Boom Tchhh. Mwaaauumm, mwau-mwaaauummmm

New recreation of the Blade Runner soundtrack on its way.

BuySoundtrax Records seeks to rectify that, with this new recording faithfully recreating the original music from the film, which proved a difficult task. Vangelis' score was composed entirely by performing on keyboards and recording it directly, so no written transcriptions exist. Edgar Rothermich was charged with reverse engineering the score–listening to the original music and a 1982 album mock-up and transcribing it by ear. He also had to recreate the sound of 1982 synthesizers and decipher if noise heard was due to recording on tape or stylistic choices by the composer.

Merry THXmas

THX 1138

Blessings of the state. Blessings of the masses.

THX 1138 is certainly not the most accessible film of all time, but for my money it remains not only timeless, but both engrossing and devastating. It’s as uncompromising in its portrayal of a fundamentally alien society as it is in ignoring and avoiding traditional narrative structures and science fiction tropes.

What’s more, the soundscape of the film remains to this day perfection. A full character in its own right, and as distant, unfamiliar and unsettling as the images, Walter Murch’s magic touch puts THX in a sparsely populated category of films. Those that are truly unique.

The DVD version of the film comes with a sound effects-only track, which almost makes the film even better. And as it happens, I found a copy of that track, with some of the voices restored, cut into album form by Wiel. I’ll save you the hassle of horrible download sites and let you grab it off of here (200mb) instead (with proper tagging and everything).

And as an added bonus, there’s a similarly themed album for Blade Runner, called ‘November 2019‘ (165mb) (via), which uses sound effects mostly from the game (sourced from the movie) to create ambient sound scapes from the various locations of Blade Runner.

‘Tis the season after all.

Blade Runner 2: Blade Runnerer

A story that Blade Runner 2 was being worked on by two screenwriters from DJ Caruso’s Eagle Eye floated recently. It was unclear just how official this project was, and how serious it should be taken. Was it the hopes of this screenwriter, or was it actually in pre-production already?

As it turns out, a bit of both, though at the moment it looks like it’s mostly the hopes of Travis Wright, who wrote a long letter to /Film explaining the status of the project, his involvement in it and this finishing remark:

I know there will be haters in regards to ever continuing Deckard’s story, but in my lifetime I’d love to sit in the theater on a friday night of its opening weekend and watch as Deckard sees attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. Who wants to be there with me?!? Geek on.

I know next to nothing about Travis Wright, but for now, the above says just about all I need to hear. And before you start thinking to yourself ‘Hey, you know, I always did want to see attack ships blahblahblah’, allow me the opportunity to convince you otherwise.

Blade Runner Is a Unique Snowflake

In the history of the film industry, few works have been as monolithic, influential and respected as Blade Runner. Despite reception problems, continuity issues and re-releases over the years, it hasn’t lost an ounce of respect—Quite the opposite in fact.

It might not matter how many American Pie, Ernest Goes To… and Porky’s sequels and spin-offs they churn out. They are, for whatever qualities they may have, easily copied. Nor does it matter how many Star Trek films they do, the series was built for it. Jason? Whatever. American Ninja? Knock yourself out.

But Blade Runner is a unique film in almost every way possible. A perfect storm of source material, talent and serendipity. It cannot be replicated. Even Ridley Scott, in all his visual splendor, hasn’t been able to make a film since, that has been able to get within eye-sight of it. Doesn’t that say something worth listening to?

Perhaps it was exactly because Blade Runner leaves the audience with open questions that it has such an impressive longevity. And perhaps this longevity isn’t an invitation to create a sequel staring Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie.

Tell, Don’t Show

There’s a golden rule in writing, which goes show, don’t tell. As rules go, this ain’t half-bad. But there are times when instead of reinforcing the illusion, it breaks it. Consider for instance if you had read this instead:

I know there will be haters in regards to ever continuing Skywalker story, but in my lifetime I’d love to sit in the theater on a friday night of its opening weekend and watch ‘the clone wars’. Who wants to be there with me?!? Geek on.

It’ll be awesome! Oh. Wait. The clone wars were better off having remained an off-hand remark by Obi-Wan.

We don’t need to meet Deckard’s wife, we don’t need to know that Rachel inherited Tyrell Corp and we don’t need to see Harrison Ford pick up the Deckard mantle again (especially after we saw Indy 4, in which Indy wants nothing more than to watch a few episodes of Matlock while gobbling down luke-warm soup back at the retirement home.

Blade Runner Already Has Sequels

Three direct sequels in fact: Blade Runner 2: The Edge of Humanity, Blade Runner 3: Replicant Night and Blade Runner 4: Eye and Talon, none of which I’ve read, and none of which I intend to read.

