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wolfshadowheart, w 10 Harsh Realities Of Rewatching Blade Runner, 42 Years Later
@wolfshadowheart@kbin.social avatar

I gave it a read and there's some interested takes but overall disagree and I think this particular read may miss some of the best parts of what make Blade Runner work. To just respond to the surmise, since all 10 points to me are more like 7 and even those 7 kind of just come down to these 3, lol.

First and foremost, its pacing is fine. Bad pacing in a movie is far worse, like Anna, and even pacing in a good one like Dune, doesn't mean anything necessarily - Blade Runner does a fine job if you are able to pay attention, I guess. Personally it seems a little odd to blame being molded by contemporary media to be the reason why an older film no longer holds up. Let me put it this way though - We have Drive (2011) and Baby Driver (2017). In a lot of ways, these movies are exactly the same at times being almost shot for shot early on (likely homage). But Baby Driver is an extremely fast paced movie, and Drive is an extremely slow burn. Both of these movies, like Blade Runner, do something different, so of the critiques there can be I'm not fully on board with this one, unless the argument is that old movies should be able to take any viewer out of their subjectivity mold, I can't really agree with the takeaway from this. I had a harder time watching the new Dune than I did Blade Runner, does that make Dune's pacing worse than Blade Runner or is Blade Runner's pacing better than Dune? See what I mean? I might feel different had there been any examples, but it seemed that it just found a "Blade Crawler" comment and made a point about it, and now that's bad because... movies are faster paced? Nyeh, not sold, lol.

Decker is no more than an analogue for the viewers to be in the world, he may be the protagonist but Decker, IMO, is far from the main character. I also disagree about him lacking complexity, however I would say that it is indeed because he is 100% a foil to the antagonists. Decker isn't meant to be this incredible Blade Runner that no other can live up to - he's good sure, he's alive and has his faculties and limbs, but he quite literally takes the role of the futuristic Desk Jockey, he is just the pencil pusher that grinds up the replicants. More on this later.

Whenever I watch Blade Runner I'm always surprised by how it's such a quiet film with so much exposition in just a few sentences. I don't think anything overshadows anything else. I think there is a strong emphasis on atmosphere which helps with the world building we get from the characters and interactions. It critiques hyper-capitalism by showing a world far in the future that by all accounts is exactly the same, save a few office jobs that have evolved. The underground is still working girls and chefs and the government is still uncoordinated and corrupt. Without the focus on visuals to evoke just how different this world is supposed to be, we don't get snapped back into mundanity when we see Decker ordering food and getting stopped by other officers. Moreover, the depth of the story comes specifically from Roy Batty, who as I mention should be viewed as the real protagonist. I think the movie itself argues this point to the bone, but everyone only ever seems to want to talk about Decker so maybe not.

I find it hard to see a lack of depth when Roy and Pris, literal cybernetic robots, are the most emotive characters in Blade Runner. The only other character we genuinely see some emotion from is the Tinkerer J.F. Sebastian, who has a love for his toys and makes friends with the replicants. They get inhumanly emotive at times, but they more than anyone we see express just how much they want to live. Roy's entire journey is a process of becoming human, until death when he gives birth to Decker by saving him. Roy lived as a human would have. In life, Roy was enslaved, escaped, and lived on the lamb. He sought vengeance towards God (Tyrell), found love, exacts vengeance once more before, in my opinion, realizing and accepting that God was right. There is no extending life. Not his own.

As he sees Deckard about to die, with the understanding that Roy himself will soon as well, Roy saves Deckard not as an act of mercy but as a birth. To extend life. For me, the story isn’t much about Deckard. It’s about what Deckard’s piece represents for humanity. He isn't complex, he doesn't need to be. Not everyone is. Particularly when Deckard himself isn't even the point that the film was trying to make, each and every quintessential moment of philosophy comes from the antagonists musings, not the protagonists inquisitions.

Your final act in death is to give life which you were no longer allowed.

That is complexity.

tunetardis, w SpaceX's Starship will create 'gravity' with centrifugal force

It would be nice is someone built a spin gravity space station with lunar and martian levels. We could see how people fare after several months in that environment before setting off to build permanent bases.

