Blade Runner
| Name | Blade Runner |
| Image | ![]() |
| Alt | Collage of a man holding a gun, a woman holding a cigarette, and a futuristic city-scape. |
| Caption | Theatrical release poster by John Alvin |
| Director | Ridley Scott |
| Producer | Michael Deeley |
| Screenplay | |
| Starring | |
| Music | Vangelis |
| Cinematography | Jordan Cronenweth |
| Editing | Marsha Nakashima |
| Studio | |
| Distributor | Warner Bros. (worldwide) Shaw Brothers (Hong Kong) |
| Released | 1982-06-25-United States-1982-12-22-Hong Kong |
| Runtime | 117 minutes |
| Country | United States Hong Kong |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $30 million |
| Gross | $41.8 million |
Blade Runner is a 1982 science fiction film directed by Ridley Scott from a screenplay by Hampton Fancher and David Peoples. Starring Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Sean Young, and Edward James Olmos, it is an adaptation of Philip K. Dick's 1968 novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? The film is set in a dystopian future Los Angeles of 2019, in which synthetic humans known as replicants are bio-engineered by the powerful Tyrell Corporation to work on space colonies. When a fugitive group of advanced replicants led by Roy Batty (Hauer) escapes back to Earth, former cop Rick Deckard (Ford) reluctantly agrees to hunt them down.
Blade Runner initially underperformed in North American theaters and polarized critics; some praised its thematic complexity and visuals, while others critiqued its slow pacing and lack of action. The film's soundtrack, composed by Vangelis, was nominated in 1982 for a BAFTA and a Golden Globe as best original score. Blade Runner later became a cult film, and has since come to be regarded as one of the greatest science fiction films. Hailed for its production design depicting a high-tech but decaying future, the film is often regarded as both a leading example of neo-noir cinema and a foundational work of the cyberpunk genre. It has influenced many science fiction films, video games, anime, and television series. It also brought the work of Dick to Hollywood's attention and led to several film adaptations of his works. In 1993, it was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress.
Seven different versions of Blade Runner exist as a result of controversial changes requested by studio executives. A director's cut was released in 1992 after a strong response to test screenings of a workprint. This, in conjunction with the film's popularity as a video rental, made it one of the earliest films to be released on DVD. In 2007, Warner Bros. released The Final Cut, a 25th-anniversary digitally remastered version; this is the only version over which Scott retained artistic control.
The film is the first of the franchise of the same name. A sequel, titled Blade Runner 2049, was released in 2017 alongside a trilogy of short films covering the thirty-year span between the two films' settings. The anime series Blade Runner: Black Lotus was released in 2021.
Plot
In 2019 Los Angeles, former police officer Rick Deckard is detained by Officer Gaff, who likes to make origami figures, and is brought to his former supervisor, Bryant. Deckard, whose job as a "blade runner" was to track down bioengineered humanoids known as replicants and terminally "retire" them, is informed that four replicants are on Earth illegally. Deckard begins to leave, but Bryant makes veiled threats and Deckard stays. The two watch a video of a blade runner named Holden administering the Voight-Kampff test, which is designed to distinguish replicants from humans based on their emotional responses to questions. The test subject, Leon, shoots Holden on the second question. Bryant wants Deckard to retire Leon and three other Nexus-6 replicants: Roy Batty, Zhora, and Pris.
Bryant has Deckard meet with the CEO of the company that creates the replicants, Eldon Tyrell, so he can administer the V-K test on a Nexus-6 to see if it works on them. Tyrell expresses his interest in seeing the test fail first and asks him to administer it on his assistant Rachael. After a much longer than standard test, Deckard concludes privately to Tyrell that Rachael is a replicant who believes she is human. Tyrell explains that she is an experiment who has been given false memories to provide an "emotional cushion", and that she has no knowledge of her true nature.
In searching Leon's hotel room, Deckard finds photos and a scale from the skin of an animal, which is later identified as a synthetic snake scale. Deckard returns to his apartment, where Rachael is waiting. She tries to prove her humanity by showing him a family photo, but Deckard reveals that her memories are implants from Tyrell's niece, and she leaves in tears.
Replicants Roy and Leon meanwhile investigate a replicant eye-manufacturing laboratory and learn of J. F. Sebastian, a gifted genetic designer who works closely with Tyrell. Pris locates Sebastian and manipulates him to gain his trust.
A photograph from Leon's apartment and the snake scale lead Deckard to a strip club, where Zhora works. After a confrontation and chase, Deckard kills Zhora. Bryant also orders him to retire Rachael, who has disappeared from the Tyrell Corporation. Deckard spots Rachael in a crowd, but he is ambushed by Leon, who knocks the gun out of Deckard's hand and beats him. As Leon is about to kill Deckard, Rachael saves him by using Deckard's gun to kill Leon. They return to Deckard's apartment and, during a discussion, he promises not to track her down. As Rachael abruptly tries to leave, Deckard restrains her and forces her to kiss him, and she ultimately relents. Deckard leaves Rachael at his apartment and departs to search for the remaining replicants.
Roy arrives at Sebastian's apartment and tells Pris that the other replicants are dead. Sebastian reveals that because of a genetic premature aging disorder, his life will be cut short, like the replicants that were built with a four-year lifespan. Roy uses Sebastian to gain entrance to Tyrell's penthouse. He demands more life from his maker, which Tyrell says is impossible. Roy confesses that he has done "questionable things" but Tyrell dismisses this, praising Roy's advanced design and accomplishments in his short life. Roy kisses Tyrell and then kills him by crushing his eyes and skull. Sebastian tries to flee and is later reported dead.
At Sebastian's apartment, Deckard is ambushed by Pris, but he kills her as Roy returns. Roy's body begins to fail as the end of his lifespan nears. He chases Deckard through the building and onto the roof. Deckard tries to jump onto another roof but is left hanging from the edge. Roy makes the jump with ease and, as Deckard's grip loosens, Roy hoists him onto the roof to save him. Before Roy dies, he laments that his memories "will be lost in time, like tears in rain". Gaff arrives to congratulate Deckard, also reminding him that Rachael will not live, but "then again, who does?" Deckard returns to his apartment to retrieve Rachael. While escorting her to the elevator, he notices a small origami unicorn on the floor. He recalls Gaff's words and departs with Rachael.
Cast
Production
Pre-production and script

Interest in adapting Philip K. Dick's novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? developed shortly after its 1968 publication. Director Martin Scorsese was interested in filming the novel, but never optioned it. Producer Herb Jaffe optioned it in the early 1970s, but Dick was unimpressed with the screenplay written by Herb's son Robert, saying, "Jaffe's screenplay was so terribly done ... Robert flew down to Santa Ana to speak with me about the project. And the first thing I said to him when he got off the plane was, 'Shall I beat you up here at the airport, or shall I beat you up back at my apartment?
The screenplay by Hampton Fancher was optioned in 1977. Producer Michael Deeley became interested in Fancher's draft and convinced director Ridley Scott to film it. Scott had previously declined the project but, after leaving the slow production of Dune, wanted a faster-paced project to take his mind off his older brother's recent death. He joined the project on February 21, 1980, and managed to push up the promised Filmways financing from US$13 million to $15 million. Fancher's script focused more on environmental issues and less on issues of humanity and religion, which are prominent in the novel, and Scott wanted changes. Fancher found a cinema treatment by William S. Burroughs for Alan E. Nourse's novel The Bladerunner (1974), titled Blade Runner (a movie). Scott liked the name, so Deeley obtained the rights to the titles.
Dick publicly expressed distaste with Fancher's early screenplay in the LA press, calling the result a "terrible script. Corny, extremely maladroit throughout". He complained that it "overrelied on the old cliché-ridden Chandleresque figure" and that Fancher had "concentrated on a lurid collision between human and android. The whole skein of the book had been simplified into a ‘you or me’ type of thing; only one of us, this human or an android, will survive". Eventually, Scott hired David Peoples to rewrite the script and Fancher left the job over the issue on December 21, 1980, although he later returned to contribute additional rewrites. Dick was especially enthusiastic about the 1981 rewrite of Fancher's draft by Peoples:
This was the February 1981 version of the script, and it immediately struck me that all the previous problems had been resolved. Peoples had done a first-class piece of work. He’d smoothed out the dialogue and reworked certain problems in some of the scenes. And the whole idea of the replicants being infused with progeria, or premature aging, was a new twist. By inserting this angle, by dropping Rachael’s suicide, by rethinking the final Batty/Deckard confrontation as a moving, wonderful sequence—and by any other number of touch-ups—Peoples transformed the Blade Runner screenplay into a beautiful, symmetrical reinforcement of my original work.
Peoples later suggested that his contributions were oversold, stating that Scott's "ideas and thrust were the motive force of the film" and noting that Scott was "totally involved on every level of scripting." He also praised an early script by Fancher, and credited actors Harrison Ford and Rutger Hauer with offering ideas about dialogue. Hauer rewrote his character's "tears in rain" speech himself and presented the words to Scott on set prior to filming.
Having invested more than $2.5 million in pre-production, as the date of commencement of principal photography neared, Filmways withdrew financial backing. In ten days Deeley had secured $21.5 million in financing through a three-way deal between the Ladd Company (through Warner Bros.), the Hong Kong-based producer Sir Run Run Shaw and Tandem Productions.
