 9 жыл бұрын
Anthony Fins I did that too, such a magical place. I used to go there often when I was studying photography in Los Angeles. I really missed that place.
@harshlight7
@harshlight7 10 жыл бұрын
Even though "Blade Runner" was made over 30 years ago, it was so ahead of its time that even today it doesn't feel dated. It's like a particularly intricate dream that you're not sure you want to wake up from.
@ttracemusic
@ttracemusic 7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this. One of my favorite movies. I was able to meet Sean Young once in LA - totally surreal. :)
@mlaforce
@mlaforce 8 жыл бұрын
I was one of those that did not understand blade runner when it came out. I was a product of commercial films, aka star wars. It took some time for me to understand and appreciate Blade Runner for what it was and what meant. If you were to ask me today, blade runner is a much more thought prevoking film than any science fiction film of it's time could ever be.
@DJRYGAR1
@DJRYGAR1 8 жыл бұрын
+Paul Davis "any science fiction film of it's time could ever be", you jest, right? There were others, also not appreciated (2001 and plenty others)
@charlielogan2538
@charlielogan2538 10 жыл бұрын
I read an interview with David Fincher a while back. When he got to make Alien 3, he had, like Ridley during the Blade Runner shoot, producers, studio executives and money men bending his ear on how the film should be made. Fincher, being young and wanting to make a good impression, took a lot of that advice.....and the movie failed because of it. Fincher took a lesson from all that. it doesn't matter who financed a picture, it will always be the Director who gets the bullet if the film flops or fails in anyway, so, when making art, be like Ridley and tell the fuckers to piss right off!!!
@charlielogan2538
@charlielogan2538 10 жыл бұрын
***** you should imagine what the film would of been like if Fincher had been given the kind of control he would have on a movie set now. Imagine if Fincher had been like Ridley and told the money men to f**k off
@charlielogan2538
@charlielogan2538 10 жыл бұрын
***** in your opinion. I love PKD's work, The Man In The High Castle is one of the most outstanding books I have ever read, no question, but when it comes to this story, I prefer Ridley's movie. It's all opinion anyway opinion about a movie, in other words, it's nothing to get to bothered about.
@charlielogan2538
@charlielogan2538 10 жыл бұрын
***** nah, the movie stands alone. what would be interesting would be a mvoie version of another classic PKD book.
@adstoney
@adstoney 10 жыл бұрын
***** I hear plenty of talk about the philosophy of Blade Runner myself. There's a lot of stuff there, it's different to Electric Sheep but it's just as deep.
@carpetmonk
@carpetmonk 9 жыл бұрын
a lot of decisions are made outside the influence of the visioneers.. like they say, ridley scott and deeley were fired (even with deeleys background) as for fincher.. the restored alien 3 is amazing, the theatrical version is ghastly. those were decisions made after principal photography. theres not much you can do against the money.. so kindly.. this world is as bleak as the futurist made it in the film.. that whole, every rose has its thorns bit. I must admit I like ALL the blade runner cuts, strictly because I cant get enough of the story. as for all this talk about being unfaithful to the novella.. that's just ridiculous.. that like complaining about the different versions of dune, another entire universe you just cant get enough of.. scotts not one to expect to conform to canon, "Hannibal" for example, doesn't mean I didn't enjoy getting to see the book brought to the screen though.
@b.hagedash7973
@b.hagedash7973 7 жыл бұрын
The sets and costumes are fantastic but for me it's the emotional component make this a truly exceptional film. Every character is yearning for something that is unobtainable but there is a beauty and romanticism in the hopelessness that mirrored my, at the time, 18 year psyche. I think the beautifully sombre goth culture was attracted to many of the same ideas and themes.
@martinpiggins5772
@martinpiggins5772 5 жыл бұрын
It’s worth watching the original cut just because it’s a different edit and is rich in the way that you discover more about the directors cut and you can understand the intended story in a much fuller way.
@reddwarf44
@reddwarf44 8 жыл бұрын
Awesome doc from BBC. Thanks for making this available!