Also, David Webb Peoples, whom I have mucho mucho respect for (Leviathan, Salute of the Jugger, 12 Monkeys, Ladyhawke) co-wrote Blade Runner and went on to write SoldierI haven’t read the Soldier script, but word on the street is that Paul W.S. Anderson did extensive rewrites, and I chose to believe that, considering the rest of his atrocious output., which was then done by Paul W.S. Anderson, an absolute hack, who rampages through franchises like the black plaque through Europe. Now, what’s interesting about this, is that Peoples considers Soldier a sidequel to Blade Runner, and of course the film… movie, let’s go with movie—even has a cascade of references to Blade Runner.

In fact, if you want to see attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion, it wasn’t in the movie, but thankfully Mr. Anderson was gracious enough to put it in the trailer.

And then of course, the game, which was actually surprisingly good, everything considered. Though it did at times feel as if it was simply trying to touch all of the things that made Blade Runner, Blade Runner, rather than expand the universe.

Hell, Vangelis even did a sequel to the soundtrack, which was… Let’s not go there.

Ultimately, none of the above could capture the kind of lightning in a bottle that drives the original. It’s not impossible. Nothing is impossible. But it is implausible. And I would personally prefer if it was left alone as it is.

The Bottomline

I’m not a staunch sequel hater as such. There have been great sequels, I freely admit as much. In fact, I’m personally looking very much forward to TR2N. And hey, T2 was a great, if more family-friendly followup to its low-budget steel-bladed adrenalin-pumped predecessor. It works because Cameron was an unfliching egomaniac, which is probably why Aliens works as a sequel to Alien, despite being a fairly shallow Vietnam-in-Space followup to a much more atmospheric and erotic predecessor (stylistically, the aliens franchise is all over the place, and for that you can blame Aliens). Of course, of all sequels, I still hold The Empire Strikes Back as the best, for managing to expand on the universe, the story, the characters and their relationships, while also being a riveting ride.

But for every one of the classic ‘great’ sequels, there’s a plethora of Indy 4’s. Sequels with high production value, star quality and little else. No vision, no substance, no heart.

Consider 2010: The Year We Make Contact, a movie which isn’t in itself that bad, it just happens to quiver in the shadow of the greatest film ever made, which makes it look like a kindergarten project. And why? Nevermind Arthur C. Clarke’s books, which in my humble opinion never lived up to the film anyway, and consider instead the fact that someone decided that 2001: A Space Odyssey could do with a sequel, probably because:

I know there will be haters in regards to ever continuing Monolith story, but in my lifetime I’d love to sit in the theater on a friday night of its opening weekend and watch as we trespass on the land of the ephemeral mystery, imposing our mediocrity to the jovial sounds of cheap synthesizers. Who wants to be there with me?!? Geek on.

Consider T3: The Rise of the Machines, which is not only a pretty bad film in itself, but which cheapens what came before by being “essentially a B movie, content to be loud, dumb and obvious, and to leave the Great Ideas to bona fide public intellectuals like Keanu Reeves and the Hulk”Thank you A.O. Scott.

Consider Alien Resurrection, which is quite frankly disastrous in every way possible. And then some.

Consider Batman & Robin… Or don’t.

Consider any of the Planet of the Apes sequels.

Any of the Jaws sequels.

But more than anything else, consider that we already saw attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion in our minds eye, and it was a sight to see.

Don’t cheapen this. Just leave it alone and pass on by. Please.

Trailer for Blade Runner Final Cut

To celebrate the 25th anniversary, here is the trailer for the final cut of Blade Runner, coming out in October. Warner Brothers, in their infinite wisdom, apparently don’t quite understand the concept of a trailer, and have decided to do their best to deny people access to it. Go figure.

Not bad, a bit jarring with the ‘hey, we can do After Effects text animation’ stuff going on. I’m still not convinced it needs new footage injected, but then I’m naturally skeptic when it comes to Blade Runner.

PS: The music in there is Death is the Road to Awe from The Fountain, by Clint Mansell, and it is the most heartbreaking, tear-wrenching, uplifting, spiritual piece of score in ages.

That said, one has to wonder why you would use someone else’s score for your trailer, when Vangelis’ Blade Runner score is one of the best and original scores ever written? Especially considering how over-used Requiem for a Dream’s score has been in trailers since The Two Towers first hit; and while I love this, there is some semblance. Has Clint Mansell become the grand-choir-track of today?