Casting
List of Blade Runner charactersList of Blade Runner characters
Casting the film proved troublesome, particularly for the lead role of Deckard. Screenwriter Hampton Fancher envisioned Robert Mitchum as Deckard and wrote the character's dialogue with Mitchum in mind. According to production documents, several actors were considered for the role, including Gene Hackman, Sean Connery, Jack Nicholson, Paul Newman, Clint Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Peter Falk, Nick Nolte, Al Pacino and Burt Reynolds. Director Ridley Scott and the film's producers spent months meeting and discussing the role with Dustin Hoffman, who eventually departed over differences in vision. Harrison Ford was ultimately chosen for several reasons, including his performance in the Star Wars films, Ford's interest in the Blade Runner story, and discussions with Steven Spielberg, who was finishing Raiders of the Lost Ark at the time and strongly praised Ford's work in the film. Following his success in those two films, Ford was looking for a role with dramatic depth.
Rutger Hauer was cast as Roy Batty, the violent yet thoughtful leader of the replicants. Scott cast Hauer without having met him, based on his performances in Paul Verhoeven's movies that Scott had seen (Katie Tippel, Soldier of Orange, and Turkish Delight). Hauer's portrayal of Batty was regarded by Philip K. Dick as "the perfect Batty – cold, Aryan, flawless". Of the many films Hauer made, Blade Runner was his favorite. In a live chat in 2001, he said "Blade Runner needs no explanation. It just . All of the best. There is nothing like it. To be part of a real which changed the world's thinking. It's awesome."
Blade Runner used a number of then-lesser-known actors: Sean Young portrays Rachael, an experimental replicant implanted with the memories of Tyrell's niece, causing her to believe she is human; Nina Axelrod auditioned for the role. Fancher originally wrote the role for his then girlfriend Barbara Hershey. Daryl Hannah portrays Pris, a "basic pleasure model" replicant; Stacey Nelkin auditioned for the role, but was given another part in the film, which was ultimately cut before filming. Debbie Harry turned down the role of Pris. Casting Pris and Rachael was challenging, requiring several screen tests with Morgan Paull playing the role of Deckard. Paull was cast as Deckard's fellow bounty hunter Holden based on his performances in the tests. Brion James portrays Leon Kowalski, a combat and laborer replicant, and Joanna Cassidy portrays Zhora, an assassin replicant.
Edward James Olmos portrays Gaff. Olmos drew on diverse ethnic sources to help create the fictional "Cityspeak" language his character uses in the film. His initial address to Deckard at the noodle bar is partly in Hungarian and means, "Horse dick bullshit! No way. You are the Blade ... Blade Runner." M. Emmet Walsh portrays Captain Bryant, a rumpled, hard-drinking and underhanded police veteran typical of the film noir genre. Joe Turkel portrays Dr. Eldon Tyrell, a corporate mogul who built an empire on genetically manipulated humanoid slaves. William Sanderson was cast as J. F. Sebastian, a quiet and lonely genius who provides a compassionate yet compliant portrait of humanity. J. F. sympathizes with the replicants, whom he sees as companions, and he shares their shorter lifespan due to his rapid aging disease. Joe Pantoliano had earlier been considered for the role. James Hong portrays Hannibal Chew, an elderly geneticist specializing in synthetic eyes, and Hy Pyke portrayed the sleazy bar owner Taffey Lewis – in a single take, something almost unheard-of with Scott, whose drive for perfection resulted at times in double-digit takes.
Production
Principal photography of Blade Runner began on March 9, 1981, and ended four months later. The Bradbury Building in downtown Los Angeles served as a filming location, and a Warner Bros. backlot housed the 2019 Los Angeles street sets. Other locations included the Ennis-Brown House and the 2nd Street Tunnel. Test screenings resulted in several changes, including adding a voice-over, a happy ending, and the removal of a Holden hospital scene. The relationship between the filmmakers and the investors was difficult, which culminated in Deeley and Scott being fired but still working on the film. Crew members created T-shirts during filming saying, "Yes Guv'nor, My Ass" that mocked Scott's unfavorable comparison of U.S. and British crews; Scott responded with a T-shirt of his own, "Xenophobia Sucks", making the incident known as the T-shirt war.
In 1992, Ford revealed, "Blade Runner is not one of my favorite films. I tangled with Ridley." Apart from friction with the director, Ford also disliked the voiceovers: "When we started shooting it had been tacitly agreed that the version of the film that we had agreed upon was the version without voiceover narration. It was a nightmare. I thought that the film had worked without the narration. But now I was stuck re-creating that narration. And I was obliged to do the voiceovers for people that did not represent the director's interests." "I went kicking and screaming to the studio to record it." The narration monologs were written by an uncredited Roland Kibbee.
In 2006, Scott was asked "Who's the biggest pain in the arse you've ever worked with?" He replied: "It's got to be Harrison ... he'll forgive me because now I get on with him. Now he's become charming. But he knows a lot, that's the problem. When we worked together it was my first film up and I was the new kid on the block. But we made a good movie." Ford said of Scott in 2000: "I admire his work. We had a bad patch there, and I'm over it." In 2006 Ford reflected on the production of the film saying: "What I remember more than anything else when I see Blade Runner is not the 50 nights of shooting in the rain, but the voiceover ... I was still obliged to work for these clowns that came in writing one bad voiceover after another." Ridley Scott confirmed in the summer 2007 issue of Total Film that Harrison Ford contributed to the Blade Runner Special Edition DVD, and had already recorded his interviews. "Harrison's fully on board", said Scott.
Although Dick died shortly before the film's release, he was pleased with a 20-minute special effects test reel that was screened for him when he was invited to the studio. Despite his well-known skepticism of Hollywood in principle, Dick enthused to Scott that the world created for the film looked exactly as he had imagined it. He said, "I saw a segment of Douglas Trumbull's special effects for Blade Runner on the KNBC news. I recognized it immediately. It was my own interior world. They caught it perfectly." He also approved of the film's final script, saying: "After I finished reading the screenplay, I got the novel out and looked through it. The two reinforce each other so that someone who started with the novel would enjoy the movie and someone who started with the movie would enjoy the novel." The motion picture was dedicated to Dick.
Design
Scott credits Edward Hopper's painting Nighthawks and the French science fiction comics magazine Métal Hurlant, to which the artist Jean "Moebius" Giraud contributed, as stylistic mood sources. He also drew on the landscape of "Hong Kong on a very bad day" and the industrial landscape of his one-time home in northeast England. The visual style of the movie is influenced by the work of futurist Italian architect Antonio Sant'Elia. Scott hired Syd Mead as his concept artist; like Scott, he was influenced by Métal Hurlant. Moebius was offered the opportunity to assist in the pre-production of Blade Runner, but he declined so that he could work on René Laloux's animated film Les Maîtres du temps – a decision that he later regretted. Production designer Lawrence G. Paull and art director David Snyder realized Scott's and Mead's sketches. Douglas Trumbull and Richard Yuricich supervised the special effects for the film, and Mark Stetson served as chief model maker.
Blade Runner has numerous similarities to Fritz Lang's Metropolis, including a built-up urban environment, in which the wealthy literally live above the workers, dominated by a huge building – the Stadtkrone Tower in Metropolis and the Tyrell Building in Blade Runner. Special effects supervisor David Dryer used stills from Metropolis when lining up Blade Runners miniature building shots.
The extended end scene in the original theatrical release shows Rachael and Deckard traveling into daylight with pastoral aerial shots filmed by director Stanley Kubrick. Ridley Scott contacted Kubrick about using some of his surplus helicopter aerial photography from The Shining.
Spinner
Spinner (Blade Runner)Spinner (Blade Runner)
"Spinner" is the generic term for the fictional flying cars used in the film. A spinner can be driven as a ground-based vehicle, and take off vertically, hover, and cruise much like vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) aircraft. They are used extensively by the police as patrol cars, and wealthy people can also acquire spinner licenses. The vehicle was conceived and designed by Syd Mead who described the spinner as an aerodyne – a vehicle which directs air downward to create lift, though press kits for the film stated that the spinner was propelled by three engines: "conventional internal combustion, jet, and anti-gravity". A spinner is on permanent exhibit at the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame in Seattle, Washington. Mead's conceptual drawings were transformed into 25 vehicles by automobile customizer Gene Winfield; at least two were working ground vehicles, while others were light-weight mockups for crane shots and set decoration for street shots. Two of them ended up at Disney World in Orlando, Florida, but were later destroyed, and a few others remain in private collections.
Voight-Kampff machine
The Voight-Kampff machine is a fictional interrogation tool originating from the novel, in which it is spelled "Voigt-Kampff". It is a polygraph-like machine that is used by blade runners to determine whether an individual is a replicant by measuring bodily functions such as respiration, blush response, heart rate, and eye movement in response to questions dealing with empathy. In real life, a magazine created an approximation of the test using questions and used it in jest on the candidates in the 2003 election for Mayor of San Francisco, concluding that at least half of them, including future Governor Gavin Newsom, would be classified as replicants.