@JohnnyFiveEagles
@JohnnyFiveEagles 10 жыл бұрын
It is funny how some works of art stand by themselves as an originator of a way of looking at our world. Ridley pried the top off of a murky and very scary future with a vision of a world that while whole and very big is also claustrophobic and confining. This world in "Blade Runner" is not too far in the future and yet it is way off as who really has the vision to see that place. If the realm of Blade Runner is at all like this one we are in for more of the same more or less. This genre of film making is almost in a class all by itself and this film set the stage for a look and a fashion that is copied by many other works since then.Blade Runner will continue to be a fashionable work of art. Thanks for the video. J. 5 Eagles.
@parvuspeach
@parvuspeach 8 жыл бұрын
best adaptation ever (and whats more amazing is that it hardly tackles the book itself), best movie ever.
@JahWincek
@JahWincek 11 жыл бұрын
Best sci-fi movie ever made...end of discusion. Perfect in every single detail... I think I'm going to enjoy The Final Cut on my home cinema tonight......again....
@dopplereffeckt675
@dopplereffeckt675 10 жыл бұрын
Shame that nobody has the balls or vision to make a movie like this today.
@gwdone
@gwdone 8 жыл бұрын
THAT WAS AMAZING!!!!! I'm so thankful that VANGELIS' music was mentioned!! Such a great movie!!! I can't get enough of anything and everything "behind the scenes" about BLADE RUNNER!! It's 4AM-- 08.18.2016--- I can't sleep, can't think, drowning in depression and anxiety, tomorrow I'll be dropping $5,000.00 for a cataract surgery for my cat that I don't have the money or a job to even pay for it, thus plastic payment of course,,,,,, what a GREAT find to get my mind off my matters!!! I'm beyond appreciative that this even exists!! Me and Twee thanks you!!
@tobiasholding855
@tobiasholding855 2 жыл бұрын
hey its 3 am for me right now 08.18.2021. I really hope u are in better place now
@gwdone
@gwdone 2 жыл бұрын
@@tobiasholding855 I very much am!!!! Thanks for asking !!
@TheOtherCola
@TheOtherCola 9 жыл бұрын
So amazing! One of the greatest SciFi films of all time!
@JFsebastiansDolly
@JFsebastiansDolly 10 жыл бұрын
Blade runner...the only movie i've ever seen that is perfect in every way. Thank god they had Ridley Scott directing it, to chose any other would have been a disservice to Philip K.Dick's genius.
@boburrides
@boburrides 6 жыл бұрын
holy shit that was awesome. How fascinating that in that cut hospital scene he goes "what are you reading? Treasure Island" and then in Blade Runner 2049 Deckard cites from this book again. God how I love these films, and with the new movie I"m rediscovering this love all over again.
@peterbense5650
@peterbense5650 11 жыл бұрын
I still cannot believe this was made in 1981-82. Timeless.
@jolesco
@jolesco 7 жыл бұрын
First time i saw Bladerunner was by pure chance. Me and a friend went to the video store to rent a VHS for the weekend and ended up choosing Bladerunner cause the box art looked cool. Must have been in the early 90's.
@TimesThree333
@TimesThree333 7 жыл бұрын
Blade Runner and Dune: 2 80s sci-fi movies adapted from great 70s sci-fi novels. 2 movies that were WAY ahead of their time. 2 movies that confused their intended audiences. 2 movies that were dubbed "massive failures" during their original theatrical release. 2 movies directed by incredibly talented directors. 2 movies that went overbudget. 2 movies that are GREAT.
@ScottLahteine
@ScottLahteine 7 жыл бұрын
I like how Vangelis cribbed the melody of "You're Just Too Good to Be True" for parts of the soundtrack. Makes me wonder if there might be some other puns in there.
@jasonlefler3456
@jasonlefler3456 7 жыл бұрын
Scott Lahteine Yes, Can't Just Take My Eyes Off You is the other. "You're just too good to be true, I can't take my eyes off of you..." Those are two lyrics in a row that play well into ideas dealt with in Blade Runner.
@bastardtubeuser
@bastardtubeuser 8 жыл бұрын
haha glad they cut the interrogation scene out, that performance could fit in a metal gear game.
@dishmanw
@dishmanw 7 жыл бұрын
I loved Blade Runner when it first came out, especially the visuals. I didn't know of the significance of the origami unicorn when I first saw it. I just thought that Edward James Olmos's character was leaving something like a calling card. Now it makes sense. I'll have to view the director's cut.
