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BLADE RUNNER-COMPLETE COLLECTORS EDITION (BR-DVD/5 DISC) DVD Movie

BLADE RUNNER-COMPLETE COLLECTORS EDITION (BR-DVD/5 DISC) DVD


2.40:1: 2.40:1

PN: 085391185741     Release: 12/18/2007
Starring: Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Sean Young
Director(s): Ridley Scott
Price:$30.99 

225 In Stock!


Blade Runner
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. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
Cast
Harrison Ford as Rick Deckard
Rutger Hauer as Roy Batty
Sean Young as Rachael
Edward James Olmos as Gaff
M. Emmet Walsh as Harry Bryant
Daryl Hannah as Pris
William Sanderson as J.F. Sebastian
Brion James as Leon
Joe Turkel as Tyrell
Joanna Cassidy as Zhora
James Hong as Chew
Morgan Paull as Holden
Kevin Thompson as Bear
John E. Allen as Kaiser
Hy Pyke as Taffey Lewis
Crew
David Snyder - Art Director
Jane Feinberg - Casting
Mike Fenton - Casting
Marci Liroff - Casting
Michael Kaplan - Costume Designer
Charles Knode - Costume Designer
Newt Arnold - First Assistant Director
Ridley Scott - Director
Terry Rawlings - Editor
Brian Kelly - Executive Producer
Hampton Fancher - Executive Producer
Vangelis - Composer (Music Score)
Marvin Westmore - Makeup
Lawrence G. Paull - Production Designer
Jordan S. Cronenweth - Cinematographer
Michael Deeley - Producer
Bud Yorkin - Producer
Linda de Scenna - Set Designer
Charles Breen - Set Designer
Louis Mann - Set Designer
Peg Cummings - Set Designer
Gregory Pickrell - Set Designer
Lawrence G. Paull - Set Designer
William Ladd Skinner - Set Designer
Thomas Roysden - Set Designer
Bud Alper - Sound/Sound Designer
David Dryer - Special Effects Supervisor
Richard Yuricich - Special Effects Supervisor
Douglas Trumbull - Special Effects Supervisor
Darryl Ponicsan - Screenwriter
Hampton Fancher - Screenwriter
David Peoples - Screenwriter
Philip Barberio - Visual Effects
Philip K. Dick - Short Story Author
Syd Mead - Visual Consultant

Blade Runner
Critics and audiences didn't care for it in 1982, but Ridley Scott's Blade Runner has since risen from cult object to classic of postmodern science fiction. A dystopian view of the future as a decaying, nostalgia-ridden junk culture, it features enormous neon billboards, ad blimps, and soaring Mayan temple-esque skyscrapers, evoking an infernal consumer society divided between those divinely living in the clouds and the multi-cultural exploited masses inhabiting the permanently dank streets. Only the robot "skin job" replicants understand the value of life and freedom. As Deckard's search for the replicants becomes a philosophical rumination on man, machine, and life, Blade Runner's striking production design and visual effects (supervised by FX maestro Douglas Trumbull) underline the cost to humanity of technology-obsessed late capitalism. Blade Runner's increasing stature merited the 10th anniversary release of the "Director's Cut," which rendered the film even more evocatively ambiguous by adding a brief unicorn dream and eliminating the studio-mandated voice-over narration and tacked-on "happy" ending. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 
Charles Knode: British Academy of Film and Television, Best Costume Design (winner)
David Dryer: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie, Best Visual Effects (nominated)
David Snyder: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie, Best Art Direction (nominated)
Douglas Trumbull: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie, Best Visual Effects (nominated)
Jordan S. Cronenweth: British Academy of Film and Television, Best Cinematography (winner)
Jordan S. Cronenweth: Los Angeles Film Critics Association, Best Cinematography (winner)
Lawrence G. Paull: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie, Best Art Direction (nominated)
Lawrence G. Paull: British Academy of Film and Television, Best Production Design/Art Direction (winner)
Linda de Scenna: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie, Best Art Direction (nominated)
Richard Yuricich: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie, Best Visual Effects (nominated)
Vangelis: Golden Globe, Best Original Score (nominated)

 
Las Vegas Film Critics Association, Best DVD (winner)
Library of Congress, U.S. National Film Registry (winner)

 

General Specifications:

Language Options:English, French
Subtitle Options:English, French, Spanish, Japanese, KO
Sound Processing:DD5.1: Dolby Digital w/ sub-woofer channel
DD2: Dolby Digital Stereo
Additional Features:New, definitive documentary dangerous days: making Blade Runner - incorporating outtakes, deleted scenes and all-new interviews - and a bonus enhancement archive DVD of extra, rare vintage and new material
DVD Aspect Ratio:2.40:1: 2.40:1
MPAA Rating:R
DVD Discs Included:5
DVD Sides:5
DVD DVD Region Code:
Content Length:578 min
 

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