Music
Blade Runner (soundtrack)Blade Runner (soundtrack)
The Blade Runner soundtrack by Vangelis is a dark melodic combination of classic composition and futuristic synthesizers which mirrors the film noir retro-future envisioned by Scott. Vangelis, fresh from his Academy Award-winning score for Chariots of Fire, composed and performed the music on his synthesizers. He also made use of various chimes and the vocals of collaborator Demis Roussos. Another memorable sound is the tenor sax solo "Love Theme" by British saxophonist Dick Morrissey, who performed on many of Vangelis's albums. Ridley Scott also used "Memories of Green" from the Vangelis album See You Later, an orchestral version of which Scott would later use in his film Someone to Watch Over Me.
Along with Vangelis's compositions and ambient textures, the film's soundscape also features a track by the Japanese ensemble Nipponia – "Ogi no Mato" or "The Folding Fan as a Target" from the Nonesuch Records release Traditional Vocal and Instrumental Music – and a track by harpist Gail Laughton from "Harps of the Ancient Temples" on Laurel Records.
Despite being well received by fans and critically acclaimed and nominated in 1982 for a BAFTA and a Golden Globe as best original score, and the promise of a soundtrack album from Polydor Records in the end titles of the film, the release of the official soundtrack recording was delayed for over a decade. There are two official releases of the music from Blade Runner. In light of the lack of a release of an album, the New American Orchestra recorded an orchestral adaptation in 1982 which bore little resemblance to the original. Some of the film tracks would, in 1989, surface on the compilation Vangelis: Themes, but not until the 1992 release of the Director's Cut version would a substantial amount of the film's score see commercial release.
These delays and poor reproductions led to the production of many bootleg recordings over the years. A bootleg tape surfaced in 1982 at science fiction conventions and became popular given the delay of an official release of the original recordings, and in 1993 "Off World Music, Ltd" created a bootleg CD that would prove more comprehensive than Vangelis' official CD in 1994. A set with three CDs of Blade Runner-related Vangelis music was released in 2007. Titled Blade Runner Trilogy, the first disc contains the same tracks as the 1994 official soundtrack release, the second features previously unreleased music from the film, and the third disc is all newly composed music from Vangelis, inspired by, and in the spirit of the film.
Special effects
The film's special effects are generally recognized to be among the best in the genre, using the available (non-digital) technology to the fullest. Special effects engineers who worked on the film are often praised for the innovative technology they used to produce and design certain aspects of those visuals. In addition to matte paintings and models, the techniques employed included multipass exposures. In some scenes, the set was lit, shot, the film rewound, and then rerecorded over with different lighting. In some cases this was done 16 times in all. The cameras were frequently motion controlled using computers. Many effects used techniques which had been developed during the production of Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Release
Theatrical run
Blade Runner was released in 1,290 theaters on June 25, 1982. That date was chosen by producer Alan Ladd Jr. because his previous highest-grossing films (Star Wars and Alien) had a similar opening date (May 25) in 1977 and 1979, making the 25th of the month his "lucky day". Blade Runner grossed reasonably good ticket sales in its opening weekend, earning $6.1 million during its first weekend in theaters. The film was released close to other major science-fiction and fantasy releases such as The Thing, Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, Conan the Barbarian and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, which affected its commercial success.
Alternative versions and home media
Versions of Blade RunnerVersions of Blade Runner
Several versions of Blade Runner have been shown. The original workprint version (1982, 113 minutes) was shown for audience test previews in Denver and Dallas in March 1982. Negative responses to the previews led to the modifications resulting in the U.S. theatrical version. The workprint was shown as a director's cut without Scott's approval at the Los Angeles Fairfax Theater in May 1990, at an AMPAS showing in April 1991, and in September and October 1991 at the Los Angeles Nuart Theatre and the San Francisco Castro Theatre. Positive responses pushed the studio to approve work on an official director's cut. A San Diego sneak preview was shown once, in May 1982; it was almost identical to the U.S. theatrical version but contained three extra scenes not shown in any other version, including the 2007 final cut.
Two versions were shown in the film's 1982 theatrical release: the U.S. theatrical version (117 minutes), known as the original version or Domestic Cut (released on Betamax, CED Videodisc and VHS in 1983, and on LaserDisc in 1987), and the International Cut (117 minutes), also known as the "Criterion Edition" or "uncut version", which included more violent action scenes than the U.S. version. Although initially unavailable in the U.S. and distributed in Europe and Asia via theatrical and local Warner Home Video releases, the International Cut was later released on VHS and The Criterion Collection Laserdisc in North America, and re-released in 1992 as a "10th Anniversary Edition".
Ridley Scott's Director's Cut (1992, 116 minutes) had significant changes from the theatrical version including the removal of Deckard's voice-over, the re-insertion of a sequence in which Deckard dreams of a unicorn, and the removal of the studio-imposed happy ending. Scott provided extensive notes and consultation to Warner Bros. through film preservationist Michael Arick, who was put in charge of creating the Director's Cut.
It is often falsely claimed that the unicorn sequence was an outtake from Ridley Scott's follow-up film Legend which also features unicorns, but it was in fact shot for Blade Runner as "additional photography" by second unit cinematographer Brian Tufano.
Scott's definitive The Final Cut (2007, 117 minutes) was released by Warner Bros. theatrically on October 5, 2007, and subsequently released on DVD, HD DVD, and Blu-ray Disc in December 2007. This is the only version over which Scott had complete artistic and editorial control. It was released on Ultra HD Blu-ray on September 5, 2017.
Reception
Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an 89% approval rating based on 132 reviews, with an average rating of 8.50/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "Misunderstood when it first hit theaters, the influence of Ridley Scott's mysterious, neo-noir Blade Runner has deepened with time. A visually remarkable, achingly human sci-fi masterpiece." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 84 out of 100 based on 15 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".
Initial reactions among film critics were mixed. Some wrote that the plot took a back seat to the film's special effects and did not fit the studio's marketing as an action and adventure film. Others acclaimed its complexity and predicted it would stand the test of time. Negative criticism in the United States cited its slow pace. Sheila Benson from the Los Angeles Times called it "Blade Crawler", and Pat Berman in The State and Columbia Record described it as "science fiction pornography". Pauline Kael praised Blade Runner as worthy of a place in film history for its distinctive sci-fi vision, yet criticized the film's lack of development in "human terms". Ares magazine said, "Misunderstood by audiences and critics alike, it is by far the best science fiction film of the year."
Cultural analysis
Academics began analyzing the film almost as soon as it was released. One of the first books on the film was Paul M. Sammon's Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner (1996), which dissects all the details concerning the film's production. He was followed by Scott Bukatman's Blade Runner and other books and academic articles. In Postmodern Metanarratives: Blade Runner and Literature in the Age of Image, Décio Torres Cruz analyzes the philosophical and psychological issues and the literary influences in Blade Runner. He examines the film's cyberpunk and dystopic elements by establishing a link between the Biblical, classical and modern traditions and the postmodern aspects in the film's collage of several literary texts.
The boom in home video formats helped establish a growing cult around the film, which scholars have dissected for its dystopic aspects, questions regarding "authentic" humanity, ecofeminist aspects and use of conventions from multiple genres. Popular culture began to reassess its impact as a classic several years after it was released. Roger Ebert praised the visuals of both the original and the Director's Cut and recommended it for that reason; however, he found the human story clichéd and a little thin. He later added The Final Cut to his "Great Movies" list. Critic Chris Rodley and Janet Maslin theorized that Blade Runner changed cinematic and cultural discourse through its image repertoire and subsequent influence on films. In 2012, Time film critic Richard Corliss surgically analyzed the durability, complexity, screenplay, sets and production dynamics from a personal, three-decade perspective. Denis Villeneuve, who directed the sequel, Blade Runner 2049, cites the film as a huge influence for him and many others.
It has also been noted for its postmodernist approach and that it contributes to the historical development of modern dystopia in film. Furthermore, the futuristic version of Los Angeles has been widely discussed by academics, with some comparing it to Milton's descriptions of hell in Paradise Lost. In a 2019 retrospective, the BBC argued that elements of the film's socio-political themes remained prescient in the real year of the film's setting, such as its depiction of climate change. From a more philosophical perspective, Alison Landsberg described Scott's direction of the film as a "prosthetic memory"—an action that has never happened and appears to be divorced from lived experience, yet it defines personhood and identity within the wider Blade Runner universe.
Awards and nominations
Blade Runner won or received nominations for the following awards:
Themes
Themes in Blade RunnerThemes in Blade Runner
The film operates on multiple dramatic and narrative levels. It employs some of the conventions of film noir, among them the character of a femme fatale; narration by the protagonist (in the original release); chiaroscuro cinematography; and giving the hero a questionable moral outlook – extending to include reflections upon the nature of his own humanity. It is a literate science fiction film, thematically enfolding the philosophy of religion and moral implications of human mastery of genetic engineering in the context of classical Greek drama and hubris. It also draws on Biblical images, such as Noah's flood, and literary sources, such as Frankenstein and William Blake. Although Scott said any similarity was merely coincidental, fans claimed that the chess game between Sebastian and Tyrell was based on the famous Immortal Game of 1851.
