Blade Runner
Movie
1982
Blade Runner is, to me, a series of philosophical questions encased in an atmosphere of celestial and technological tension. The synth evokes both mystery and mythos. There's a pervading sense of the unreal straining against a grounding pessimism. It succeeds as both science fiction and noir, and would qualify as one of the very best in either genre. I find something new in it every time I revisit it, because it is full of questioning, and longing, and longing is eternal. Nothing is ever really answered, and the film coercively recruits you into the act of drawing conclusions. But this film is not about conclusions. Or, at least, not enduring ones. Above all, it gives you the sense that human conclusions are like tears in rain. It's greatest trick is making the audience focus on finding answers -- on the idea that those answers really matter. I would call it bleak, but I think Blade Runner simply refuses consolation, and we have a tendency to confuse that with bleakness.
-/10
Review Score
Visit the Movie Page
There is much more information about this movie on its page. View actors, crew, full ratings, and more!
Go to Movie PageFilmmaking
100
Overall
95
Screenplay
90
Acting
100
Cinematography
100
Production
100
Directing
100
Concept
95
Story
100
Dialogue
95
Characters
85
Pacing
100
Musical Score
Attributes
?
Entertaining
100
Uniqueness
95
How Much I Like It
75
Twists
100
Artistry
?
Fun
0
Cliche
0
Cheesy
?
Broad Appeal
100
Cerebral
90
Emotional
100
Discussion Worthy
Genres
5
Action
?
Comedy
5
Drama
?
Suspense
20
Mystery
?
Thriller
?
Horror
10
Adventure
10
Romance
50
Science Fiction
?
Fantasy
?
Animation
Maturity
?
Family Friendly
?
Positive Message
?
Thematically Mature
?
Intense
?
Sexuality
?
Nudity
?
Violence
?
Gore
?
Crude
?
Profanity
?
Scary
?
Substance Use


