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Review: Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Reviews
Blade Runner: The Final Cut
A cohesive revision from Ridley Scott
By
BRETT MICHEL
|
November 14, 2007
BLADE RUNNER: THE FINAL CUT
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3.5
Stars
Harrison Ford
"Are you for real?” asks stripper Zhora (Joanna Cassidy), snake draped around her nearly naked frame as she’s confronted by “blade runner” Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford), a semi-retired gumshoe charged with locating and “retiring” four renegade “replicants” –– 21st-century cyborg slave laborers. Neither the dick nor the dancer (and certainly not the reptile) is entirely “human,” but that’s the clever conceit of Ridley Scott’s dystopian vision of 2019 Los Angeles: in such an ersatz locale, what is “real”? The differences between this ostensibly final revision of Scott’s influential “future noir” and his 1992 “director’s cut” are subtle yet cohesive. Ford’s voiceover from the ’82 original remains absent, and that allows his appropriately synthetic acting to clash with Rutger Hauer’s
sympathetic hyper-emoting as Christ-like replicant Roy Batty, more than ever the film’s ironically “human” archetype: man in search of his maker.
117 minutes | Coolidge Corner
Related
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Firewall
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EXTRAS! EXTRAS!
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Firewall
You could trace a history of American anxiety through the bad guys Harrison Ford has had to fight to protect his on-screen family: industrialization in The Mosquito Coast (1987), the IRA in Patriot Games (1992), Russian terrorists in Air Force One (1997), himself in What Lies Beneath (2000).
Shafted
American Gangster , Ridley Scott’s adaptation of Mark Jacobson’s New York magazine article about ’70s Harlem drug kingpin Frank Lucas, is as generic as the title.
EXTRAS! EXTRAS!
As much as I lament the continuing decline of attendance at the cineplex, it’s also easy to understand.
Review: Robin Hood (2010)
“And so the legend begins . . . ”
The future of an illusion
When I first realized that movies would, for better or worse, dominate my imagination forever, I really gave no thought to the forces at work creating these transfiguring images on a screen.
Crossword: ''Shrinkage''
A few inches have been lost.
February 2008
Monthly forecast
June 2008
Monthly forecast
March 2008
Monthly forecast
April 2008
April's planetary themes are fire and earth and a touch of water, which basically amounts to the conditions needed for pottery.
May 2008
Monthly forecast
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ARTICLES BY BRETT MICHEL
REVIEW: GIRL IN PROGRESS
| May 15, 2012
As rites of passage go, Girl in Progress is a step backward for the genre.
REVIEW: FIRST POSITION
| May 10, 2012
While not the most probing look at rising stars, Bess Kargman's documentary focuses on six aspiring contestants preparing for the prestigious Youth America Grand Prix competition (a proven entry point into the world of professional ballet) who demonstrate dazzling talent.
REVIEW: THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL
| May 03, 2012
Filled with Indian (and British) clichés, it is nonetheless a pleasant diversion that doesn't involve special effects or 3D glasses.
REVIEW: BLUE LIKE JAZZ
| April 12, 2012
A faith-based film directed by Christian recording artist Steve Taylor, adapted by Taylor and Donald Miller from the latter's 2003 memoir, this micro-budgeted indie tries to appeal to everyone by not offending anyone . . . except those who like movies.
REVIEW: JIRO DREAMS OF SUSHI
| April 04, 2012
Eighty-five-year-old Jiro, with his unchanging expression and bald pate, resembles a wizened turtle. Leaving home at age 9 and forced to fend for himself, he would become the world's greatest sushi chef.
See all articles by:
BRETT MICHEL
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