Blade Runner delves into the effects of technology on the environment and society by reaching to the past, using literature, religious symbolism, classical dramatic themes, and film noir techniques. This tension between past, present, and future is represented in the "retrofitted" future depicted in the film, one which is high-tech and gleaming in places but decayed and outdated elsewhere. In an interview with The Observer in 2002, director Ridley Scott described the film as "extremely dark, both literally and metaphorically, with an oddly masochistic feel". He also said that he "liked the idea of exploring pain" in the wake of his brother's death: "When he was ill, I used to go and visit him in London, and that was really traumatic for me."
A sense of foreboding and paranoia pervades the world of the film: corporate power looms large; the police seem omnipresent; vehicle and warning lights probe into buildings; and the consequences of huge biomedical power over the individual are explored –
especially regarding replicants' implanted memories. The film depicts a world post ecocide, where warfare and capitalism have led to destruction of 'normal' ecological systems. Control over the environment is exercised on a vast scale, and goes hand in hand with the absence of any natural life; for example, artificial animals stand in for their extinct predecessors. This oppressive backdrop explains the frequently referenced migration of humans to "off-world" (extraterrestrial) colonies. Eyes are a recurring motif, as are manipulated images, calling into question the nature of reality and our ability to accurately perceive and remember it. The film also consists of themes of Japan as a power, coming amid a time of anti-Japanese sentiment in the United States.
These thematic elements provide an atmosphere of uncertainty for Blade Runners central theme of examining humanity. In order to discover replicants, an empathy test is used, with a number of its questions focused on the treatment of animals – seemingly an essential indicator of one's "humanity". Replicants will not respond the same way humans would, showing a lack of concern. The film goes so far as to question if Deckard might be a replicant, in the process asking the audience to re-evaluate what it means to be human.
The question of whether Deckard is intended to be a human or a replicant has been an ongoing controversy since the film's release. Both Michael Deeley and Harrison Ford wanted Deckard to be human, while Hampton Fancher preferred ambiguity. Ridley Scott has stated that he envisaged Deckard as a replicant. Deckard's unicorn-dream sequence, inserted into Scott's Director's Cut and concomitant with Gaff's parting gift of an origami unicorn, is seen by many as showing that Deckard is a replicant – because Gaff could have retrieved Deckard's implanted memories. The interpretation that Deckard is a replicant is challenged by others who believe the unicorn imagery shows that the characters, whether human or replicant, share the same dreams and recognize their affinity, or that the absence of a decisive answer is crucial to the film's main theme. The film's inherent ambiguity and uncertainty, as well as its textual richness, have permitted multiple interpretations.
Legacy
Cultural impact
Tears in rain monologue
While not initially a success with North American audiences, Blade Runner was popular internationally and garnered a cult following. The film's dark style and futuristic designs have served as a benchmark and its influence can be seen in many subsequent science fiction films, video games, anime, and television programs.
Its influence has also extended beyond the science fiction genre, especially in the creation of cinematic worlds. For example, Denis Villeneuve, Lana Wachowski, Christopher Nolan, Guillermo del Toro, Gareth Edwards Rian Johnson, Ronald D. Moore and David Eick have all cited it as an influence. Nolan notes that he has seen Blade Runner "literally hundreds of times", while del Toro describes it as "one of those cinematic drugs, that when I first saw it, I never saw the world the same way again". Scott Derrickson has called it "maybe the best American film ever made". Oren Soffer, who worked with Edwards as co-cinematographer on The Creator, cited the film as "the most visually stunning of all time" and as an influence on his work.
The film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry in 1993 and is frequently taught in university courses. In 2007, it was named the second-most visually influential film of all time by the Visual Effects Society. The film has also been the subject of parody, such as the comics Blade Bummer by Crazy comics, Bad Rubber by Steve Gallacci, and the Red Dwarf 2009 three-part miniseries "Back to Earth". The anime series Psycho-Pass by Production I.G was also highly influenced by the film.
Blade Runner continues to reflect modern trends and concerns, and an increasing number of critics consider it one of the greatest science fiction films of all time. It was voted the best science fiction film ever made in a 2004 poll of 60 eminent world scientists. Blade Runner is also cited as an important influence to both the style and story of the Ghost in the Shell franchise, which itself has been highly influential to the future-noir genre. Blade Runner has been very influential to the cyberpunk movement. It also influenced the cyberpunk derivative biopunk, which revolves around biotechnology and genetic engineering. The film is also considered to be one of the early examples of the tech noir subgenre.
The dialogue and music in Blade Runner has been sampled in music more than any other film of the 20th century. The 2009 album I, Human by Singaporean band Deus Ex Machina makes numerous references to the genetic engineering and cloning themes from the film, and even features a track titled "Replicant".
Blade Runner is cited as a major influence on Warren Spector, designer of the video game Deus Ex, which displays evidence of the film's influence in both its visual rendering and plot. Indeed, the film's look – and in particular its overall darkness, preponderance of neon lights and opaque visuals – are easier to render than complicated backdrops, making it a popular reference point for video game designers. It has influenced adventure games such as the 2012 graphical text adventure Cypher, Rise of the Dragon, Snatcher, the Tex Murphy series, Beneath a Steel Sky, Flashback: The Quest for Identity, Bubblegum Crisis video games (and their original anime), the role-playing game Shadowrun, the first-person shooter Perfect Dark, the shooter game Skyhammer, and the Syndicate series of video games.
The logos of Atari, Bell, Coca-Cola, Cuisinart, Pan Am, and RCA, all market leaders at the time, were prominently displayed as product placement in the film, and all experienced setbacks after the film's release, leading to suggestions of a Blade Runner curse. Coca-Cola and Cuisinart recovered, and Tsingtao beer was also featured in the film and was more successful after the film than before.
The design of Tesla's Cybertruck was inspired by the film. Prior to its release Elon Musk promised that it would "look like something out of Blade Runner". Besides referring to the truck as the "Blade Runner Truck", Musk chose to debut the truck in order to coincide with the film's setting of November 2019. The film's art designer Syd Mead praised the truck and said he was "flattered" by the homage to Blade Runner.
Media recognition
| Year | Presenter | Title | Rank | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | The Village Voice | 100 Best Films of the 20th Century | 94 | |
| 2002 | Online Film Critics Society (OFCS) | Top 100 Sci-fi Films of the Past 100 Years | 2 | |
| Sight & Sound | Sight & Sound Top Ten Poll 2002 | 45 | ||
| 50 Klassiker, Film | ||||
| 2003 | 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die | |||
| Entertainment Weekly | The Top 50 Cult Movies | 9 | ||
| 2004 | The Guardian, scientists | Top 10 Sci-fi Films of All Time | 1 | |
| 2005 | Total Films editors | 100 Greatest Movies of All Time | 47 | |
| Time magazine's critics | "All-Time 100" Movies | |||
| 2008 | New Scientist | All-time favorite science fiction film (readers and staff) | 1 | |
| Empire | The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time | 20 | ||
| 2010 | Total Film | 100 Greatest Movies of All Time | ||
| 2012 | Sight & Sound | Sight & Sound 2012 critics top 250 films | 69 | |
| Sight & Sound | Sight & Sound 2012 directors top 100 films | 67 | ||
| 2017 | Empire | The 100 Greatest Movies Of All Time | 13 | |
| 2022 | IGN | Top 25 Sci-Fi Movies of All Time | 2 | |
| 2022 | Sight & Sound | Sight & Sound 2022 critics top 100 films | 54 | |
| 2024 | Far Out Magazine | 10 most accurate movie psychopaths according to the FBI (replicant Leon Kowalski) | 8 | |
American Film Institute recognition
- AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills – No. 74
- AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) – No. 97
- AFI's 10 Top 10 – No. 6 Science Fiction Film
In other media
Before filming began, Cinefantastique magazine commissioned Paul M. Sammon to write a special issue about Blade Runners production which became the book Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner. The book chronicles Blade Runners evolution, focusing on film-set politics, especially the British director's experiences with his first American film crew; of which producer Alan Ladd, Jr. has said, "Harrison wouldn't speak to Ridley and Ridley wouldn't speak to Harrison. By the end of the shoot Ford was 'ready to kill Ridley', said one colleague. He really would have taken him on if he hadn't been talked out of it." Future Noir has short cast biographies and quotations about their experiences as well as photographs of the film's production and preliminary sketches. A second edition of Future Noir was published in 2007, and additional materials not in either print edition have been published online.
Philip K. Dick refused a $400,000 offer to write a Blade Runner novelization, saying: "was told the cheapo novelization would have to appeal to the twelve-year-old audience" and it "would have probably been disastrous to me artistically". He added, "That insistence on my part of bringing out the original novel and not doing the novelization – they were just furious. They finally recognized that there was a legitimate reason for reissuing the novel, even though it cost them money. It was a victory not just of contractual obligations but of theoretical principles." Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? was eventually reprinted as a tie-in, with the film poster as a cover and the original title in parentheses below the Blade Runner title. Additionally, a novelization of the movie entitled Blade Runner: A Story of the Future by Les Martin was released in 1982. Archie Goodwin scripted the comic book adaptation, A Marvel Comics Super Special: Blade Runner, published in September 1982, which was illustrated by Al Williamson, Carlos Garzon, Dan Green, and Ralph Reese, and lettered by Ed King.
