For the Christmas period, Google YouTube has briefly added both
Bladerunner (1982 film, a Director's cut) and
Bladerunner 2049 (2017 film) to its free to Internet view with ads listing that are considered by many as among the greatest futuristic science fiction films ever that I strongly agree with. Tuesday watched the former, then yesterday the sequel. Had watched both in past on TV a couple times years ago, but had missed and not paid attention to key parts, so never clearly understood what was going on until now. One of most cleverly scripted film puzzles ever. Even after this watch, had to perform some web searches for more clarity.
The cinephotography is utterly incredible in both films. Note, I was born in downtown Los Angeles. In hindsight, the unrealistic film dates are shortcomings. Instead of 2019 and 2049 would have been more believable if 2119 and 2149. So will highly recommend other SF members watch these films again because YouTube is certain to remove them from the free list soon.
Still had some loose ends like what happened to K after Decker was captured as I didn't know where the others came from. Lots of subtle scenes with things happening, making it a well crafted puzzle. So web searched and found this, "
This underground organization, led by a one-eyed woman named Freysa, had been tracking K using a tracker planted in his jacket by the replicant prostitute Mariette."
Another difficult puzzle that was clarified after watching with a web search shows how well the script was put together:
Niander Wallace, the evil replicant master, didn't know Dr. Ana Stelline was Deckard's daughter, because the Replicant Resistance successfully hid her identity by creating a fake identity (a deceased male child) and placing her in deep quarantine, while Wallace was focused on finding the child, not the creator of the "miracle" memory, and Ana's own unique physiology/quarantine made her seem irrelevant to the search for a living, hidden child who could reproduce. Here's a breakdown of why Wallace, (who wanted to flood the universe with trillions of his replicants then kill or enslave any natural humans
,) missed the connection:
- The Diversion Tactic: The Resistance changed the birth records of Ana (the girl) to show she died and that a male child with identical DNA was born and also died. This sent Wallace and his forces chasing a ghost.
- Wallace's Goal: Wallace wanted to find the child to unlock the secret to replicant reproduction for his empire. He was looking for a living child who could reproduce, not the memory architect.
- Ana's Seclusion: Ana was isolated in a sterile lab due to a supposed "immune deficiency" (maybe a cover for her unique status) and worked as a subcontractor for Wallace, creating memories, not as a known replicant revolutionary.
- K's Realization: It was only K, after experiencing Ana's real memory and realizing it was her memory, who connected the dots: the creator of the core memory (Ana) must be the child itself.
- Wallace's Blind Spot: Wallace saw Ana as a valuable tool (a memory designer) but didn't suspect this seemingly fragile, confined woman was the biological miracle he sought, especially with the fake records in play.
In essence, the Resistance successfully made Ana invisible to Wallace by burying her true identity under layers of deception and by making her seem like a non-factor, allowing her to survive and create memories that would eventually lead to Deckard. The first clue in the movie was right at the beginning when K retired (killed) Sapper on the farm and noticed something weird under the dead tree. At the film end, K, the movie's main character, dies from gunshot wounds from the evil Luv, after delivering Decker to his daughter.