What's New in Blade Runner - The Final Cut? 380
tripper700 writes "25 years since its original release, a definitive version of Ridley Scott's science fiction masterwork Blade Runner, Blade Runner: The Final Cut, has been released. So what exactly has changed? And is it worth all the fuss? SFFMedia describes each change in detail. Is it just a patch up job attempting to cash in on a cult film? Or like an oil painter retouching a masterpiece, or a novelist polishing prose, is Ridley Scott simply trying to perfect his original vision?"
That's nothing. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That's nothing. (Score:5, Funny)
Theatrical Release > Extended Version > Uncut Version > Director's Cut > Aniversary Edition > Remastered Edition > Final Cut > Final Cut: Pro
I hate films with more versions than the software used to edit them.
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Re:That's nothing. (Score:5, Funny)
Soon we'll have auto update functions in the movies.
Please wait.. the movie is being updated
The updates will fix visual bugs as well as plot holes.
Re:That's nothing. (Score:5, Interesting)
But what a pretty movie it was, even if it was stupid. The old 3D graphics were actually pretty cool- it was a weird world full of square clouds and straight blue lines. You just don't see stuff like that anymore. The quality of today's CGI is so good and so photorealistic that anything produced now is unimpressive and boring. It's evolved into junk for commercials: whales jumping up out of freshwater lakes where financially secure guys are fishing, expensive cars performing risky ballet moves while cruising down empty superhighways, etc. It's sucked the magic out of almost everything you see- if it looks incredible, you know instantly you're looking at CGI crap. Soon, even pornography will be ruined.
I wanted to see Tron again but my mother didn't care for it, so I dragged my father (mainframe programmer) to see it. He hates movies. But he liked it so much he dragged me there to see it again so I saw it three times. END OF LINE
Re:That's nothing. (Score:5, Funny)
You blasphemous motherfucker, take it back!
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Re:That's nothing. (Score:5, Funny)
wait...
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Best. Porn title. Ever.
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Yeah, it's kind of sad, but it was inevitable. Look at the bright side: we're ge
RIP Tron (Score:3, Interesting)
It used techniques never seen before... and never again (after the aggrivation factor turned out to be immense.)
And
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Re:That's nothing. (Score:5, Funny)
Riddle me this: (Score:3, Interesting)
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IMHO, watch the one with the voiceover. Certainly watch that one first. Like most Hollywood movies, the transition from book to movie was made clumsily, protestations of "art" notwithstanding. Deckard's voiceover is done tastefully and serves to focus the movie in many places where it becomes meaningless and context-free in the "director's cut."
One of the best 2-3 SF movies ever made in the voiceover version.
Re:Riddle me this: (Score:4, Insightful)
Storytelling 101 - show, don't tell. Especially don't tell poorly.
The movie stands up quite well without the narration.
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Re:Riddle me this: (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Riddle me this: (Score:4, Interesting)
IMO, the voice over gives the movie the right character. Someday soon, when the technology is there, we the fans will do our own version with Harrison's voice in a fan voice over cut.
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Yeah, whatever. I saw the director's cut first, and I had no problems figuring out what was happening. When I watched the theatrical release, I thought the unnecessary explanation of everything was distrac
Narration Version for me (Score:3, Insightful)
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It's hard to imagine not hearing the voiceovers (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, when I watch the first "Director's Cut" I hear the voiceovers in my head
I disagree about that "the transition from book to movie was made clumsily". The only thing I really object to, although I understand it, is the cinematic differentiation of replicants from humans displayed by Leon removing an egg from boiling water. If you can stick a replicant's hand in boiling water without hurting them, then the VK test is kind of pointless. Frankly, I'd cut that scene.
From TFA: In the scene where Batty confronts Tyrell, the line, "I want more life, fucker" has been replaced with "I want more life, father".
Bad change, IMO. In a movie with zero profanity, that line really hit hard.
Also from TFA: Equally, if Deckard really is a Nexus 7 created to work as an exterminator, why is he lacking the strength of the inferior Nexus 6 models he is chasing? He seems to spend a large part of the film being bashed to a pulp.
True, if you assume "Nexus 7" vs. incredibly illegal experimental Nexus 5
Re:It's hard to imagine *SPOILERS* (Score:5, Interesting)
IMHO, "I don't know why he saved my life. Maybe in those last moments he loved life more than he ever had before. Not just his life, anybody's life, my life. All he'd wanted were the same answers the rest of us want. Where did I come from? Where am I going? How long have I got? All I could do was sit there and watch him die." is the best line in just about any film ever.
