|
 Blade Runner (Final cut) (2007)
IMDB rating: 8.30
Plot: Deckard is a Blade Runner, a police man of the future who hunts down and terminates replicants, artificially created humans. He wants to get out of the force, but is drawn back in when 4 “skin jobs”, a slang term for replicants, hijack a ship back to Earth. The city that Deckard must search for his prey is a huge, sprawling, bleak vision of the future. This film questions what it is to be human, and why life is so precious.
|
Directors: Scott Ridley
Actors: Ford Harrison,Hauer Rutger,Olmos Edward James,Walsh M. Emmet,Sanderson William,James Brion,Turkel Joe,Hong James,Paull Morgan,Thompson Kevin,Allen John Edward,Pyke Hy,Action,Drama,Sci-Fi,Thriller,
What is the differance between Blade Runner the directors cut & Blade Runner the final cut?
I recorded Blade Runner the final cut yesturday. I saw the directors cut about 10+ years ago.
Helmutt:- nothing to get to excited about then
man.yogurt:- If I remember rightly the film was AA. You had to be 14 to see it. I saw Blade runner with Outland & at the time they were stuning films. When I watch Blade runner my immagination runs riot. The film had a presense. For me Blade Runner is more than average. It’s near the top. Blade Runner was of its time, about 26 years ago.
Snake:- No way……6 versions…… I….. as you can see thought there were only 3.
There’s so many cuts I forget which bits are in which… And I have six versions on DVD…
:S
Cpt. Willard | May 27, 2008
The Ridley Scott-approved (1992, 117 minutes) Director’s Cut; prompted by the unauthorized 1990-1 workprint theatrical release and made available on VHS in 1994 (1993 in Japan), on Laserdisc in 1995 and on DVD in 1997. Significant changes from the theatrical version include: removal of Deckard’s voice-over, re-insertion of a unicorn sequence and removal of the studio-imposed happy ending.
Ridley Scott’s Final Cut (2007, 117 minutes), or the "25th Anniversary Edition", released by Warner Bros. theatrically on October 5, 2007 and subsequently released on DVD, HD DVD, and Blu-ray in December 2007 (U.K. Dec. 3; U.S. Dec. 18). This is the only version over which Ridley Scott had complete artistic control; the Director’s Cut was rushed and he was not directly involved. In conjunction with the Final Cut, extensive documentary and other materials were produced for the home video releases culminating in a five-disc "Ultimate Collector’s Edition" release by Charles de Lauzirika.
The Corinthian | May 27, 2008
The "final cut" version is the one they re-released with 8 seconds more of unseen footage so people that already have the DVD paid an extra $22 for.
Dumbasses.
Helmutt | May 27, 2008
The cinema version has a sound score thoughout the film.
The directors cut has no score and an extended lenth with deleted scenes added and some newer parts too.
The final cut has both some of the original score and deleted scenes added.
AdelleStevens | May 27, 2008
The Director’s Cut has even more craptastic, overblown, over-hyped, not nearly as good as people rant and rave on about it, material in it!
While I enjoyed the film, it’s not this nuclear bomb blammo best sci-fi film of all time that *so* many people claim it to be. Honestly, it’s pretty average.
man.yogurt | May 27, 2008
I didn’t love the director’s cut, and neither did many critics that panned it. The final cut isn’t much better, IMHO. The original was better, shorter, and slicker.
Kris | May 27, 2008