@BleakVision
@BleakVision 2 жыл бұрын
The Mode out and about! Never have seen his old stuff before! Great documentary.
@janetcraft
@janetcraft 8 жыл бұрын
Great documentary. I really enjoyed Blade Runner, no matter how many scenes are added or deleted. I've always been interested in how a movie was made, even BEFORE watching the flick. I have the movie poster pinned up in my room. Love this film. Thank you for sharing.
@Stier2019
@Stier2019 7 жыл бұрын
Very good documentary! all these trouble/challenges they went through make Blade runner even more admirable !!
@mandipsandhu5306
@mandipsandhu5306 9 жыл бұрын
I think Ridley Scott is underrated. I know we all love him, but he kills at sci-fi, kills at period pieces, spy films and urban stories. Top 3 for me.
@charlielogan2538
@charlielogan2538 9 жыл бұрын
His movies have won Oscars, he's not at all underrated!
@HAlariousInc
@HAlariousInc 9 жыл бұрын
I forgot having one of your films that you directed be on AFI's list of top 100 American films still makes you "underrated" :3
@pvtrichter88
@pvtrichter88 9 жыл бұрын
He is not underated he is well acclaimed as a director !! however I must warn you if you want to maintain your image of him don't watch EXODUS gods and kings avoid that one at all costs!!
@charlielogan2538
@charlielogan2538 9 жыл бұрын
pvtrichter88 why? It is certainly not as lame as Kingdom Of Heaven.
@chaddelk3605
@chaddelk3605 9 жыл бұрын
I like Blade Runner.
@QASIMARA
@QASIMARA 9 жыл бұрын
We like Bla de Run n er, as well.
@damionchrist
@damionchrist 4 жыл бұрын
I LOVE Blade Runner‼️
@TheFree2last1
@TheFree2last1 11 жыл бұрын
Thank You for this video. I always am amazed by the fact there are still making of videos made of this video. I hope it never changes either. So much to see, and to tell about it. REALLY COOL.
@Macleodking
@Macleodking 2 жыл бұрын
BLADE RUNNER and THE THING were both released on June 25th, 1982. Both films had dark visions, graphic violence and question mark endings. Both films failed at the box office. They simply came out at the wrong time. Both films were reviled by critics and rejected by audiences, but later when on to achieve classic status.
@replicantargent
@replicantargent 9 жыл бұрын
This needs to be remastered into HD.
@replicantargent
@replicantargent 9 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I thought about that, and then cursed the "low def" times.
@simonRTJ
@simonRTJ 8 жыл бұрын
+replicantargent it was taped on UK Pal format so quite close to 720i
@bladerunner2434
@bladerunner2434 7 жыл бұрын
get a bluray copy its great!
@percyzeppelin
@percyzeppelin 8 жыл бұрын
Just perfect..too perfect
@pawelostaszewski8367
@pawelostaszewski8367 9 жыл бұрын
Without vangelis powerfull score this movie wasnt be as terrific as it is.
@QASIMARA
@QASIMARA 9 жыл бұрын
pawel ostaszewski who killed the music?
@loobsy1
@loobsy1 9 жыл бұрын
pawel ostaszewski I think everything including the Vangelis score came together brilliantly and it's a stunning film as a result. And Ridley would have chosen Vangelis to write the score.
@theartist124
@theartist124 10 жыл бұрын
Wow, thanks for posting!
@markbyrne7598
@markbyrne7598 Жыл бұрын
This is not the greatest Sci fi movie ever made. It is the greatest movie ever made.