This one line makes anything else in the film worth enduring (not that the film isn't good without the line) and is the crux of the entire film. I guess other people see it in other lights but it's hard for me not to see the entire film leading up to this one line. I just can not accept that this film is about anything outside of the questions that artificial life will dwell on in the future when we produce it. I think it's great that science fiction discusses these questions. All of the robot/alien junk is just crap in comparison to the hard questions that will arise from our journey from natural human beings into a synthetic society where anything goes. With the stem cell debate being what it is we are kinda starting to ask these questions today in a round about way.
Still, see the film for what it is but it's still fantastic that all of the crap about cops and killing skin jobs and the Tyrell corporation comes down to one beautifully made point about our inevitable future. These questions are neat to address in fiction but warns us of the moral puzzles we will have to solve in the future.
I'm left wondering everytime after the movie; what will we decide and who will we answer to when the question becomes more than hypothetical.
That's science fiction to me. Again, just my humble opinion.
Re:It's hard to imagine *SPOILERS* (Score:5, Insightful)
Arrrgh where were you when Roy Batty uttered his last words as his biological clock killed him right before that in the same scene? [youtube.com] Were you in the theater bathroom taking a piss?
OK granted "C-beams" and the Tannhauser Gate whatever that is sounds like total bullshit but that was way better than the graceless and forgettable voiceover from Harrison Ford that followed.
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He's just as entitled to an opinion as you are. Try not to be abusive; there's no point to it. The voice over version had Roy's comments too; but they're about Roy's experience; Deckard's voice-over line was about Deckard's experience. Sometimes changes aren't for the best - even if they are made by the director. A movie, especially one like this, is more than the sum of its parts, more than one person's vision, and more than one character's experience. That's why you can see it one way, and the parent (an
Re:It's hard to imagine *SPOILERS* (Score:5, Insightful)
And yeah, as was mentioned, Scott and Ford hated the voiceover and intentionally bombed it in the hopes that the studio would leave it out. They didn't.
That being said, I've seen the Final Cut. I live in NYC and had the wonderful opportunity to see it in theaters, and I'll be honest, it's the best, by far. The storyline flows much better than any of the other versions, it's visually spectacular (though a bit overdone with the flare effect on the Spinners), and overall it's so much more watchable and doesn't feel as if it's dragging on as much as the other versions.
I took my girlfriend to see it for the first time, and she freaked out and loved it from the word go. To be honest, I was happy she saw that version first, as she didn't have aspects of it ruined by poor production, or bad editing. So if you've never seen Blade Runner, go see the Final Cut and pretend the others never existed.
Lifespans - Nexus 6 vs. Nexus 7 (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, the answer to that lies clearly in Tyrells words: "The light that burns twice as bright burns for half as long and you have burned so very, very brightly Roy." - In other words, the superior strength and durability comes at the price of a reduced lifespan.
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Not really, since the VK test is designed to tell replicants apart from humans. If you don't know whether somebody is a replicant or not, you can't
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There's been a lot of debate whether this is about perfecting the movie or making a boatload more cash. I don't think that there's that many die-hard fans out there who would just go out and purchase yet another release of the movie. Would they really continue to milk it for all it was worth?
Someone elsewhere in the thread compares it to the revised Starwars movies. At least Lucas only really only did one maj
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The primary value of the re-release to me is to get the original film on HD.
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Re:Riddle me this: (Score:5, Informative)
Watching the voice-over version first is one way to do that, but if you like it you really need to turn right around and watch the final one to get the good version. What I suggest instead to those who like reading Science Fiction books anyway is to read "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" first, then see the best available version without the voice-over--that will now be this Final Cut version. That way you will know what's going on but won't have your first viewing distracted by the voice-over. The book and movie have many shared elements but plenty of things that are different between the two; both have unique elements worth experiencing, and it's not the case that the book "ruins" the movie or anything.
And the opposing opinion... (Score:3, Interesting)
DECKARD: (while fiddling with his badge and gun) I'm a cop.
Deckard's flying car cruises through futuristic L.A. until it arrives at a large building, upon which he disembarks and goes to see his boss in the police department.
DECKARD: I was on my way to headquarters to meet with the
Re:And the opposing opinion... (Score:4, Interesting)
Sushi. That's what my ex-wife called me. Cold fish.
There is another voiceover, however, and you will become acquainted with it in a whole movie's worth of deleted scenes. It's not bad.
Here, let me link you to something on YouTube:
Alternate version of Batty's death scene [youtube.com].
I still am a partisan against voiceovers in Blade Runner. But that's one beautiful rejoinder from Deckard to Batty's classic soliloquy. And dig what Gaff says at the end.
There are going to be some pretty spectacular fan-edits out there once this is out. It might wind up being that people can choose the edit of Blade Runner they prefer.
I am awaiting my 5 disk set breathlessly.
