Blade Runner 2049

Blade Runner 2049 (2017)

 
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Ralph Tragni
Updated September 16, 2024

Movie Info

Year Released
Directed by
MPAA Rating
R [Restricted]
Runtime
163 mins.
Release date
October 6, 2017 (United States)
Budget (In USD)
$150,000,000
Revenue (In USD)
$276,605,984
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Movie Overview | Blade Runner 2049 (2017)

Blade Runner 2049 is a 2017 American epic neo-noir science fiction film directed by Denis Villeneuve from a screenplay by Hampton Fancher and Michael Green, based on a story by Fancher. A sequel to Blade Runner (1982), the film stars Ryan Gosling and Harrison Ford, with Ana de Armas, Sylvia Hoeks, Robin Wright, Mackenzie Davis, Dave Bautista, and Jared Leto in supporting roles. Ford and Edward James Olmos reprise their roles from the previous film as Rick Deckard and Gaff, respectively. Gosling plays K, a "blade runner" who uncovers a secret that threatens to destabilize society and the course of civilization.

Screenplay
Hampton Fancher
Michael Green

Story
Hampton Fancher
Based on
Characters from 'Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?' by Philip K. Dick

Producer
Andrew A. Kosove
Broderick Johnson
Bud Yorkin
Cynthia Sikes Yorkin

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1 review
Overall rating
 
4.8
Entertainment Factor
 
4.0(1)
Story
 
5.0(1)
Actors Performance
 
5.0(1)
Cinematography
 
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Masterpiece
(Updated: January 04, 2025)
Overall rating
 
4.8
Entertainment Factor
 
4.0
Story
 
5.0
Actors Performance
 
5.0
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5.0
Sound Track
 
5.0
 
This is one of the best sequals to a movie ever made.  It is one of the most fascinating, brutal, and visually stunning film I’d ever set my eyes upon.  My eyes were glued to the colors and the cinematography.
So yes, I’ve seen this film three times now. I just watched it the night before writing this. But I think it needed three watches for me to really grasp it, especially now that I’m older, more versed in Blade Runner in general, and with a capability to understand what it is I’m seeing. So, let’s get into the review.

Certain actors gave better performances than others; the leads were the better out of the cast, which is definitely what you want as a director. Ryan Gosling is generally an endearingly deadpan kind of personality, and so the role of an unfeeling android suited him perfectly. He seemed the same in press junkets for this film as he did in the actual role – no insult intended. Opposite him, Harrison Ford was consistently Harrison Ford. His role in this film wasn’t a big one, though the scene where he meets the clone of Rachel was quite well acted.

Jared Leto as the villain of the story was a great choice. He’s brilliant at being a character actor, especially when it comes to the evil sort. He was strange, uncomfortable to watch at a few points, and a great all around psycho with a God complex. I read that David Bowie was the original choice for Wallace, though he passed away before the filming began. That would’ve been incredible to see, but Jared Leto makes a brilliant replacement and suits his role perfectly.