Blue Dolphin Enterprises published the film's screenplay combined with selected production storyboards as The Illustrated Blade Runner (June 1982); a book of original production artwork by Syd Mead, Mentor Huebner, Charles Knode, Michael Kaplan, and Ridley Scott as Blade Runner Sketchbook (1982); and The Blade Runner Portfolio (1982), a collection of twelve photographic prints, similar to the artist portfolios released by their Schanes & Schanes imprint.
There are two video games based on the film, both titled Blade Runner: one from 1985, a side-scrolling video game for Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, and Amstrad CPC by CRL Group PLC, which is marked as "a video game interpretation of the film score by Vangelis" rather than of the film itself (due to licensing issues); and another from 1997, a point-and-click adventure for PC by Westwood Studios. The 1997 game has a non-linear plot based in the Blade Runner world, non-player characters that each ran in their own independent AI, and an unusual pseudo-3D engine (which eschewed polygonal solids in favor of voxel elements) that did not require the use of a 3D accelerator card to play the game. The player assumes the role of McCoy, another replicant-hunter working at the same time as Deckard.
The television film (and later series) Total Recall 2070 was initially planned as a spin-off of the film Total Recall (based on Philip K. Dick's short story "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale"), but was produced as a hybrid of Total Recall and Blade Runner. Many similarities between Total Recall 2070 and Blade Runner were noted, as well as apparent influences on the show from Isaac Asimov's The Caves of Steel and the TV series Holmes & Yoyo.
Documentaries
The film has been the subject of several documentaries.
- Blade Runner
- Convention Reel (1982, 13 minutes)
- Co-directed by Muffet Kaufman and Jeffrey B. Walker, shot and screened in 16 mm, featured no narrator, was filmed in 1981 while Blade Runner was still in production and featured short "behind-the-scenes" segments showing sets being built and sequences being shot, as well as interviews with Ridley Scott, Syd Mead and Douglas Trumbull. Appears on the Blade Runner Ultimate Collector's Edition.
- On the Edge of Blade Runner (2000, 55 minutes)
- Directed by Andrew Abbott and hosted/written by Mark Kermode. Interviews with production staff, including Scott, give details of the creative process and the turmoil during pre-production. Insights into Philip K. Dick and the origins of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? are provided by Paul M. Sammon and Hampton Fancher.
- Future Shocks (2003, 27 minutes)
- Directed by TVOntario. It includes interviews with executive producer Bud Yorkin, Syd Mead, and the cast, and commentary by science fiction author Robert J. Sawyer and from film critics.
- Dangerous Days
- Making Blade Runner (2007, 213 minutes)
- Directed and produced by Charles de Lauzirika for The Final Cut version of the film. Its source material comprises more than 80 interviews, including extensive conversations with Ford, Young, and Scott. The documentary is presented in eight chapters, with each of the first seven covering a portion of the filmmaking process. The final chapter examines Blade Runner's controversial legacy.
- All Our Variant Futures
- From Workprint to Final Cut (2007, 29 minutes)
- Produced by Paul Prischman, appears on the Blade Runner Ultimate Collector's Edition and provides an overview of the film's multiple versions and their origins, as well as detailing the seven-year-long restoration, enhancement and remastering process behind The Final Cut.
- Blade Runner Phenomenon (2021, 53 minutes)
- Directed by Boris Hars-Tschachotin and made by the France and Germany European public service channel ARTE, this documentary informs viewers using behind-the-scenes material from various sets, photos, original locations in Los Angeles, and interviews with those involved in the production.
Sequel and related media
Blade Runner (franchise)Blade Runner (franchise)
A sequel was released in 2017, titled Blade Runner 2049, with Ryan Gosling alongside Ford in the starring roles. It entered production in mid-2016 and is set decades after the first film. Harrison Ford reprised his role as Rick Deckard. The film won two Academy Awards, for cinematography and visual effects.
The world of Blade Runner has also come to be explored in animation. Blade Runner 2049 was preceded by the release of three short films that served as prequels, where the chronological first, Blade Runner Black Out 2022, was anime (the other two, 2036: Nexus Dawn and 2048: Nowhere to Run, were live action, not animated).
In November 2021, a Japanese-American anime television series called Blade Runner: Black Lotus was released. The series tells the story of a female replicant protagonist, rather than that of a male Blade Runner one.
Dick's friend K. W. Jeter wrote three authorized Blade Runner novels that continue Rick Deckard's story, attempting to resolve the differences between the film and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? These are Blade Runner 2: The Edge of Human (1995), Blade Runner 3: Replicant Night (1996), and Blade Runner 4: Eye and Talon (2000).
Blade Runner co-writer David Peoples wrote the 1998 action film Soldier, which he referred to as a "sidequel" or spiritual successor to the original film; the two are set in a shared universe. A bonus feature on the Blu-ray for Prometheus, the 2012 film by Scott set in the Alien universe, states that Eldon Tyrell, CEO of the Blade Runner Tyrell Corporation, was the mentor of Guy Pearce's character Peter Weyland.
In late 2022, Amazon announced a Blade Runner 2049 sequel series would be produced. On October 12, 2022, an apparent official approval to actually make a Blade Runner 2099 TV series was reported. Blade Runner 2099 is scheduled to premiere on Amazon Prime Video in 2026.
See also
- Arcology
- Biorobotics
- List of adaptations of works by Philip K. Dick
- List of cult films
- List of dystopian films
- List of fictional robots and androids
- Synthetic biology
Notes
- AFI.com, American Film Institute, Blade Runner, December 3, 2015, live, November 6, 2015
- BFI.org, British Film Institute, Blade Runner, December 3, 2015, live, December 6, 2015
- Blade Runner (1982), British Film Institute, April 26, 2018, February 15, 2017, dead
- Tim, Gray, 'Blade Runner' Turns 35: Ridley Scott's Unloved Film That Became a Classic, Variety, June 24, 2017, July 5, 2017, July 31, 2019, live
- Blade Runner (1982), Box Office Mojo, February 3, 2024, May 15, 2020, live
- Turan, Kenneth, From the Archives: 'Blade Runner' went from Harrison Ford's 'miserable' production to Ridley Scott's unicorn scene, ending as a cult classic, September 13, 1992, Los Angeles Times, February 5, 2021, February 5, 2021, live
- Lussier, German, The Mistake That Changed the History of Blade Runner, February 4, 2021, Gizmodo, February 5, 2021, February 5, 2021, live
- Sammon, Paul, Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, 1996, Harper
- Sammon, Paul, Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, 1996, Harper
- Ridley Scott: interviews, Ridley Scott, Paul Sammon, University Press of Mississippi, 2005
- Dangerous Days: Making , Blade Runner, , documentary, Blade Runner: The Final Cut, DVD, Warner Bros., 2007, 1982
- Blade Runner at 30: Celebrating Ridley Scott's Dystopian Vision, live, September 30, 2021, June 18, 2021, Time
- Ebiri, Bilge, Even Now, Rutger Hauer's Performance in 'Blade Runner' Is a Marvel – With his combination of menace and anguish, he created an unforgettable character that made the movie the classic it remains today., July 25, 2019, The New York Times, July 25, 2019, July 25, 2019, live
- Ebert, Roger, September 11, 1992, Blade Runner: Director's Cut , review, RogerEbert.com, July 27, 2011, March 4, 2013, dead
- Hauer, Rutger, Rutger Hauer, Chatroom Transcripts: Live Chat February 7, 2001, February 7, 2001, RutgerHauer.org, July 27, 2011, September 9, 2012, usurped
- The Battle for Blade Runner, Vanity Fair, Schulman, Michael, September 14, 2017, August 9, 2024, July 6, 2020, live
- 10 Things You Never Knew About Blade Runner, NME, October 5, 2017, October 8, 2021, October 10, 2021, live
