I don't think viewing conditions affect my enjoyment of a movie...whether it's good or not affects whether or not I enjoy a movie. I saw "Blade Runner" in a film class where the professor would hype up what we see before we watch it. I had heard about this movie for years and was extremely curious about it. I also thought it had a really cool, evocative and ominous title, and was primed to love it since I generally love sci-fi and I'm pretty sure the professor did a good job of setting it up as something great.
It was one of the most disappointing movies I've ever seen. The production design, special effects, and make-up were magnificent, but I couldn't care less about any of the characters or the story. The voiceover narration bugged the hell out of me too. Perhaps the most hackneyed, annoying voiceover narration I've ever heard. I don't think seeing it in the dark with headphones at home would have changed that opinion, in fact it probably looked more impressive in a lecture theatre on a bigger screen.
I saw that movie in my twenties and thought it was shallow, empty, and overrated. I saw "2001: A Space Odyssey" as a significantly less mature teenager and found it mindblowingly unforgettable. I just saw "Altered States" a few months ago and it's one of the movies where the strength of the visual inventiveness was almost enough by itself to impress me, but I was happy with the performances and writing too. "Blade Runner" just isn't all that.
I think it's one of those movies where people let the 'message' (which I really didn't see until people explained it to me, and still am not impressed with) and brilliance of the special effects blind them to how ultimately hollow it truly is. "2001: A Space Odyssey" (and to a lesser extent, "Altered States") are just so much classier, presented with a more clear focus and elegance in their storytelling.
It was one of the most disappointing movies I've ever seen. The production design, special effects, and make-up were magnificent, but I couldn't care less about any of the characters or the story. The voiceover narration bugged the hell out of me too. Perhaps the most hackneyed, annoying voiceover narration I've ever heard. I don't think seeing it in the dark with headphones at home would have changed that opinion, in fact it probably looked more impressive in a lecture theatre on a bigger screen.
I saw that movie in my twenties and thought it was shallow, empty, and overrated. I saw "2001: A Space Odyssey" as a significantly less mature teenager and found it mindblowingly unforgettable. I just saw "Altered States" a few months ago and it's one of the movies where the strength of the visual inventiveness was almost enough by itself to impress me, but I was happy with the performances and writing too. "Blade Runner" just isn't all that.
I think it's one of those movies where people let the 'message' (which I really didn't see until people explained it to me, and still am not impressed with) and brilliance of the special effects blind them to how ultimately hollow it truly is. "2001: A Space Odyssey" (and to a lesser extent, "Altered States") are just so much classier, presented with a more clear focus and elegance in their storytelling.