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Doesn't matter. (Score:5, Insightful)
Hell, not like these changes are generally of any real significance (although, given how extensively different the director's cut of Kingdom of Heaven was, Blade Runner may be significantly different). For all the bitching that was done about Star Wars, for example, barely anything was changed in those movies. I just really don't see why this is worth getting worked up over, as people inevitably will.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Doesn't matter. (Score:4, Insightful)
That said, however, this is the Age of the Tracker. Everything is available, and if you can't get if from legitimate channels, well
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Ironically, in the prequels, the setting didn't have as much charm, but the pl
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Personally, I'd say the first three of Lucas' eff
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Re:Doesn't matter. (Score:4, Insightful)
But at least ask yourself this: if it makes no difference why did they change the order?
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And that tells us something about you. You might even call it a *characterization* about you, which distinguishes you from someone who wouldn't fire first. And that's why the change matters. And even if I were to allow that it did not change the characterization of Han, it ruined the pacing of the scene, so the mod isn't even defensibl
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Agreed about Jar-Jar, though. I was sincerely hoping that Lucas would offer up some fanservice in the form of him being a casualty of Anakin's fall to the dark side. :(
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Back before Episode 2, Mad Magazine included -- in one of their "best of the year / worst of the year" things -- a poster we all want to see. It was titled "Star Wars Episode II: A Galaxy Rejoices", and looked very much like the Ep 1 poster, except everyone is happy, and Anakin is slicing Jar-Jar's head off.
That is perhaps the only thing I'
Re:Doesn't matter. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Doesn't matter. (Score:5, Insightful)
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The only version of Star Wars available on DVD is the Special Edition.
Sorry to double post, but I only noticed this as I hit submit. What you say isn't true. Something like 6 months after the initial DVD release, they released the original cut as well.
At any rate, I probably unintentionally caused confusion when I mentioned my two points so close to each other. While you're correct that the original isn't always available, I didn't mean to say it was. In this case it is, and that's why I say the changes don't matter. The final cut could be full of Teletubbies, and one coul
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Sorry to double post, but I only noticed this as I hit submit. What you say isn't true. Something like 6 months after the initial DVD release, they released the original cut as well.
Sort of. They released a copy of the Laserdisc masters on DVD, including the matted 4:3 presentation and terrible aliasing. But hey, it's better than nothing, I suppose.
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Gilliam and Scott, both far better directors than Lucas, aren't afraid of putting everything out there and letting the viewer decide which is best.
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The obvious question... (Score:4, Funny)
Does Han shoot first in this one?
(...sorry)
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This is a very up-beat version, so - Nope, Pris shoots first and we get to hear a LOT about Leon's mother.
Also, get ready for replicans.
Re:The obvious question... (Score:5, Funny)
"Meesa seen things, yousa wouldn believe!"
All I Really Care About (Score:2, Interesting)
Changed or not? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm wondering if this is actually a change. In the original, it's a beautiful bit of ambiguity: Hauer slurs the word, so that it sounds halfway between "father" and "fucker", neatly summing up his feelings towards Tyrell.
If they've actually re-dubbed that, I'll be a little disappointed.
Oh well, Scott's still unlikely to mess things up as much as Lucas did
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I'm wondering if this is actually a change. In the original, it's a beautiful bit of ambiguity: Hauer slurs the word, so that it sounds halfway between "father" and "fucker", neatly summing up his feelings towards Tyrell.
I've watched this film thirty-plus times, and it sounds like 'fucker' to me, every time. Really not sure where people get this idea of a slurred / doubled pronunciation. Don't forget that Hauer is a Nederlander by birth and despuie all his work and training, isn't immune from occasional inflections.
FWIW, wikiquote "I want more life, fucker" points to an IMDB 'trivia' entry, which could have been added or edited by just about anyone. Personally, I just don't hear this..
agreed, it is not 'father' and should not be (Score:3, Interesting)
I want more life "father"?? (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally I'm holding out for the (Score:4, Funny)
i saw it at the ziegfeld two months ago (Score:3, Interesting)
and?
doesn't f***ing matter what they changed in minutaie
if i love the film for the same reason so many slashdotters do, it's one of the best f***ing movies ever made, and the minutaie doesn't matter, the whole of its incredible existence does
and it really is best in the theatres. 17 inch crt monitors don't do it much justice. if you missed it in the theatre 2 months ago, all i have to say to you is
if only you had seen what i had seen with your eyes
or something like that
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Five versions (Score:5, Informative)
Workprint version - pre-release test screening version
US original cinematic version
International original cinematic version
Directors cut - 1992 version - approved by Scott, but he was not directly involved
Final cut - Scott had complete control over this version
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f@!$er (Score:2)
"I want more life, father."
and
"Two of them got fried..."
were two of the biggest things that stood out to me.