- Debbie Harry: 'My biggest regret is turning down Blade Runner', June 16, 2014, October 8, 2021, January 9, 2018, live
- Sanderson, William, William Sanderson, Brinkley, Aaron, A Chat with William Sanderson, BladeZone, October 5, 2000, July 27, 2011, April 28, 2014
- Mindhole Blowers: 20 facts about Blade Runner that might leave you questioning Ridley Scotts humanity, Davis, Cindy, November 8, 2011, Pajiba.com, September 21, 2014, live, August 2, 2014
- July 5, 2007, Ford: 'Blade Runner Was a Nightmare', Moono.com, July 27, 2011, February 24, 2012
- Rebecca, Pahle, 10 Fascinating Facts About , Blade Runner, August 28, 2015, Mental Floss, March 24, 2015, live, August 29, 2015
- Rob, Carnevale, Getting Direct with Directors: Ridley Scott, September 2006, BBC News, July 27, 2011, April 13, 2014
- And beneath lies, the truth, Empire, November 2000, Colin, Kennedy, 137
- In Conversation with Harrison Ford, Empire, April 2006, 202
- Smith, Neil, The Total Film Interview, Total Film, Summer 2007, 130
- Boonstra, John, A final interview with science fiction's boldest visionary, who talks candidly about , Blade Runner, , inner voices and the temptations of Hollywood, Rod Serling's the Twilight Zone Magazine, Philip K. Dick, 2, 3, June 1982, 47–52, July 27, 2011, May 28, 2013
- Wheale, Nigel, 1995, The Postmodern Arts: An Introductory Reader, Routledge, July 27, 2011, April 14, 2021, live
- Director Maximus, The Daily Telegraph, July 27, 2011, September 20, 2003, London, Mark, Monahan, June 21, 2008, dead
- Irish Arts Review, September 27, 2014, November 6, 2014, live
- Giraud, Jean, Jean Giraud, 1988, Moebius 4: The Long Tomorrow & Other SF Stories, Marvel Comics
- The Miniature Models of Blade Runner, VFX Voice, October 2, 2017, March 20, 2018, Failes, Ian, March 21, 2018, live
- Quentin Tarantino, Ridley Scott, Danny Boyle, & More Directors on THR's Roundtables I, 2016, February 4, 2018, The Hollywood Reporter, YouTube, live, January 6, 2016
- Ridley Scott: I used footage from Kubrick's , The Shining, in , Blade Runner, Uproxx, Hitfix, December 10, 2015, February 4, 2018, Eggersten, Chris, July 11, 2017, live
- Ridley Scott Reveals Stanley Kubrick Gave Him Footage from , The Shining, for , Blade Runner, Ending, The Hollywood Reporter, Howard, Annie, December 10, 2015, live, January 14, 2016
- The Top 40 Cars from Feature Films: 30. Police Spinner, ScreenJunkies, July 27, 2011, March 30, 2010, though press kits for the film stated that the spinner was propelled by three engines: "conventional internal combustion, jet and anti-gravity"., April 4, 2014
- Lightman, Herb A., Patterson, Richard, October 7, 2020, Discussing the Set Design of Blade Runner, August 29, 2024, The American Society of Cinematographers, en, October 7, 2024, live
- Museum of Pop Culture, Experience Music Project / Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame (EMP/SFM), January 24, 2011, dead
- BladeZone, Deconstructing the Spinner, Winfield, Gene, Gene Winfield, Willoughby, Gary, July 27, 2011, September 27, 2013
- When A Newspaper Gave Blade Runner's Replicant Test To Mayor Candidates, Charlie Jane, Anders, February 23, 2015, Gizmodo, live, August 19, 2024
- Eric, Gutoski, 2003, More Human than Human: A field guide for testing if the San Francisco mayoral candidates are human or not, The Wave, dead, May 6, 2006
- How the Blade Runner soundtrack used electronic music to explore what it means to be human, June 8, 2024, The University of Sydney, en-US
- Vangelis, Vangelis, Blade Runner – Scoring the music, NemoStudios.co.uk, July 27, 2011, October 19, 2013
- Larsen, Peter, Film music, Reaktion Books, London, 2007
- Album Review: Vangelis: , Blade Runner Trilogy: 25th Anniversary, Mike, Orme, Pitchfork, July 27, 2011, February 7, 2008, October 29, 2013
- Blade Runner at 25: Why the Sci-Fi F/X Are Still Unsurpassed, Adam, Savage, Popular Mechanics, live, April 2, 2015, July 2007
- Los Angeles 2019 (Blade Runner) – Cinema's Greatest Effects Shots Picked by Hollywood's Top VFX Specialists, Empire, live, May 18, 2015, October 2, 2015
- Blade Runner: Spinner Vehicles, DouglasTrumbull.com, Trumbull Ventures, 2010, September 21, 2015, dead, July 4, 2015
- Harmetz, Aljean, E.T., May Set Sales Record, Section C, Cultural Desk, page 9, The New York Times, June 29, 1982
- Kaplan, Fred, A Cult Classic Restored, Again, The New York Times, September 30, 2007, July 27, 2011, December 20, 2013
- Blade Runner, British Board of Film Classification, May 27, 1982, January 8, 2016, dead, March 22, 2016
- Blade Runner, , Cut, British Board of Film Classification, September 29, 1992, January 8, 2016, dead, April 6, 2016
- Brian Tuffano Obituary, theguardian.com, January 26, 2023
- Blade Runner, , Final Cut, British Board of Film Classification, October 12, 2007, January 8, 2016, dead, March 5, 2016
- Blade Runner: The Final Cut, July 26, 2007, The Digital Bits, July 27, 2011, February 22, 2014
- 4k Movie, Streaming, Blu-Ray Disc, and Home Theater Product Reviews & News , , High Def Digest, 2025-06-08, ultrahd.highdefdigest.com
- Blade Runner (1982), Rotten Tomatoes, Fandango, June 1, 2022, June 5, 2020, live
- Blade Runner (1982), Metacritic, CBS Interactive, April 3, 2020, April 16, 2020, live
- Hicks, Chris, September 11, 1992, Movie review: Blade Runner, Deseret News, July 27, 2011, April 7, 2014
- Kael, Pauline, Taking It All In, 1984, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 360–365
- John, Christopher, Film & Television, Ares, TSR, Inc., Winter 1983, 13
- Sammon, Paul M., Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, 1996, Orion Media, en, October 1, 2020, April 14, 2021, live
- Williams, Douglas E., Ideology as Dystopia: An Interpretation of "Blade Runner", International Political Science Review, 9, 4, October 1988, 381–394, October 13, 2015, 1600763, live, July 8, 2016, Publications, Inc., Sage Publications, Ltd.
- Torres Cruz, Décio, Postmodern Metanarratives: Blade Runner and Literature in the Age of Image, 2014, Palgrave Macmillan UK, en, September 18, 2020, October 9, 2020, live
- Jenkins, Mary, 1997, The Dystopian World of Blade Runner: An Ecofeminist Perspective, Trumpeter, 14, 4, October 13, 2015, September 14, 2017, live
- Doll, Susan, Faller, Greg, Blade Runner and Genre: Film Noir and Science Fiction, Literature Film Quarterly, 1986, 14, 2, October 13, 2015, live, October 13, 2015
- Shone, Tom, Woman: The Other Alien in Alien, June 6, 2012, Slate, live, April 24, 2016
- Jagernauth, Kevin, Blade Runner, Is Almost a Religion for Me: Denis Villeneuve Talks Directing the Sci-fi Sequel, October 12, 2015, IndieWire, April 28, 2015, dead, October 1, 2015
- Blade Runner: The Final Cut, Movie Review (1982), Ebert, Roger, RogerEbert.com, June 18, 2016, live, June 27, 2016
- Rodley, Chris, Blade Runner: The Director's Cut, October 14, 2015, frieze, 1993, dead, September 5, 2008
- Bruno, Giuliana, 1987, Ramble City: Postmodernism and , Blade Runner, October, 41, 61–74, 10.2307/778330, 778330, 0162-2870
- Desser, David, 1985, Blade Runner: Science Fiction & Transcendence, Literature/Film Quarterly; Salisbury, 13, 172–179
- Barnett, David, Are we living in a Blade Runner world?, June 30, 2022, www.bbc.com, November 12, 2019, en, June 30, 2022, live
- Landsberg, Alison, 144020560, 1995, Prosthetic Memory: Total Recall and Blade Runner, Body & Society, 1, 3–4, 175–189, 10.1177/1357034X95001003010
- Blade Runner, July 27, 2011, dead, Movies & TV Dept., The New York Times, 2013, May 17, 2013
- Gandhi Wins Art Direction and Cinematography: 1983 Oscars, January 3, 2014, www.youtube.com, August 14, 2020, August 3, 2020, live
- The 55th Academy Awards | 1983, Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, October 5, 2014, August 14, 2020, April 17, 2018, live
- E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial Wins Visual Effects: 1983 Oscars, April 28, 2014, www.youtube.com, August 14, 2020, August 6, 2020, live
- The Dystopian World of , Blade Runner, : An Ecofeminist Perspective, July 27, 2011, Trumpeter, Jenkins, Mary, 1997, 14, 4, February 14, 2009, live
- Harley, Alexis, America, a prophecy: when Blake meets , Blade Runner, Sydney Studies in English, December 24, 2020, 31, 61–75, 107741379, January 29, 2022, February 10, 2024, live
- Edwards, Jacob, 'A Most Unconvincing Replicant: Allegory and Intelligence in Blade Runner's Chess Game', by Jacob Edwards, The Lifted Brow, December 27, 2013, April 7, 2019, April 6, 2019, live