@LifeHawkeye
@LifeHawkeye 3 жыл бұрын
I’m 47 and have probably seen the movie 10 times maybe more. I have to admit that until this week, I never ever could understand the hype over Blade Runner. It makes the top pick in almost every magazine’s greatest sci fi film lists. For years I couldn’t understand why really. Then when the sequel 2049 came out I absolutely loved the sequel. After seeing that movie several times it made me really start to wonder what connection I was missing because I began to really love the story and the universe of blade runner. After reading many people’s reasons behind their love for the original, i rewatched the directors final cut the other night. I FINALLY FINALLY get it! It was a sci fi universe that had never been created before and the visuals, the lighting, the cinematography the music and acting…it was so perfect and extremely ahead of its time. It certainly is a benchmark in cinematic and art history. I dream of a prequel or two dealing with the Tyrell Corporation coming to power and developing the Nexus series replicants, then how they begin laboring at one of the 9 off world sites. I can visualize a very good cgi rendering of Roy Beatty watching attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion and again seeing the reflection of C-beams glittering in his eyes as he stands so tiny against the backdrop of an enormous Tannhaüser Gate. I can absolutely see it and would be sobbing joyfully if I ever get to witness this as of yet unmade film in the story. I think if the right team were to handle this project it could be so beautifully done and be yet another jewel in the crown that is the Blade Runner franchise. Rarely have any sequels lived up to the original much less a 3rd or 4th film. I hold out hope that this could happen. But to the entire fan base of Blade Runner that has been there from the beginning praising its genius, I am sorry I didn’t “get it” sooner. I finally do and count it as probably the most important sci fi movie of our time.
@dieterandrew3542
@dieterandrew3542 Жыл бұрын
Sequel drove the story into the ground!
@hypocriticalsatire3966
@hypocriticalsatire3966 Жыл бұрын
@@dieterandrew3542 Keep your opinion I don't want it
@LifeHawkeye
@LifeHawkeye Жыл бұрын
@@pylgrym I read the article you linked thank you for giving me that insight. I never once thought about either movie putting women in a bad light necessarily, but the article might have a point. I definitely admit that the scene from the original BR where Deckard basically forces himself onto Rachael was…cringeworthy for sure. I fail to understand why that scene was left in there the way it was. Again, thanks for the article, it certainly makes me think.
@DeepScreenAnalysis
@DeepScreenAnalysis Жыл бұрын
The most powerful movies usually have a divisive impact when they first come out. If a movie is universally popular like Star Wars, it doesn’t have much going for it except as a commercial entertainment.
@Fandango541
@Fandango541 7 жыл бұрын
Saw this in 1982 at a theatre in LA. Dudes, this movie is phucking real. I knew it then, I know it now. Ridley Scott and Phillip K. Dick are something of prophets to my way of thinking. I don't think they even realized it, but they are. They had a future vision and this movie was part of it. And by the way, Deckard definitely is a Replicant. How else would Gaff have known about the dream Deckard had of the unicorn and make an oragami figure of it. Everyone knew he was, except Deckard.
@Fandango541
@Fandango541 7 жыл бұрын
I haven't seen it yet, but will and will let you know. Each time a movie is remade it changes the one you really liked in the first place. This new one will probably be more like what Philip K. Dick's book was like instead of what Scott saw in it. Hard to say. The mood of this one was so unique I bet the new one will have it's own 'mood'.
@georgeehret3480
@georgeehret3480 7 жыл бұрын
Blade Runner is my favorite movie. Beautiful film that presents great commentary on artificial intelligence and a breathtaking Orwellian future. Went to go inspire films like Ghost in the Shell and Akira
@oriongear2499
@oriongear2499 3 жыл бұрын
RIP Rutger Hauer AKA Roy Batty. You'll be missed.
@donttreadonme9170
@donttreadonme9170 9 жыл бұрын
This Film effected so my style and art in the 80's. It brought neon back into fashion too
@willnettles2051
@willnettles2051 7 жыл бұрын
Saw Blade Runner in Westwood (L.A.) the night it premiered. Susan and I couldn't get tickets until the midnight show, so we walked around trying to get in a restaurant --no luck. We didn't want to sit in the front corner of the theater so we got on line at 11--starving. We figured we just get popcorn, but when we got in the theater, the concessions was jammed. I said, a reel in I'll come back out. We were already home still talking about Blade Runner when we remembered how hungry we were.
