Sunday, March 24, 2019

Comparing Ridley Scotts Blade Runner and Philip K. Dicks Do Androids

Comparing Ridley Scotts Blade Runner and Philip K. Dicks Do Androids ambitiousness of Electric Sheep? How do we know that we are human and, if we are human, what does it ungenerous to be human? These two philosophical inquiries are explored in abundant depth in Ridley Scotts motion picture Blade Runner, and of course the school text of Philip K. Dicks wonderful novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? on which the film is based. Most would agree that these themes exist in the novel, moreover a handful of critics and academics have some doubt as to their presence in the film. If unrivaled examines both the film and the text, one will realize that they both shell out to support the same motifs, but do so in contrasting fashions. Many critics argue that the awesome visuals overwhelm the contents of the plot and theme, but I argue that the visuals depicting Los Angeles in the year 2019 help to overture the themes. Viewers often miss the human side of the story or lack there o f, and may object to the strong visuals for this reason. It can be argued that the visuals serve to portray a dehumanized world where only crafty signs of humanitys existence are dispersed throughout, where existentialist notions such as what be human is and what being human means are not good answered.To briefly summarize the plot, Harrison Ford stars as Rick Deckard, a bull from the future (blade runner) who tracks down and veils replicants, which are basic tout ensembley artificially created human beings. In other films, they are usually referred to as androids. Specifically, his assignment is to find and kill five replicants who have escaped from an off-world colony and come to earth. The most evoke parts of Blade Runner are Deckards interactions with the various replicants, especially Ra... ... too feel sympathy for Deckard. The film illustrates that both are in a struggle to become more human, Deckard because he is slowly losing his humanity, and the androids because t hey have neer had the experience of humanity, but desire it. This sympathy for both entities further reinforces the dishonor that Scott is creating between the android and the human. Because the film does this so effectively, we can easily supplicate the question, what makes a human more deserving of life than an android?Essentially, when all is said and done, Blade Runner is really a film almost questions, questions that we should ask ourselves of humanity. What is a human? What does it mean to be human? Do humans have more of a right to life than replicants? keep up humans and androids become the same thing? It is not so of import that one answers these questions, but that he or she asks them.

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