- Barber, Lynn, Scott's Corner, January 6, 2002, live, The Observer, London, July 27, 2011, July 20, 2008
- Avenging nature: the role of nature in modern and contemporary art and literature, 2020, Lexington Books, Valls Oyarzun, Eduardo, Ecocritical theory and practice, Lanham Boulder NewYork London, 13, Gualberto Valverde, Rebeca, Malla García, Noelia, Colom Jiménez, María, Cordero Sánchez, Rebeca
- Representations of Ecocide in Blade Runner and Neuromancer, June 21, 2023, project.cyberpunk.ru, July 3, 2013, live
- Cheded, Farah, June 29, 2017, Quite an Experience to Live in Fear: An In-Depth Look at How the Anxieties that Inspired 'Blade Runner' Fare Today, February 13, 2024, Film School Rejects, en-US, February 13, 2024, live
- Is Deckard a Replicant? The history of Blade Runner's most enduring mystery, The Daily Telegraph, Tristram Fane Saunders, October 5, 2017, March 12, 2019, March 11, 2019, live
- Peary, Danny, 1984, Omni, 's Screen Flights, Screen Fantasies: The Future According to Science Fiction, Directing , Alien, and , Blade Runner, : An Interview with Ridley Scott, Omni, / , Doubleday, 293–302
- July 27, 2011, A Cult Classic Restored, Again, Kaplan, Fred, September 30, 2007, The New York Times, The film's theme of dehumanization has also been sharpened. What has been a matter of speculation and debate is now a certainty: Deckard, the replicant-hunting cop, is himself a replicant. Mr. Scott confirmed this: 'Yes, he's a replicant. He was always a replicant.', February 5, 2018
- What is a Blade Runner? And other questions you may have before seeing the sequel, Adam White, October 2, 2017, The Daily Telegraph, March 11, 2019, SCOTT, Gaff, at the very end, leaves an origami, which is a piece of silver paper you might find in a cigarette packet, and it's a unicorn. Now, the unicorn in Deckard's daydream tells me that Deckard wouldn't normally talk about such a thing to anyone. If Gaff knew about that, it's Gaff's message to say, 'I've read your file, mate.', March 29, 2019, live
- Blade Runner, riddle solved, July 9, 2000, BBC News, July 27, 2011, live, April 6, 2014
- 2013-11-08, The Wachowskis, DePaul Visiting Artists Series
- Rian Johnson on Looper: Plot, Influences, and Sequel Potential, YouTube, October 2012
- Moore, Ronald D., Ronald D. Moore, Daniel Solove, Deven Desai and David Hoffman, Battlestar Galactica, Interview, Eick, David, October 3, 2011, November 1, 2011, dead, Concurring Opinions, February 21, 2008, David Eick
- Exclusive: Christopher Nolan Talks 'Batman Begins' 10th Anniversary, Forbes, Hughes, Mark, July 30, 2015, August 9, 2024, October 3, 2017, live
- Denis Villeneuve's Favorite Movies: 29 Films the Director Wants You to See, IndieWire, Sharf, Zac, Foreman, Alison, Zilko, Christian, February 26, 2023, August 9, 2024, August 6, 2024, live
- How Ridley Scott's 'Blade Runner' Changed the Look of Cinematic Sci-Fi Forever, October 3, 2017
- Nathan, Ian, Ridley Scott A Retrospective, 2025, Thames and Hudson
- The Creator, Working with Chappel Roan, & the Empire Strikes Back with Cinematographer Oren Soffer by Intermission
- Aren't We All Just Replicants on the Inside?, October 2, 2007, Rapold, Nicolas, The New York Sun, July 27, 2011, September 5, 2008
- Librarian Announces National Film Registry Selections, March 7, 1994, Library of Congress Information Bulletin, May 20, 2020, March 8, 2021, live
- Complete National Film Registry Listing, Film Registry , , National Film Preservation Board , , Programs at the Library of Congress , , Library of Congress, May 20, 2020, October 31, 2016, live
- The Visual Effects Society Unveils '50 Most Influential Visual Effects Films of All Time', Visual Effects Society, July 27, 2011, June 4, 2012
- Crazy: , Blade Runner, Parody, Kissell, Gerry, BladeZone, July 27, 2011, April 28, 2014
- Albedo, #0, Grand Comics Database, Project, Gallacci, Steven A., "Bad Rubber" section, July 27, 2011, April 6, 2014
- Red Dwarf: Back To Earth, – This Weekend's Essential Viewing – NME Video Blog, Howard, Rob, NME, July 27, 2011, October 11, 2012
- Red Dwarf: Back to Earth, – Director's Cut DVD 2009: Amazon.co.uk: Craig Charles, Danny John-Jules, Chris Barrie, Robert Llewellyn, Doug Naylor: DVD, live, June 14, 2009, July 27, 2011, June 15, 2009
- Directors's Panel with Katsuyuki Motohiro, Naoyoshi Shiotani, and Atsuko Ishizuka, March 30, 2013, December 30, 2013, Anime News Network, live, December 31, 2013
- Jha, Alok, Rogers, Simon, Rutherford, Adam, August 26, 2004, July 27, 2011, 'I've seen things...': Our expert panel votes for the top 10 sci-fi films, The Guardian, London, May 13, 2007, dead
- Blade Runner, tops scientist poll, BBC News, August 26, 2004, September 22, 2012, live, May 13, 2014
- Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence, Jim, Omura, September 16, 2004, FPS Magazine, July 27, 2011, October 29, 2013
- Hollywood is haunted by , Ghost in the Shell, Steve, Rose, The Guardian, October 19, 2009, July 27, 2011, March 8, 2013
- Coplan, Amy, Davies, David, Blade Runner, 2015, Routledge, July 13, 2017, February 25, 2018, live
- Booker, M. Keith, Alternate Americas: Science Fiction Film and American Culture, 2006, Greenwood Publishing Group, July 13, 2017, February 26, 2018, live
- Milner, Andrew, Literature, Culture and Society, 2005, Psychology Press, July 13, 2017, February 25, 2018, live
- Brown, Steven T., Tokyo Cyberpunk: Posthumanism in Japanese Visual Culture, 2016, Springer, July 13, 2017, February 25, 2018, live
- Evans, Josh, What Is Biopunk?, June 20, 2015, September 18, 2011, ScienceFiction.com, June 2, 2015, live
- Wohlsen, Marcus, Biopunk: Solving Biotech's Biggest Problems in Kitchens and Garages, Current Publishing, 2011, August 24, 2017, October 20, 2021, live
- One Movie Both Invented and Perfected the Tech Noir, Game Rant, Ben, Sherlock, February 21, 2021, November 4, 2023, August 26, 2022, live
- September 1, 2004, Cigéhn, Peter, The Top 1319 Sample Sources (version 60), live, July 27, 2011, Sloth.org, Semimajor.net, October 27, 2013
- Deus Ex Machina – , I, Human, Review, The Metal Crypt, February 22, 2010, July 27, 2011, April 7, 2014
- Gaming Gurus, 14, 4, April 1, 2006, Wired, August 28, 2009, September 3, 2013
- Webster, Andrew, Cyberpunk meets interactive fiction: The art of , Cypher, The Verge, October 17, 2012, February 27, 2013, February 1, 2014
- Rise of the Dragon, OldGames.sk, November 10, 2010, February 2, 2014
- dead, July 18, 2012, Tracing Replicants: We examine , Blade Runner, 's influence on games, November 11, 2010, 1Up
- Blade Runner, and , Snatcher, AwardSpace.co.uk, November 10, 2010, July 25, 2013
- The Top 10 Best Game Detectives, NowGamer, live, March 16, 2012, May 16, 2011
- Beneath a Steel Sky, Softonic.com, November 10, 2010, October 19, 2013
- Lambie, Ryan, Den of Geek, Bubblegum Crisis, 3D live-action movie on the way, November 10, 2010, January 4, 2012
- 3D Live Action , Bubblegum Crisis, Movie Gets a Director and a Start Date, Bleeding Cool, November 10, 2010, April 7, 2014, November 4, 2010
- Retrospective: , Perfect Dark, November 10, 2010, February 21, 2011
- Ripper, The, Europa!, GameFan, 2, 12, December 1994, August 20, 2018, March 2, 2019, live
- Robertson, Andy, Skyhammer – Now here's a game that really soars!, The Atari Times, June 2, 1996, August 20, 2018, April 1, 2018, live
- Syndicate Wars, : Review, Chuck, Schrank, Gamezilla PC Games, Lubie.org, November 10, 2010, September 8, 2013
- Syndicate, HardcoreGaming101.net, November 10, 2010, January 1, 2014
- Lukas, Mariman, Chapman, Murray, December 2002, 4.1, alt.fan.blade-runner, FAQs.CS.UU.nl, Blade Runner, : Frequently Asked Questions, February 4, 2018, February 5, 2018
- The curse of Blade Runner's adverts, BBC Newsbeat, September 11, 2018, February 27, 2015, October 20, 2018, live
- Why the Tesla Cybertruck Looks So Weird, Wired, December 5, 2019, December 5, 2019, live, Marshall, Aarian
- Blade Runner's art director Syd Mead is a huge fan of Tesla's new Cybertruck, Aaron, Holmes, Tyler, Sonnemaker, Business Insider, December 5, 2019, November 28, 2019, live
- Elon Musk Says Tesla Truck Reveal Will Coincide With 'Blade Runner' Date, Bill, Roberson, Forbes, December 5, 2019, November 27, 2019, live
- 100 Best Films of the 20th Century, Hoberman, J., 2001, Village Voice Critics' Poll, The Village Voice, FilmSite.org, July 27, 2011, March 31, 2014