@TheYaddayadda
@TheYaddayadda 8 жыл бұрын
What are we to make of the Replicant? What is it, exactly? I've watched this movie more than 20 times, it never gets old to me. For the longest time, I assumed that replicants were robots with skin. Something akin to David in AI. It was quite a revelation, and enhanced the movie even more for me, when I realized that they were not that at all - or at least not fully that. What we know for sure: Replicants are constructed beings. They are clearly not humans. "Commerce is our goal, here. More human than human." - Tyrell. But what is the exact nature of their construction? Regardless of any mechanical structure they may or may not have, the brain of a replicant is a genetically engineered organ of flesh and blood, not some programmed AI. "We're not machines, Sebastian. We're physical" - Roy. What does Roy's use of the word "physical" tell us about how he views himself? Are not robots or androids also "physical"? Replicants have true emotions, not scripted ones or algorithms. "If we gift them with a past, we create a cushion or a pillow for their emotions, and consequently, we can control them better." - Tyrell Replicants clearly have a physicality which surpasses almost any human. As a young person, I always assumed because this was due to them being mostly mechanical inside. But in light of the above facts, I'm no longer sure. When Roy and Leon visit Chew, they witness Chew working on the genetic design of eyes. For a while, I thought that perhaps that Chew would make eyes, other shops would make other organs, still others would make things like bones and skin etc, and the various components would then be fashioned together like some sort of futuristic Frankenstein's monster in a Tyrell lab. Perhaps the fleshy bits being suspended from a totally artificial skeletal structure, as per The Terminator. Now that I'm more educated and have had more time to analyze the many clues, it seems to most likely that replicants are 100% bio-engineered. All aspects of their physicality, knowledge, personality traits and abilities, and (in Rachel's case) memories are 100% programmed into their minds at the genetic level. Their bodies are grown to full maturity in a lab and only then are they allowed to become conscious, possessing all the characteristics (minus emotional maturity) of a fully developed adult. This also includes the programmed and irreversible accelerated senescence (cell aging), resulting in the four-year lifespan. Above all the speculation about the exact physical nature of the replicant, is the bigger issue, upon which the movie tries to offer opinions from many perspectives: Does the replicant have a soul? Do we?
@sammitman3031
@sammitman3031 4 жыл бұрын
I really don't believe that there is anything i DONT like about Blade Runner... it's dare i say, a perfect movie.
@clementgaud5173
@clementgaud5173 9 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video
@HelderP1337
@HelderP1337 8 жыл бұрын
31:59 So that's where Kojima took the idea for the MGS4 BB corp bosses end scene.
@browsertab
@browsertab 6 жыл бұрын
Kojima owes his career to Blade Runner and the Asian cinema influenced by its inception.
@keithseratt998
@keithseratt998 6 жыл бұрын
Look up Snatcher for the Sega CD
@dutty1549
@dutty1549 6 жыл бұрын
Yo what the fuck, you're right. I've been a fan of the series and Blade Runner since I was 4 years old (not age appropriate I know lmao) and never connected the two. Fuck, I'm enlightened.
@TheMrWreckz
@TheMrWreckz 6 жыл бұрын
Look up some of what Kojima did before MGS. He did a game called Snatcher which is a playstation game. Its JUST like blade runner.
@forcedadventure
@forcedadventure 10 жыл бұрын
BLADE RUNNER............................................BEAUTIFUL MOVIE !!!
@xrpadoption3293
@xrpadoption3293 7 жыл бұрын
one of very few movies that is behond perfect...have watched it about 100 times over 34 years...vangelis's music is astonishingly sexy, haunting and cuts into your soul. Rutger and Sean brought it to life. actually reached out to Mary Sean through email and we chatted for a while. one of the pictures on the piano is my grandmother. first time I had sex with a young woman I was very attracted to was the soundtrack, love theme, memories of green...perfectly romantic. BLADE RUNNER is very much apart of me like the skin around my bones. Thank Ridley Scott and the writer of do androids dream of electric sheep when they sleep...need to read that book one day.
@CynicalPole
@CynicalPole 10 жыл бұрын
thank you for posting this. you kind sir are a gentleman and a scholar.
@AndrewClark4MarkRacing
@AndrewClark4MarkRacing 8 жыл бұрын
Excellent thanks
@mtg1214
@mtg1214 7 жыл бұрын
great doc!
@hannahriley8728
@hannahriley8728 7 жыл бұрын
I feel guilty that I'm 44yrs old yet still haven't seen it!
@stefanjevtic7175
@stefanjevtic7175 3 жыл бұрын
Oh dear 😳
@hollywooda111
@hollywooda111 10 жыл бұрын
Stunning one of the best films ever made...
@jorgelourencoyt
@jorgelourencoyt 11 жыл бұрын
Great upload. Congrats.