Apparently some of the cuts where they removed the voiceover were shortened a bit, too. (Since the voiceover was simply removed for the original Director's Cut, the scenes where Deckard was previously talking now hung a bit long with nothing going on).
Riddley Scott vs The Script Writer (Score:3, Interesting)
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First question... What's with you and Unicorns!? (Anyone see Legend?)
The Digital Bits' Review (Score:4, Informative)
See It (Score:2)
Don't miss it if you can catch it. I hope they do remaster it again sometime, just so there's an excuse to show it at the Ziegfield again.
perfect this vision, jerk (Score:2)
Changes (Score:2)
2) All the replicants have been replaced with Ewoks.
Still waiting for E.T. The Final Cut (Score:3, Funny)
Stupid comment (Score:3, Informative)
Well, gee, if he is not supposed to know he's a replicant, super-human strength might be a bit of a give-away, no?
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So if you want a Nexus 7 to go hunting them, you can't create it as powerful as Roy - you'd only be running the risk of 2 supermen running riot out there! So you create Dekkard as a bit of a wuss, if he realises what he is and tries to escape
Cash in? (Score:2, Informative)
A short list (Score:2, Insightful)
There have been some stunningly good science fiction novels over the years. A lot of science fiction films, though, are more about eye-candy.
Bladerunner did it right. I was a big Philip K. Dick fan, and I went to the original expecting to be disappointed. I wasn't. Bladerunner is still one of my all-time favorite films, in any genre.
Don't get me wrong, I love special effects. I just wish sometimes they'd pick more challenging stories to use them with. I hope all the software advances will make it
Final cut? I think not... (Score:2)
They'll release another 83 billion versions of this for each new media format that comes out between now and doomsday. Just you wait.
FUCKING P.C. (Score:3, Informative)
"I want more life, FUCKER"
?! For me, it was a significant line, and it was working well in the movie. This was the point in the movie where the roles of master and slave between Tyrell and Roy were reversed. It was Roy now who was in control. If you replace "fucker" with respectful "father", you lose that, you'll get a respectful 'son'.
I've seen both the international/theatrical lasedirsk version and the Director's Cut, and I liked the Director's cut more (no voiceovers, unicorn). But this time I might pass on it. If I get a chance to see it in a theater, I will; but for DVD I'll stick to 1992 version.
Soundtrack Change (Score:3, Informative)
Completely Awesome (Score:2, Interesting)
More info that isn't in this article... (Score:4, Interesting)
The main question (Score:3, Funny)
Rob Zombie's gonna be pissed (Score:3, Funny)
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I felt Blade Runner was a masterful work. It did not bore me because what it lacked in action (if action can be "lacking", since it's not a prerequisit for a good film anyhow), it made up for in atmosphere.
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I blame the "Citizen Kane" affect, i.e I only got around to watching the 'great work' after first seeing so many films that were based upon the original, that when I did finally see it with high expectations I was underwhelmed and like "Oh I've seen this before". Sure this may of spoiled my enjoyment, but even so I never had that
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Counting replicants (Score:4, Insightful)
In the Director's Cut, RS added the possibility that Deckard was a replicant, while the original (with voiceover) made us assume he was what PK Dick calls "An authentic human", and frankly, not a very good one. I and my BR fan peeps debated whether or not Deckard ***was*** a replicant, based on evidence from the movie. But we didn't really debate whether or not RS wanted us to debate it. He clearly wanted us to think that he POSSIBLY was. There were MANY clues in the Director's Cut that supported his Replicantshipiness. Not the least of which was the missing replicant, one of which "got fried." Some (not I) thought that Deckard was the missing replicant, re-programmed to kill the others. I always thought it was a continuity gaff. (Sorry for the pun)
I saw it in LA on the huge screen, and aside from the sheer grandeur of enhanced city effects, the most significant change was that they changed the numbers of replicants that arrived and were fried. THERE WERE NO MISSING REPLICANTS after this new, improved release. By changing that gaff, RS sent a clear signal that Deckard's Replicanticity was ***NOT*** a foregone conclusion. It is STILL left to the viewer to decide.
But I gotta tell you, I still prefer the voiceover. Although they fixed the "dead air" when Roy dies and Deckard just stares stupidly (sans voiceover), there is still too much lost without the voiceover. We really have no clue WHY Roy tried to kill Deckard, then saved him.
I was PRAYING that they at least added the original finale, with the "best line that most people have ever heard in a movie..." "We didn't know how long we had... who does?
Someday, I'll get a bottle of Johnny Walker Black (notice the label on deckard's booze... AND ROY'S!!!) rip both versions into an iMac (with voice command... Enhance 34 to 46. k'ch k'ch k'ch beep beep beep) and make my own cut. Or, maybe someone has already beat me to it?
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