The females in the film provide lots to talk about. Ana de Armas was a great choice for Joi, and got me to feel a shred of sadness when her little computer device keeping her alive got crushed near the end. Her interpretation of a computerized girlfriend made to say and do whatever her owner wants was both distant and cold, as well as warming and endearing. Sylvia Hoeks was an actress I’d never seen before. She shined in her role as Luv, a Terminator-like hitwoman servant of Wallace. She was suitably robotic, menacing, and violent, while still retaining a femininity meant to be disarming. I ended up being interested in her character, though I was cringing in disgust at most of her inventive murder techniques.  Overall, the acting from the leads was great. Some supporting characters drew me out of the story a little with less than acceptable performances, though my bar for actors is not a high as some people’s. As long as I can suspend my disbelief, I’ve seen people in real life interact in strange ways, and so acting that might be a little off isn’t a deal-breaker.
The writing is a beautiful, complex, sometimes confusing, but all-around gorgeous story.  The writing in this film utilized the central themes of Blade Runner to great effect. The ending in particular, though contentious and disliked by some, is stunningly poignant and beautiful if you understand what it means. If you don’t, I’ll tell you.
Officer K (Ryan Gosling) delivers Rick Deckard to the building his miracle daughter now inhabits. He tells him to go see her, and that “all the best memories are hers.” Harrison Ford goes in to see his daughter he’s never met. Now K is alone in the snow and we hear the familiar sound of Tears in the Rain. If you remember from the first film, that piece plays over Roy Batty’s final monologue – which happens to be about the futility of living, and that life and memories will turn to dust when one dies. K is a replicant, and everything he lived since he was constructed is gone, all his memories, real and fake, will be lost once he dies. His duty is fulfilled – he reunited Deckard with his daughter. Those two can now live in freedom, and (assuming Deckard is human and not a replicant) they can live to the full extent of human life. Also interesting to note that K, the android, lived more of a real life than Deckard’s daughter, who was his living female counterpart, trapped in a synthetic cage the entire film.
Some parts were not so elegant, however. The entire deal with the underground society of freedom-fighting replicants was a little corny and unneeded. Connecting the prostitute character to it was also unnecessary. It never really amounted to anything, and just acted as a segue to get K out of the crisis section of the story arc and back into the action after Deckard is taken and Joi is “killed.” It also acted as a final connecting point for the prostitute character (I don’t remember her name – it wasn’t said that much in the film, if at all) and ensured she had a final goal and purpose aside from being “just a prostitute.” Overall useless to the story, in my view. I guess it also gave K a group of people to belong to, as he was kind of a loner throughout the movie, though he dies at the end anyway, and so it never amounts to anything lasting. Though maybe that’s the point.
Roger Deakins is my favorite cinematographer, mostly because he’s beyond talented. He doesn’t like to use green screen that often, I’ve heard, and so he uses darkness and big, black sheets as background so that he doesn’t have to pollute his image with computer junk. What an incredible perspective and aptitude for his profession. Most people throw up a green screen and end up having to rotoscope everything out anyway, but this is the epitome of great artistic craftsmanship. Every shot in this film could be a painting, and a certain couple shots have become iconic images in both sci-fi, and filmmaking in general. Those would be the orange desert and the giant pink Joi leaning down to look at K on the balcony. 
Roger Deakins loves color in this movie, and he uses lots of it to create really outlandishly beautiful, surreal, sci-fi environments that look like something other than the real world. Part of this must be attributed to production design, but without the cinematography, none of it would have sold as perfectly as it did. I can’t express how much I love movies that have a “look.” You can make a film in the real world with real colors and environments without putting much effort into your look, but to be completely honest, I’ll get visually bored with it. If I want cold, blue-toned streets, I can walk outside and look around. If I want bland, unlit, suburban house interiors, I can open my eyes in the morning. Put something interesting on the screen for me to look at. I don’t care about your story or your acting if I’m falling asleep watching it. That’s why Roger Deakins will forever be my favorite, because even when he’s filming in a house, or a street, he lights in creatively, frames it beautifully, and keeps me awake.

Now let's talk about the music.  Holy sweet mother, the music in this film is magic. Vangelis composed the score for the original, and Hans Zimmer and Benjamin Wallfisch reimagined his auditory vision for this sequel. The music for Blade Runner has influenced so many soundtracks, songs, and anything else to do with audio since it came out in the eighties. There’s a reason for that. It immediately warps you to the dystopian, smog-filled, advertisement littered streets of Los Angeles in the future. It sets the tone and holds you for the entire film. Generally, the music in this sequel was a little more visceral and mechanical, which suits the tone of the film. this is a sequel, taking place years after the first one, and everything has gotten worse on earth. The soundtrack should represent the dirt, smog, and metal, and it does beautifully.

I always judge a film by how it makes me feel.  Blade Runner 2049 is a film I would watch many times over, and that’s a rare thing for me. I can count on one hand the movies I’d enjoy watching more than once. There’s very few, but this film, as well as the first one, are both on that exclusive list.
The visuals, music, and story all combine to create an experience I find myself wanting to have multiple times. It’s a piece of film art, not made for the casual audience, but rather for one who enjoys the art of filmmaking and the art of humanity.
It’s dystopian, which some people hate in general, but it also takes it’s time and immerses you in its world. For a casual viewer that wants a fast, entertaining jolt, they’ll find themselves hating this movie. But for anyone who enjoyed the first Balde Runner movie, they will love this film.  You should watch the first one first and then this right after!

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