@MeBeTheDB
@MeBeTheDB 8 жыл бұрын
In the mid-80's ... I was ever so fortunate to work as an assistant editor for Douglas Trumbull's 'ShowScan' company on an in-house piece about Mr. Trumbull and the ShowScan Process that he & Richard Yuricich invented. It was to be utilized to get the studios, distributors and the most resistant exhibitors to embrace this wondrous new way of seeing movies in the all but dead days of 70mm ... ... Now ShowScan is shot in 65mm & projected at 60 frames per second (fps) If one wonders what ShowScan looks like -- it's the difference of a VHS tape to BLU-RAY today. The frame was utterly & wondrously crystal clear to behold. You felt as if you were looking at it live. It was-IS because of Mr. Trumbull's first film as a director , 'SILENT RUNNING' -- that I saw at age 12 during the film's first release in 1971 -- that caused me to be want to be a screenwriter & director ... and always to see this life, this art, this science, this universe in terms of 'Oooh, what IF ...? And then -- in my middle 20's I actually got to meet THE MAN ... my unknowing 'Obi-Wan' ... my teacher who gave his lessons by the outstanding technical ability to make it, the idea, happen in terms of getting it on film. Better yet -- about a year before I worked for Mr. Trumbull ... as a most excellent coincidence worked as a PRINT CONTROLLER / FILM BOOKER for a very small start-up motion picture distributor. And when I say 'small' -- I mean we were in an old clapboard two-story house with our offices being in the two upstairs bedrooms -- the living room (reception) -- and the dining room was my office. Said offices by 'furnished' by means of used furniture. Then one day, I bought the original screenplay to 'SILENT RUNNING' and on the cover page, it gave the name and address of the Producing Company and the Address ... and guess what-? SAME HOUSE I had offices in and ps: I actually lived in it for the first month or so whilst looking for nearby digs. Me, the kid who loved SILENT RUNNING was here in the house / office where they made the film from. Talk about your synergy .... the blessing of the stars above ... I have been given it more than once in this life with this and other things. So, filmmakers reading this -- follow your dreams. Learn the lessons, make your heart of heart the promise to complete your circle. It can & does happen. SOAR ... DARE TO DREAM, YOUR PATH LEADS ONWARDS, EVER ONWARDS ... D.A. 2/7/16
@krisskross3076
@krisskross3076 Жыл бұрын
Harrison Ford is exchangeable so is the rest of the actors, but what's not is the Soul of Vangelis that penetrates this beautiful movie and transcends it beyond cinema.
@myrandompast998
@myrandompast998 5 жыл бұрын
Now every SF movie bares the stigma of Blade Runner's vision of the future. Just like every alien movie need to accept or reject the Alien's tone. What phenomenal visual artists.
@DZ-bj3yx
@DZ-bj3yx 3 жыл бұрын
This movie is a fucking masterpiece
@dukecraig2402
@dukecraig2402 6 жыл бұрын
The original release with the narrative, ala film noir, is the best, taking it out looses that film noir feel that I loved so much about the original.
@beatselements1453
@beatselements1453 6 жыл бұрын
I agree
@dukecraig2402
@dukecraig2402 6 жыл бұрын
Beats & Elements Yea, I'd like to see a fully restored version of the original theatrical release.
@davydevilution7297
@davydevilution7297 8 жыл бұрын
Finest hour of Rutger Hauer.
@moritzbauer6922
@moritzbauer6922 2 жыл бұрын
2:57 cat joins, intrigued by the old mans wisdom about this masterpiece
@01What10
@01What10 8 жыл бұрын
I still think that the mystery of whether Deckard is a replicant or not is much more interesting than the answer itself. I know Scott says that Deckard is a replicant, but again I personally believe leaving it up to the audience to decide for themselves is much better than giving the answer. That said, Blade Runner is still one of my favorite films.
@KaitainCPS
@KaitainCPS 8 жыл бұрын
+Video Vagrancy Damn straight. The important thing is that the question needs to be asked. The answer is secondary.
@01What10
@01What10 8 жыл бұрын
I think the question needs to be asked, but the answer kind of cheapens this 30 year old mystery. Its something that movies these days tend to do often.
