Originally published on Blogger, December 21, 2017
[Semi-spoiler-free review of Blade Runner 2049]
- Replicants are bioengineered humans, designed by Tyrell corporation for use off-world. Their enhanced strength made them ideal slave labor.
- After a series of violent rebellions, their manufacture became prohibited and Tyrell corp went bankrupt.
- The collapse of ecosystems in the mid 2020s led to the rise of the industrialist Niander Wallace, whose mastery of synthetic farming averted famine.
- Wallace acquired the remains of Tyrell corp and created a new line of replicants who obey.
- Many older model replicants - Nexus 8s with open-ended lifespans - survived. They are hunted down and 'retired'.
- Those that hunt them still go by the name... Blade Runner
It’s
a very quiet movie. The score is used sparingly and there are long
pauses in dialog. The theater (surprisingly packed) is filled with
occasional coughs. Loud coughs, small coughs, short coughs from the
front, from behind, from the side. I imagine a plague, a superflu that
starts slowly. The human race is always weak against slow builds--they
never forsee a creeping doom.
I
thoroughly enjoy seeing a movie spoiler-free. I do watch much-awaited
movie trailers, but not too close to the release date. I loathe early
reviews... those critics and starving writers wanting their opinion to
be the first.
I remember 1998’s fated Godzilla big
budget blockbuster. The early movie trailers avoided showing the
monster’s full face and figure. Eventually, as summer came and the
movie premiered, the face and body were no longer a spoiler. I remember
feeling spoiled when I saw the full lizard, because I didn’t see the
movie until it was on VHS. Now, I shield my eyes from TV teasers, so I
can go in pure, unfettered. I’m thinking, “maybe I can outguess the
director and discover the plot using my Holmesian powers”. Usually, I
am surprised and pleased to see a movie unfold different from my dreams. And this happened for Blade Runner 2049.
A few days before I saw BR '49, I went to the Wikipedia article on it to look up a character name. For some reason, I had to know what
Ryan Gosling was doing in this film. And, to my dismay, I thought I had
seen too much. The next morning in bed, I woke up with an epiphany to
the plot. I knew the director (Denis Villeneuve) had a penchant for
plot twists, and I believed we were going to get a “twin” event. If
you’ve ever seen his Enemy, you’ll know where my head was:
I
dreamed up a movie where Ryan Gosling was playing both a replicant and
a human. Each scene with a Gosling would jump between the human and the
copy character. They looked and sounded the same, but one was real and
the other was manufactured. We wouldn’t find out until the end that
there were two characters on the clock. It seemed very Villeneuvien to
me, so I went with it. But, to my joy I was totally wrong. That
dream-movie would make a great sequel to what I witnessed in 2049.
The
Harrison Ford and “Rachel” scenes were the least interesting in the
film. But I guess there were old fans to placate. A CGI Sean Young
seemed tacked-on. What I’m impressed by is new sci-fi ideas. Novel ideas thrown onto the screen like:
- A portable hologram girlfriend that can be erased forever (just like a real one)
- Farming synthetically (replicant animals that humans eat?)
- A terrorist attack, deleting all cloud data
- Memory fabrication
- Nuclear Vegas
If
it were to be compared to the 1992 or even 1982 version of the
original, I would say ‘49 has 90% less Asian influence with 80% more
detective work.
I remember bleak silence. Silence (with no coughing plague).
The only thing I distinctly remember from the PKD novel (Androids/Sleep)
is the ending. I was on a plane to somewhere, reading in my seat. At
the end of the book, Decker is outside of the city and he finds a toad.
He believes it is the real thing and it uplifts him immensely. He goes
on thinking that for several pages, but in the end, it turns out to be
synthetic.