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Blade Runner
1982 -
USA -
114 min. -
Feature, Color
Director:
Ridley Scott
Cast:
Harrison Ford,
Rutger Hauer,
Sean Young,
Edward James
Olmos, M.
Emmet Walsh,
Daryl Hannah,
Joanna Cassidy
More Information:
All Movie Guide
Características del DVD
- Lang.: English
/ Subtitles in
Spanish
Alquílela
por (rent it for): $3.77
(dos días - two days)
Si vive en
Weston (if you live in Weston)
Sinopsis
(All Movie Guide)
A blend of science fiction and noir detective
fiction, Blade
Runner (1982) was a box office and critical bust upon its initial
exhibition, but its unique postmodern production design became hugely
influential within the sci-fi genre, and the film gained a significant cult
following that increased its stature.
Harrison Ford
stars as Rick Deckard, a retired cop in Los Angeles circa 2019. L.A. has
become a pan-cultural dystopia of corporate advertising, pollution and flying
automobiles, as well as replicants, human-like androids with short life
spans built by the Tyrell Corporation for use in dangerous off-world
colonization. Deckard's former job in the police department was as a talented
blade runner, a euphemism for detectives that hunt down and assassinate
rogue replicants. Called before his one-time superior (M.
Emmett Walsh), Deckard is forced back into active duty. A quartet of
replicants led by Roy Batty (Rutger
Hauer) has escaped and headed to Earth, killing several humans in the
process. After meeting with the eccentric Eldon Tyrell (Joe
Turkel), creator of the replicants, Deckard finds and eliminates Zhora (Joanna
Cassidy), one of his targets. Attacked by another replicant, Leon (Brion
James), Deckard is about to be killed when he's saved by Rachael (Sean
Young), Tyrell's assistant and a replicant who's unaware of her true
nature. In the meantime, Batty and his replicant pleasure model lover,
Pris (Darryl
Hannah) use a dying inventor, J.F. Sebastian (William
Sanderson) to get close to Tyrell and murder him. Deckard tracks the pair
to Sebastian's, where a bloody and violent final confrontation between Deckard
and Batty takes place on a skyscraper rooftop high above the city. In 1992,
Ridley Scott
released a popular director's cut that removed Deckard's narration, added a
dream sequence, and excised a happy ending imposed by the results of test
screenings; these legendary behind-the-scenes battles were chronicled in a
1996 tome, Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner by
Paul M.
Sammon.
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