Details on Blade Runner: The Ultimate Collection

It would seem that details about the Blade Runner Ultimate Collection DVD have leaked online, and it sounds… pretty good. Pretty good indeed. I’m copying the specs whole-sale, since the details have since vanished from Australian retailer EzyDVD.

Blade Runner Briefcase

Disc 1 – The Final Cut (2007):

  • Ridley Scott’s definitive new version of his science-fiction masterpiece includes added & extended scenes, added lines and new and cleaner special effects.

Disc 2 – 3 Complete Film Versions:

  • ‘82 U.S. Theatrical version
  • ‘82 International Theatrical version
  • ‘92 Director’s Cut

Disc 3 – “Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner” Documentary

  • Newly created documentary: Through interviews with the cast and crew, critics and colleagues, this feature-length documentary provides a mainstream-friendly yet meaningful in-depth look at Blade Runner’s literary genesis, its challenging production and controversial legacy. When all is said and done, this will be the definitive documentary on the film.

Disc 4 – Enhanced Content Bonus: (TBC)

  • INCEPTION – Featurettes and galleries devoted to Philip K. Dick, the birth of Cyberpunk and adapting the novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.
  • PRE-PRODUCTION – Featurettes and galleries devoted to script development, conceptual design and abandoned sequences.
  • PRODUCTION – Featurettes and galleries devoted to principal photography and locations.
  • POST-PRODUCTION – Featurettes and galleries devoted to deleted scenes, music and visual effects.
  • RELEASE – Featurettes and galleries devoted to marketing and reaction including Trailers, TV Spots and Promotional Featurettes
  • LEGACY – Featurettes and galleries devoted to the film’s resurrection and impact.

Disc 5 – Work Print Version & Enhanced Content:

  • Including the rarely seen Work Print version and potentially the 52 min. Channel Four (UK) documentary which was the first serious documentary created for the film.

Additionally, the set will come packaged in a limited “Blade Runner” briefcase holding the five-disc digipack with foil-enhanced and embossed slipcase. The goodies inside will include a lenticular motion image from the original feature, a collectible model spinner, an origami unicorn, a collection of photographs and a letter from Ridley Scott. Holy shit.

The street date is going to be in September. Unfortunately, the retailer is not taking international orders for this thing. However, don’t be too surprised if Region 1 gets the same thing. We’ll keep you posted.

So what’s my take? Well, I’m still wondering about the new edition; that could really go either way. I wasn’t too crazy with the new Alien edition (except for Lambert slapping Ripley, which made me jump out of my seat!). But then, it doesn’t really matter, since this DVD set apparently ships with a crazy five different versions!

That. Is. Crazy! And wonderful!

I suspect that my favorite version will remain the ’92 Director’s Cut, but it is nonetheless nothing short of stunningly cool that the Work Print Edition is included in this set. I’ve got a cam’d version of it (which is neigh unwatchable), and it is very much worth the true fan’s time.

Though I caught a screening of it last summer at a local cinema which specializes in old movies, I have really been saving myself for this DVD for years on end. That it is finally on the horizon is remarkable. Remarkable because the editions that have been out so far have been rather pale, considering that Blade Runner, along with 2001, which also doesn’t have a proper version out, is one of the most highly beloved movies ever made.

And of course, you can probably bet on the always talkative Mr Scott to supply us with at least one commentary.

Good times.

Related: Read more about the 4K restoration process.

Blade Runner Final Cut

Blade Runner is possibly the best movie ever made. Period. Rikke and I were recently lucky enough to catch a theater showing of the Director’s Cut in Cinemateket, which was pure pleasure, even the parts I slept though… Ehm… It was late, okay?:”(Cinemateket is having a large showing of Roger Corman movies in June, in case you like me enjoy yourself a bit of movie history, like Death Race 2000)”:.

The reason I’m mentioning this, is that after literally years of waiting, rumors going this way and that, the Blade Runner Final Cut DVD has finally found its way out of the legal hellhole it’s been living in, and is making its way to stores in September 2007! But that’s not all:

“Blade Runner: Final Cut” will arrive in 2007 for a limited 25th anniversary theatrical run, followed by a special edition DVD with the three previous versions offered as alternate viewing: Besides the original theatrical version and director’s cut, the expanded international theatrical cut will be included. The set will also contain additional bonus materials. “#”:http://comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=14724

This is great news indeed! Finally this, one of the very cornerstones of modern cinema, will gets its due. It breaks my heart to see movies like Pearl Harbor get the full treatment while Blade Runner and 2001 are allowed to be released in sub-par DVD versions that don’t do them proper justice.

By the way, if one was so inclined, one might be able to procure a HD version of Blade Runner off of UseNet. Just sayin’.