Monday, August 19, 2019
Blade Runner as a Classic Film Noir and a Science Fiction Film Essay
Blade Runner as a Classic Film Noir and a Science Fiction Film         Blade Runner, a well known 80ââ¬â¢s science-fiction film, begins in 2019,     set in the industrial city of L.A., the scene lit only by the many     neon lights and molten guisers. We draw in from a panoramic long shot     to Deckard, ââ¬Ëex-cop, ex-killer, ex-blade-runnerââ¬â¢, who is at the heart     of this film.       Blade Runner is, definitively, a science fiction film, but the traits     of Film Noir are the bread and butter, bringing it the dark, desperate     atmosphere that is the very beauty of the film. Ridley Scott plants     shrapnels of Film Noir throughout, from the subtle (cigars), to the     downright blatant (the washed-up cop of main man).       The genre itself developed in the post-war era, thriving upon the     depression that had settled upon the world, and the new technology.     The latter meant that scenes could be filmed outside of a studio, and     new effects could be created with lighting. However, though the new     technology was there, the after-math of the war meant that this     equipment was often quite rare, leading to the lower budget films     opting for stark, shadowy sets rather than miss out on the technology.     But this type of setting fitted perfectly into the style of Film Noir     anyway, as the feeling of the genre was reflecting the current mood,     which was far from happy.       The war had left some blind, and everyone else with brand new eyes,     people could no longer see everything at face value, or to put it     bluntly, the value of face had slumped. The world after war was no     place for the frilly and meaningless, and Hollywood, as the capital of     frill, had to come up with something new, and refreshingly...              ...th Deckard ââ¬Ëwhy am I called back?     Why am I doing this?ââ¬â¢       and the replicants can ask, ââ¬Ëwhy am I a replicant, why am I like     this?ââ¬â¢       The answer of course, the bitter sentiment of Film Noir, ââ¬Ëfor no     reason at all.ââ¬â¢ The viewer watches Blade Runnerââ¬â¢s characters like fish     in a tank, with pity because they are trapped, and with resignation,     because theyââ¬â¢ll never, really, get out.        The fusion of Sci-Fi and Film Noir works perfectly in Blade Runner,     using the past to paint a (dismal) picture of the future. The     combination was one of the first of itââ¬â¢s kind, pulling two genres     together to work in perfect unison. And this combination of Sci-Fi and     Film Noir will continue to work because the future is unseen, and     therefore to us, quite scary, and, as in typical Film Noir fashion,     thereââ¬â¢s always ââ¬Ësomething BAD out thereâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬â¢                        
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