BLADE RUNNER (1982) MOVIE NEWS & REVIEW
blade runner (1982) movieGenre | Science Fiction
Classification | M
Running time | 117 minutes
Released | 25 June 1982 castHarrison Ford ... Rick Deckard Rutger Hauer ... Roy Batty Sean Young ... Rachael Edward James Olmos ... Gaff M. Emmet Walsh ... Bryant Daryl Hannah ... Pris William Sanderson ... J.F. Sebastian Brion James ... Leon Kowalski Joe Turkel ... Dr. Eldon Tyrell Joanna Cassidy ... Zhora James Hong ... Hannibal Chew Morgan Paull ... Holden Hy Pyke ... Taffey Lewis directorRidley Scott writerHampton Fancher ... (screenplay) and David Webb Peoples ... (screenplay) (as David Peoples) Philip K. Dick ... (novel) cinematographerJordan Cronenweth ... director of photography musicVangelis film editorMarsha Nakashima Terry Rawlings ... supervising editor box office resultWorldwide $27,580,111
Australia $ not available
North America $27,580,111 movie minutiaeThe term replicants is used nowhere in Philip K. Dick's writing. The creatures in the source novel are called Androids or Andies. The movie abandoned these terms, fearing they would sound comical spoken on screen. Replicants came from David Webb Peoples' daughter, Risa, who was studying microbiology and biochemistry. She introduced her father to the theory of replication - the process whereby cells are duplicated for cloning purposes.
The ending title sequence in the theatrical cut of the film contains unused footage from Stanley Kubrick's THE SHINING (1980). These were extra shots of the main title sequence, although none of the shots contain the road that was seen in THE SHINING.
Although for many years Harrison Ford refused to talk about the film, he did contribute to the 2007 DVD documentary DANGEROUS DAYS: MAKING BLADE RUNNER (2007), claiming he has reconciled with Ridley Scott and made his peace with the film. In fact, Ford says the thing he remembers most is not the grueling shoot or the arguments with his director, but being forced to record the voiceover which executive producers Jerry Perenchio and Bud Yorkin insisted be in the film. Ford doesn't actually mention any names, but in discussing the voiceover which was used in the theatrical cut, he says it was written by "clowns". In actual fact, Darryl Ponicsan was initially hired to write it, but his version was tossed out. Then Roland Kibbee was hired and his version is the one that was used. According to David Peoples and Hampton Fancher, who had become close friends, when they first saw the film, they each thought the other had written it, and despite the fact that they both hated it, they told one another they loved it for fear of insulting the other's feelings. related movies |
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