@piratecat5113
@piratecat5113 7 жыл бұрын
I wonder what Villeneuve will do with this :) For me though Scott shot the original with a human Deckard but changed his mind well after the fact and as for the man himself Harrison Ford, Deckard is still totally human as it is still for me I must say. A human falling in love with a replicant was one of the most powerful theme in the movie but a replicant with a replicant makes it insignificant like a love story between Ken and Barbie :)
@EAPoeProductions
@EAPoeProductions 7 жыл бұрын
Bladerunner surely is one of the most amazing SciFi movies i´ve ever seen. The only thing i never understood was the directors cut from the 90ies where all the narration from the off had been removed instead of adding the hospital scenes with Holden.
@FrostedSeagull
@FrostedSeagull 6 жыл бұрын
Hey Edgar Allan Poe . . . I re-discovered Bladerunner vai the 1992 Director's Cut sans narration. I prefer this version as I have grown so use to it, the narration annoys me. I also found that I could use my imagination as opposed to Deckhards narration . . . which at times . .. is annoying.
@johncastillo5462
@johncastillo5462 7 жыл бұрын
I love this documentary it real explain how they came up with this brilliant picture
@emmarobinson6222
@emmarobinson6222 8 жыл бұрын
what a great film
@davelister1
@davelister1 7 жыл бұрын
Been there made it fit ! and the end speech !
@dennispotter4236
@dennispotter4236 11 жыл бұрын
Quiet right, it's good to hear another take on a story you are already familiar with.
@cjbrenner13
@cjbrenner13 9 жыл бұрын
A movie way before its time....most people back then just didnt get it.
@nicky.keller
@nicky.keller 4 жыл бұрын
Thisisgreat!
@jdiezastronomy
@jdiezastronomy 5 жыл бұрын
I don't think the script/dialogues are masterpiece. In fact, there are a bunch of plot holes. But, visuals and world construction are UNIQUE. No other film in history has this level of perfect cinematic visuals. You can watch it again and again and keeps you amazed. Probably the best lit film in history. You don't need a perfect script to make a fascinating movie.
@Thespeedrap
@Thespeedrap 7 жыл бұрын
I like this documentary and the movie.I really hope they don't a sequel but it might be good too Idk we'll see.
@tohu777
@tohu777 9 жыл бұрын
Dick's research in the stacks, the Nazi officer's diary which spurred him to think about humanity, empathy, etc--I assume that was while researching The Man in the High Castle?
@MatteoPrezioso
@MatteoPrezioso 8 жыл бұрын
31:44 - 31:59 lolol
@jmm1233
@jmm1233 10 жыл бұрын
a film before its time
@georgetempest9627
@georgetempest9627 7 жыл бұрын
A very good documentary I seem to have totally missed on British tv, travelling around a lot. This is my all time favourite movie and I still remember how stunned I was, walking out of the cinema afterwards. I don't know if it is true, but I read in a German magazine around that time that they used the then current VW Passat as a base for Deckard's car. I never read the original book - shame on me :o)
@brunswick1ful
@brunswick1ful 11 жыл бұрын
Thanks.
@johnjones6756
@johnjones6756 8 жыл бұрын
A very good film: well documented.
@ThunderZandor
@ThunderZandor 10 жыл бұрын
I stumbled out of the theatre back in 82' knowing full well i had stepped into a realistic future. 2020 is only 6 years from now and back then it seemed so far away! Ok, maybe it's 2018 now and it's only 2 years away.
@raulegido
@raulegido 6 жыл бұрын
Great doc. Does someone have any idea on how they got that "water" effect on the lighting for this documentary? or how does this technique is called? thanks a lot
@jazzx251
@jazzx251 10 жыл бұрын
Cambridge is becoming this vision of the future - and very soon we'll all need flying cars to escape the gridlock that plagues its streets. I live in a modern apartment, not unlike Deckard's in the movie - all mod cons, but very functional. You can clearly see how a small, but significant town, could become a megalopolis.
@harrihiltunen1244
@harrihiltunen1244 7 жыл бұрын
fantastic sci-fi movie...
@Sarke2
@Sarke2 6 жыл бұрын
Very nice documentary, Rutger Hauer is the man :)
@BikingBadwithTC
@BikingBadwithTC 4 жыл бұрын
The Best movie, ever.
