Posted on 05/27/2014 3:50:41 PM PDT by Para-Ord.45
Alcon Entertainment has an offer out to Harrison Ford to reprise his role of Rick Deckard in its Ridley Scott-directed sequel to Blade Runner.
Original screenwriter Hampton Fancher and Michael Green are writing the new one, which takes place several decades after the conclusion of the 1982 original.
Alcon acquired Blade Runners film, television and ancillary rights in 2011 from producer Bud Yorkin to produce prequels and sequels of the sci-fi cult classic. Yorkin will serve as a producer on the sequel along with Alcons Andrew Kosove and Broderick Johnson. Cynthia Sikes Yorkin will co-produce. Frank Giustra and Tim Gamble, CEOs of Thunderbird Films, will serve as executive producers. Alcon actually sent a press release out that it offered the role to Ford (which is unusual in itself), but Ford gave an interview recently saying he was anxious to see the script. He has expressed interest in reprising the role in the past, but no deal is set as he has yet to read the script.
(Excerpt) Read more at deadline.com ...
Most of the main cast members are still around. Just saying.
Yeah and he did a great job of it too. Fooled me.
“Graffiti” came out in 1973. Ford was about 31. I don’t believe he was playing a high schooler, though, but a twentysomething hot rodder. He turns 72 in July.
Oh, yeah. It was Hauer’s edit the night before the shoot that saved it from SF banality and made it what it is. Some of the crew cried when they saw it.
But most were killed. Only Deckard, Rachael and the 2 cops (Bryant and Gaff played by M. Emmet Walsh and Edward James Olmos) lived.
The script off of Philip K. Dick was ok, it was the set design, the models, the costumes that were gorgeous, different and so visually impressive. To this day nothing in the sci-fi genre has surpassed it.
CGI can NEVER replicate that feel. CGI cannot create that atmosphere where you could almost smell the wet streets of L.A.
We can spot CGI a mile away, it looks fake and feels cartoonish. It in fact turns any attempt at noir sci-fi into a Warner Brother cartoon.
IF they`re smart they`ll know what made Blade Runner Blade Runner and it wasn`t the lead actor.
“Only Deckard, Rachael and the 2 cops (Bryant and Gaff played by M. Emmet Walsh and Edward James Olmos) lived.”
Ford cannot play Deckard since Deckard was a replicant. Ford`ll have to play some other character.
My favorite character was Toad.
Concur completely. The audience is becoming accustomed to it now. If you're old enough to remember when Ray Harryhausen's work was new, it was astonishingly realistic to those audiences. These days it's nostalgic camp. Sure got to me, though.
It had very innovative design and cinematography.
Maybe as a cameo. But he’s a little long in the tooth for realistic action.
LOVED “The Equalizer”
That said, it worked because Edward Woodward was a great actor, was able to deliver his lines completely dead-pan, and portray the impression that he really could deliver on his threats. It didn’t need to be explained, you knew from the first moment that this was a violent person.
Somehow, I don’t see Denzel Washington being able to play that believably.
Ford could’ve easily been replaced with Tom Selleck and it would’ve been just as good. Aside from the visuals, it was all the supporting players that made it tops. I don’t see anyone today that could come close to equaling those actors. Too many pretty boys that are as menacing as an egg salad sandwich. Hauer, the late Brion James, Joanna Cassidy and even Daryl Hannah all managed to be menacing. The great Joe Turkel as Tyrell (who was also just as great in his small part as the bartender in “The Shining”).
I worry we’d end up with a black hole of a sequel filled with the likes of Channing Tatum, the nadir of leading men in today’s Hollyweird.
And I know, the quote was not from that scene; still, love that quote. Great “death scene” however...Very powerful.
It is 32 years since the original Blade Runner...
A half-black, half-replicant android has attained a position of considerable power.
The “blandroid” has no past. No origin. All such records have been erased. No one admits to anything. The Voight-Kampff machine yields indeterminant results.
Yet, from his position of power, the blandroid replicant has managed considerable destruction. Few spinners are in the skies. And this has made the blandroid replicant angry.
Retired police officer Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford) is called in to investigate the illegal transfer of disruptor weapons. All evidence leads back to the blandroid. Deckard finds a way to bring the blandroid down, but before he can act on the information, the blandroid finds out and sends his Turner Corporation replicants to destroy Decker.
Will humanity survive?
That was never definitively confirmed. I’ll tell you why I personally don’t believe it, and that’s because when he fought against the other replicants, they all beat him to a pulp. He would’ve had their equal strength, especially if he was a law enforcement officer (after all, if Daryl Hannah’s Pris, the “Pleasure Model”, was that powerful, it wouldn’t make sense if a cop wasn’t).
I’m not sure I buy into that summary.
Deckard was probably one of the special ones as well, no mandated expiration date, like his new girlfriend at the end of the movie.
If he and his GF were special, it may be that they will age naturally as well.
Disclaimer: I never read the book.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.