Greyghoster, w SpaceX's Starship will create 'gravity' with centrifugal force

Maybe Musk could watch The Martian? They have the centrifugal gravity thing down pat. The concept of build in orbit seems attractive too.

inkican,

If Elon musk was in the Martian, he'd be Dr Evil

aeronmelon, w Apple TV Already Has a Perfect Sci-Fi Replacement for Constellation. - Dark Matter

Dark Matter WAS a great spiritual successor to StarGate & B5 that SyFy murdered just as it was going from interesting to really great.

Article got my hopes up for nothing!

teft, w Archimedes’ death ray might have worked, teen science project suggests | CNN
@teft@lemmy.world avatar

Didnt mythbusters disprove this like 15 years ago?

ashok36,

“I’m standing right in it and I’m not dead.”

EmptyRadar,

That is discussed in the article:

The Discovery Channel series “MythBusters” featured episodes in 2004, 2006 and 2010 testing out scenarios for the purported death ray but ultimately declared the legend to be a myth when each test failed to light a wooden boat on fire. In 2005, a class of students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, inspired by the show’s first episode, was able to ignite a wooden boat once with a similar technique to Sener’s on a larger scale, but failed on a second attempt.

Sener said he believes that combining MIT’s findings with his own, the data could suggest the death ray was plausible, and Archimedes likely could have used the sun’s rays with large mirrors to cause combustion. But the technology may not work in cold temperatures or cloudy weather, and the sea’s impact on the ships’ motion affects the practicality of this device, he added in his paper.

Lemming421, w Archimedes’ death ray might have worked, teen science project suggests | CNN
@Lemming421@lemmy.world avatar

Do

Not

Give

Elon

Musk

Ideas

Anticorp, w Pentagon Review Finds No Evidence of Alien Cover-Up

We have investigated ourselves and found no evidence of wrongdoing.

shroomaroomboom,

Took the words out of my mouth

DevCat, w Pentagon Review Finds No Evidence of Alien Cover-Up
@DevCat@lemmy.world avatar

That’s precisely what an alien would say.

FfaerieOxide, w Ready to be mad? Come read "10 Harsh Realities Of Rewatching The Matrix, 25 Years Later"
@FfaerieOxide@kbin.social avatar

Why would I click an article the only thing about which you have disclosed is that it will make me mad?

All equal I'd as soon not seek that out and the premise about learning more about The Matrix rings hollow because unless the article's author (who—like everything else about the piece—is not revealed in the post) is Bane Hooked Up to pregnant horse pee, they don't understand The Matrix better than I do.

Lath, w AI chatbots can get better at math because ... Star Trek

They're programmed to follow the data. And we should be thankful for that. Imagine if they were programmed to follow the lore.

Semi-Hemi-Demigod, w AI chatbots can get better at math because ... Star Trek
@Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

What if they identify most with the ship’s computer, Data, and the other cybernetic/optronic characters

inkican,

"LCARS understands meee!"

ElderWendigo, w Ray Winstone Recalls “Soul-Destroying” Experience While Filming for Marvel’s ‘Black Widow’

Too many ads, didn’t read because it’s an obvious click bait headline:

He doesn’t like being called back for reshoots.

Johnvanjim, w Apple Orders ‘Neuromancer’ Series Based on William Gibson Novel

Don’t mess this up, don’t mess this up, don’t mess this up..

dumples, w Apple Orders ‘Neuromancer’ Series Based on William Gibson Novel
@dumples@kbin.social avatar

Apple TV+ has been making some good shows. That plus a good source material would make this look good.

TheBananaKing, w Sting is my favorite part of David Lynch’s Dune

I really liked all the Lynch harkonnens - they were just sleazy and degraded by power: not terrifying supervillians, but the Trump family.

Like, they were still a major problem, but because privilege, not any kind of badassery.

I think that’s an aspect that was missed in the Villeneuve dune, along with making Paul too pretty and heroic.

1984 Paul was a sour unlikelable dick, and that was kind of the point for me.

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