@guruuDev
@guruuDev 10 жыл бұрын
The "Moebius" cartoons began in 1975. Blade Runner leans VERY heavily on the visual stylings of those early cartoons -- "The Long Tomorrow" (1976) in particular. Ridley Scott acknowledges the Moebius connection but he he does so only furtively with slight references here and there. I was outraged in 1982 when there was no mention of Moebius or Jean Giraud in the credits. (This being said, no one could have done more credit to the influence of Moebius than Ridley Scott.)
@BigHugsFromHell
@BigHugsFromHell 10 жыл бұрын
I just finished watching a making of "Alien" before this, and while there is some mention of "Metal Hurlant" in that by Scott and others, it is still less than one would suspect or hope to see. In the Fifth Element documentary, there is absolutely no mention of Moebius, but that film took the most direct input from him than perhaps all others combined -- both from "Long Tomorrow" for set design, and direct creature concepts he submitted -- all of which are mentioned most in his biographical documentary. It leaves the impression that maybe he, himself, did not want such bold credit. Maybe it's a form of modesty, or something more businesslike to him which doesn't carry much personal weight? Maybe they weren't very happy or artistically invested experiences, all around, with those aspects of production which concerned his input or inspiration? I'm just speculating, but there seems to be a pattern with how his credit is often danced around, if not covered altogether, when it comes to films he's helped.
@megaky00
@megaky00 10 жыл бұрын
Will Jonassen Need to read Heavy Metal -- any recommendations on particular issues to look out for (other than "The Long Tomorrow" mentioned above)? Anything close to Blade Runner's good to me!
@guruuDev
@guruuDev 10 жыл бұрын
megaky00 The early American Heavy Metel stuff is his golden period. I read that he did peyote in Mexico and that was part of his inspiration. His “Arzach” stories are super cool - but can’t miss with any of them. There is a consistant style in buildings and clothing and machines in his scifi illustrations that BladeRunner assimilates. I can’t remember which specific stories are most like Blade Runner. The Frank Lloyd Wright Aztek look of Deckert’s apartment ties in as Moebius used Mexican PreColumbian elements woven into his scifi worlds. His characters often wear mestizo style hats.
@guruuDev
@guruuDev 10 жыл бұрын
Will Jonassen Just read your whole comment. Missed part of it earlier. That’s interesting speculation. There may be something to that indeed. He did work on Alien along with Giger so Ridley Scott would have know him, I assume. I noticed too that there isn’t much reference to him in the Alien documentaries. I think Moebius did go off and join some sort of cult for a while. Perhaps he was a bit eccentric. Maybe he didn’t give them official authority with Blade Runner so they don’t want to emphasize his influence too much for that sort of reason -- along the lines of what you were saying.
@count69
@count69 10 жыл бұрын
megaky00 I'd recommend July/Aug 1980 - it has a Moebius story 'Shoreleave' (and a Moebius interview!) which was my introduction to him so is a particular favourite. 'Salammbo' by Druillet is for me the standout strip of these issues.
@bluesman6891
@bluesman6891 10 жыл бұрын
Despite that Daryl Hannah did a great job as Pris, I think Stacey Nelkin should've gotten the part. Since Stacey audited Pris, her performance had me startled and here is my reason; she had the quality of a child-like with an innocence expression. Yet, there is more than meet the eyes and her "innocence" look would terrifyingly fool everyone in this movie and Stacey would've make a unique villain. That's just my theory.
@VisualTedium
@VisualTedium 10 жыл бұрын
Dig it
@mimic1965
@mimic1965 10 жыл бұрын
wrong!
@bluesman6891
@bluesman6891 10 жыл бұрын
mimic1965 I said "That's just my theory." Don't take it too personally.
@JazenValencia
@JazenValencia 10 жыл бұрын
They were both super hot back in the day.
@meleeray524
@meleeray524 2 жыл бұрын
Classic.
@mathmusicstructure
@mathmusicstructure 9 жыл бұрын
lol that scene from the hospital that got cut is fucking terrible
@HumbuckerGuy
@HumbuckerGuy 9 жыл бұрын
mathmusicstructure That actor really shit the bed. Good call to cut that scene.
@minniehahhah7593
@minniehahhah7593 7 жыл бұрын
In what way is it terrible?
@HartmutJagerArt
@HartmutJagerArt 7 жыл бұрын
Well, that is why it got cut !
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