I could imagine some people moaning it was too long and boring; frankly I don't care. Go watch Fast & Furious then.
See, my read on that was that she recreated her own memory, fully knowing who and what she is, to put "a bit of herself" into the replicants she was making memories for. She says that it really happened (to her), but she doesn't say it was a real memory. She said before that real memories are kind of foggy and lack detail whereas that fake memory was detailed enough for K to find the horse.Suddenly Ana's reaction to K's memory makes more sense, why she would cry upon seeing the memory. She knows its her memory and perhaps she realizes (if she didn't already) that she's actually a replicant who was born and not constructed.
It's not in the movie, it's from the 2022 animated short.The only thing I'm at all negative about is the wretched pop song at the end of the soundtrack.
Blade Runner isn't just my favorite sci-fi film or favorite Ridley Scott film or favorite Harrison Ford film. It's my favorite film period. To say I was apprehensive about a sequel is putting it mildly.
Some of those fears were allayed when Denis Villeneuve was hired as director and not Ridley Scott. I love many of Scott's films but I knew he wasn't the right person for the job (see Prometheus and Covenant, and *I'm* one of the few supporters of those films). Villeneuve, on the other hand, has proven to me with Enemy and Arrival that he would be the best person suited for continuing the story of Blade Runner. But even then I remained very cautiously optimistic.
Blade Runner: 2049 is a worthy sequel. The film emulates the original's aesthetic and music without directly copying it. The story continues Deckard's journey, but he isn't focus and the film is better for it. Instead, it's K's (Ryan Gosling), where it further explores existential questions of what it means to live, feel, and create.
The story itself is pretty interesting, even if it didn't quite end in the direction I expected. I loved the focus on K and his turmoil about his existence. He quickly becomes convinced that he's Rachael and Deckard's son and with seemingly good reason and I loved the revelation that meant for him, that he wasn't constructed but rather he was born. And then all of that comes crashing down, not from Deckard but from Freysa, the leader of the underground movement. Suddenly Ana's reaction to K's memory makes more sense, why she would cry upon seeing the memory. She knows its her memory and perhaps she realizes (if she didn't already) that she's actually a replicant who was born and not constructed. I don't want another sequel, but if we do get one, I want it to be focused on Ana entirely.
Another favorite part of this film is K's touching relationship with Joi, his paid-for holographic mistress. Even though she was designed as essentially a love bot, the viewer can tell that there's real affection between both of them. Her dual love scene by inhabiting the body of Marriette so Joi and K can enjoy physical intercourse made think of a similar situation in Her, whether it was intentional or not. Despite K's ultimate fate, my heart broke when Luv inevitably destroyed Joi's mobile device, thus killing her.
The biggest thing that bothered me about film was the unnecessary use of flashbacks to earlier moments in the film as well as to the original. I didn't mind the auditory ones, but all of the visual callbacks that K has in reflect on moments felt like Villeneuve (or someone else) didn't trust the viewer to recall what K is recalling. I also found the full flashback to Rachael's first appearance unnecessary especially we see the replica of that moment almost immediately. Trust the viewer to know what's being recalled!
That being said, I did thoroughly enjoy the more casual visual and auditory callbacks that were built into the story. K being smashed through the wall during his confrontation with Sapper, K's and Luv's verbal commands of directing a camera zoom echoing Deckard's commands, the need to get forensic help on the street, Vangelis' original music when K died which called back to Roy Batty's death, "more human than human," and probably more that I've forgotten and missed. Like the original film, 2049 also echoes Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? animal dynamic, i.e. the need for any animal as a pet, authentic being the preference. And this time Deckard actually gets a pet, even if it wasn't a sheep.
I will have to see the film more times to fully judge it, and while it doesn't quite reach the same heights of the original, it is a very good film indeed.
Stray thoughts:
I went in avoiding spoilers as much as possible (I didn't even know Sapper was a replicant until the second short), so I was genuinely shocked to see "present day" Rachael, seemingly performed (and later confirmed in the credits) by Sean Young. That was a lovely surprise!
Speaking of avoiding spoilers and any press material, was it known that K was a replicant prior to the film's release?
There's only one thing I want for Christmas this year: Deckard's holojukebox. So awesome!
It was a brief appearance, but I loved Edward James Olmos' return as Gaff. The man truly loves the original film.
Tentatively an "A-."
I read his relationship with Joi differently. When the advert echoed some of the things she had said, seemingly with genuine emotion, he realised that, despite appearances, she was just an adaptive program designed to give him exactly what he wanted. At that point, the pointlessness of his existence really hits home and he decides that obedience is what has kept him at a shadow of his emotional and developmental potential - which has also kept him alive, I suppose.
It's not in the movie, it's from the 2022 animated short.
Hm, maybe. I'll definitely have to play close attention to her scenes again to see how my reading fits with what actually happened.See, my read on that was that she recreated her own memory, fully knowing who and what she is, to put "a bit of herself" into the replicants she was making memories for. She says that it really happened (to her), but she doesn't say it was a real memory. She said before that real memories are kind of foggy and lack detail whereas that fake memory was detailed enough for K to find the horse.
I read his relationship with Joi differently. When the advert echoed some of the things she had said, seemingly with genuine emotion, he realised that, despite appearances, she was just an adaptive program designed to give him exactly what he wanted. At that point, the pointlessness of his existence really hits home and he decides that obedience is what has kept him at a shadow of his emotional and developmental potential - which has also kept him alive, I suppose.
Oooh, that's an interesting take on their relationship and perhaps a more accurate one than what I took from it. I'll have to keep both of yours insights in mind when I see the film again. I particularly like the notion of K dying for a family that is not his because he craves a real one so much.This. He spends the whole movie desperately looking for something real, something authentic. But at the end of the day finds he has nothing that isn't artificial. He can't escape the limits of what he is. He has no family. But then he makes the choice to spare Deckard at the end, despite being told he should kill him or let him die. Because dying for the right cause is the most human thing he can do. The resistance intends him to die for freedom, but K dies for family. A family that isn't his, but one he's looked for the whole movie nonetheless.
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