Blade Runner DVD/ A,A-
US/1982/Color/Widescreen Anamorphic
2.35:1/DD,Surround/117 minutes/Directed by Ridley Scott/Starring Harrison Ford, Rutger
Hauer/Warner/36 Chaps/$24.95
The so-called Directors Cut
of Blade Runner is an appropriate choice for the vanguard of DVD releases. For fans
of this stunning film, seeing Blade Runner in the latest optical format is a great
thrill. Blade Runner still defines Scifi noir. Director Ridley Scott combines an excellent
story, consummate camera techniques and spectacular production design to deliver a seminal
cinema treat that still leaves every similar film after it wanting.
Blade Runners depiction of
a future Los Angeles is dark and exciting, a synthesis of cyber punk, junk and corporate
advertising . The vision is dominated by International business interests, foremost
the Tyrell Corporation, the manufacturer/designer of androids called Replicants. A
group of the artificially created intelligent machines escape from an off-planet work
colony to seek out their fate on Earth and to come to terms with their maker, Tyrell. Rick
Deckard is a blade runner, a detective who specializes in the pursuit of runaway
Replicants. Deckard alternates between pursuer and pursued in a series of beautifully
filmed chases. Along the way Deckard becomes involved with an advanced female
Replicant model and his own origins are called into question, making the chase a journey
of discovery as well.
The Directors
Cut of Blade Runner does not include the voice-over narration by Harrison
Fords Deckard. Theres always been great controversy surrounding the classic
noir narration. Many critics feel it takes away from the magnificent visual focus of the
film and the narration itself is superfluous. Others complain that Fords delivery is
so devoid of emotion that it appears he was sleepwalking through the dubbing, which was
added later. I still think the narration works beautifully and even enhances the noir
feeling, but at the same time I can run delightedly with this perhaps leaner vision.
Harrison Ford is a great choice
for Deckard. Ford is one of our few movie stars who could have shined during the heyday of
the Hollywood studio system. He brings that magic to the role of the blade runner.
Theres a fatalistic quality to his Deckard, a world weariness and cynicism that
captures the character to perfection. Rutger Hauer, as Roy Batty, the Replicant runaways
leader, is brilliantly impenetrable and unstoppable, yet, at the crucial moment is
pathetically vulnerable. Sean Young is an icy vision of Replicant perfection as the
object of Deckards desire.
Scotts superb
direction, the intelligent and mysterious script by David Peoples and Hampton Fancher, the
photography of Jordan Cronenwelth, Laurence Pauls set designs, Douglas
Trumbulls special effects, and the other worldly score by Vangelis add up to
brilliant entertainment.
The Blade Runner DVD is a
new software reference for this film. DVD and component output in particular do wonders
for the grainy transfer of this atmospheric Ridley Scott vision. Annoying NTSC artifacts
are exacerbated by the size of my projection screen(six feet by eleven feet 1.85:1)
screen. Since DVD is a component delivery system, moire, a plague of pictures filled with
horizontal lines or plaid patterns, is virtually absent. You can compare some scenes in
Blade Runner to judge for yourself how revealing your individual system. On chapter 7,
Deckard approaches the Tyrell headquarters building in hover craft. The building is
a mass of horizontal detail. On laser, the building is constantly jittering as the comb
filter attempts to resolve the separate color and black and white information into one
image. The same scene on DVD is rock steady. DVD potentially can deliver more accurate and
stable color. Check out the green and red LEDs in the background of Deckards
vehicle. The clarity and resolve of DVD creates a more three dimensional picture. Look
through the gap in the Tyrell building to the faint cityscape behind. DVD adds a new depth
to this picture. Of course, these benefits will most certainly be dependent to some degree
on the quality of the DVD transfer.
Blade Runner still
exhibits grain in either DVD or laser since that is an product of the source
material and the artistic vision. The Anamorphic transfer provided for monitors capable of
expanding the image is a major plus is delivering excellent detail in this DVD. One
caveat: Fail to turn the sharpness control all the way down on this transfer and you will
be sorely disappointed. The extra information provided by DVD will translate into extra
noise and exaggerated edge enhancement. |