- OFCS Top 100: Top 100 Sci-Fi Films, OFCS.org, Online Film Critics Society, June 12, 2002, July 27, 2011, March 13, 2012
- Sight & Sound Top Ten Poll 2002, Sight & Sound, BFI.org.uk, British Film Institute, 2002, May 15, 2012, February 4, 2018
- Schröder, Nicolaus, 2002, 50 Klassiker, Film, Gerstenberg, de
- 1001 Movies to See Before You Die, 1001BeforeYouDie.com, July 22, 2002, May 28, 2014, February 4, 2011
- Top 50 Cult Movies, May 23, 2003, Entertainment Weekly, July 27, 2011, March 31, 2014
- Top 10 sci-fi films, The Guardian, July 27, 2011, July 25, 2013, dead
- Scientists vote , Blade Runner, best sci-fi film of all time, The Guardian, August 26, 2004, July 27, 2011, Alok, Jha, March 8, 2013
- How we did it, The Guardian, August 26, 2004, July 27, 2011, July 26, 2013, dead
- Film news: Who is the greatest?, Total Film, Future Publishing, October 24, 2005, July 27, 2011, January 23, 2014
- The Complete List – All-Time 100 Movies, Time, May 23, 2005, July 27, 2011, August 22, 2011, dead
- All-Time 100 Movies, Time, July 27, 2011, February 12, 2005, August 31, 2011, dead
- All-Time 100 Movies: , Blade Runner, (1982), Time, July 27, 2011, February 12, 2005, Corliss, Richard, March 5, 2011, dead
- Sci-fi special: Your all-time favourite science fiction, Alison, George, New Scientist, November 12, 2008, July 27, 2011, April 6, 2014
- New Scientist, 's favourite sci-fi film, Alison, George, New Scientist, October 1, 2008, July 27, 2011, April 6, 2014
- Empire, Features, Empire, July 26, 2011, October 14, 2013
- Film Features: 100 Greatest Movies of All Time, Total Film, Future Publishing, July 27, 2011, December 22, 2013
- 2012, Sight & Sound, 2012 critics top 250 films, Sight & Sound, BFI.org, British Film Institute, September 20, 2012, October 26, 2013
- 2012, Sight & Sound, 2012 directors top 100 films, Sight & Sound, BFI.org, British Film Institute, September 20, 2012, April 18, 2014
- The 100 Greatest Movies, Empire, March 20, 2018, October 7, 2018, October 13, 2018, live
- Top 25 Sci-Fi Movies of All Time, IGN, June 30, 2022, June 7, 2022, June 30, 2022, live
- The Greatest Films of All Time, Sight & Sound, December 24, 2022, December 1, 2022, March 18, 2021, live
- November 21, 2024, The FBI reveal the 10 most accurate movie psychopaths, March 8, 2025, faroutmagazine.co.uk, en-US, November 21, 2024, live
- Shone, Tom, 2004, Blockbuster, Simon & Schuster
- June 24, 2001, Future Noir, : Lost Chapters, 2019: Off-World, Scribble.com, February 4, 2018
- Riesman, Abraham, October 2, 2017, The Weird World of Blade Runner Spinoffs, August 1, 2020, Vulture, en-us, October 28, 2020, live
- Google Books, Blade Runner: (Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), Dick, Philip K., 2007, Del Rey Books, July 27, 2011, April 14, 2021, live
- Hear , Blade Runner, , , Terminator, , , Videodrome, & Other 70s, 80s & 90s Movies as Novelized AudioBooks, Colin, Marshall, Open Culture, September 14, 2015, live, December 24, 2016
- Marvel Super Special, #22, Grand Comics Database, April 6, 2014
- Jonathan, Law, Cassell Companion to Cinema, 1997, 1995 , Brewer's Cinema, Cassell, London, England, Internet Archive
- Stein, Michael, Blade Runner, June 1982, Fantastic Films, Fantastic Films Inc., Chicago, IL, 4, 5, Ad, 0273-7043
- Bates, Jason, Westwood's Blade Runner, PC Gamer, 4, 9, BladeZone, September 9, 1997, July 27, 2011, November 27, 2012
- Robb, Brian J., Counterfeit Worlds: Philip K. Dick on Film, 200–225, Titan Books, 2006
- Platt, John, March 1, 1999, A , Total Recall, spin-off that's an awful lot like , Blade Runner, Science Fiction Weekly, 5, 9 , issue #98, July 27, 2011, January 15, 2008
- On the Edge of , Blade Runner, Ingels, Nicklas, Los Angeles, 2019, Tyrell-Corporation.pp.se, July 27, 2011, April 7, 2014
- Future Shocks, TVO.org, TVOntario, , Ontario Educational Communications Authority, July 27, 2011, dead, December 24, 2014
- Interview: Charles de Lauzirika (, Blade Runner, ), July 27, 2011, CHUD.com, Fischer, Russ, February 8, 2007, February 2, 2014
- Blade Runner, – The Final Cut: 2-Disc Special Edition DVD Review, July 27, 2011, FilmEdge.net, Weitz, Scott, December 16, 2007, usurped, May 17, 2013
- Goldberg, Matt, Ryan Gosling Confirms He's in , Blade Runner 2, ; Talks Shane Black's , The Nice Guys, Collider, November 16, 2015, November 16, 2015, November 17, 2015, live
- Nudd, Tim, Ryan Gosling Set to Join Harrison Ford in , Blade Runner, Sequel, People, live, August 23, 2015
- Blade Runner 2, Officially Starts Filming This July, Haleigh, Foutch, January 25, 2016, Collider, October 6, 2016, July 22, 2016, live
- The 90th Academy Awards | 2018, Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, August 14, 2020, April 17, 2018, live
- Blade Runner 2049: five things we learned from the shorts, Ben, Child, September 29, 2017, The Guardian, February 1, 2022, February 1, 2022, live
- Black Lotus: Everything you need to know about the Blade Runner anime, Martyn, Casserly, November 15, 2021, Tech Advisor, February 1, 2022, February 1, 2022, live
- Hear Alessia Cara's New Song 'Feel You Now' in 'Blade Runner: Black Lotus' Opening Sequence, Heran, Mamo, August 5, 2021, Billboard, February 1, 2022, February 1, 2022, live
- Blade Runner 2049, Prequel Short Connects Events to Original 1982 Film, D'Alessandro, Anthony, August 31, 2017, Deadline Hollywood, October 3, 2017, November 2, 2017, live
- September 16, 2022, 'Blade Runner 2049' Sequel Series Ordered at Amazon, variety.com, September 16, 2022, September 16, 2022, live
- Caddy, Becca, Blade Runner 2099: everything we know so far – Everything we know about Amazon's upcoming Blade Runner 2099 series, October 12, 2022, TechRadar, October 12, 2022, October 12, 2022, live
- Andreeva, Nellie, 'Blade Runner 2099' To Premiere In 2026 On Prime Video, Deadline Hollywood, September 11, 2025, August 22, 2025, August 23, 2025, live
References
- AFI.com, American Film Institute, Blade Runner, December 3, 2015, live, November 6, 2015
- BFI.org, British Film Institute, Blade Runner, December 3, 2015, live, December 6, 2015
- Blade Runner (1982), British Film Institute, April 26, 2018, February 15, 2017, dead
- Tim, Gray, 'Blade Runner' Turns 35: Ridley Scott's Unloved Film That Became a Classic, Variety, June 24, 2017, July 5, 2017, July 31, 2019, live
- Blade Runner (1982), Box Office Mojo, February 3, 2024, May 15, 2020, live
- Turan, Kenneth, From the Archives: 'Blade Runner' went from Harrison Ford's 'miserable' production to Ridley Scott's unicorn scene, ending as a cult classic, September 13, 1992, Los Angeles Times, February 5, 2021, February 5, 2021, live
- Lussier, German, The Mistake That Changed the History of Blade Runner, February 4, 2021, Gizmodo, February 5, 2021, February 5, 2021, live
- Sammon, Paul, Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, 1996, Harper
- Sammon, Paul, Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, 1996, Harper
- Ridley Scott: interviews, Ridley Scott, Paul Sammon, University Press of Mississippi, 2005
- Dangerous Days: Making , Blade Runner, , documentary, Blade Runner: The Final Cut, DVD, Warner Bros., 2007, 1982
- Blade Runner at 30: Celebrating Ridley Scott's Dystopian Vision, live, September 30, 2021, June 18, 2021, Time
- Ebiri, Bilge, Even Now, Rutger Hauer's Performance in 'Blade Runner' Is a Marvel – With his combination of menace and anguish, he created an unforgettable character that made the movie the classic it remains today., July 25, 2019, The New York Times, July 25, 2019, July 25, 2019, live
- Ebert, Roger, September 11, 1992, Blade Runner: Director's Cut , review, RogerEbert.com, July 27, 2011, March 4, 2013, dead
- Hauer, Rutger, Rutger Hauer, Chatroom Transcripts: Live Chat February 7, 2001, February 7, 2001, RutgerHauer.org, July 27, 2011, September 9, 2012, usurped
- The Battle for Blade Runner, Vanity Fair, Schulman, Michael, September 14, 2017, August 9, 2024, July 6, 2020, live
- 10 Things You Never Knew About Blade Runner, NME, October 5, 2017, October 8, 2021, October 10, 2021, live
- Debbie Harry: 'My biggest regret is turning down Blade Runner', June 16, 2014, October 8, 2021, January 9, 2018, live
- Sanderson, William, William Sanderson, Brinkley, Aaron, A Chat with William Sanderson, BladeZone, October 5, 2000, July 27, 2011, April 28, 2014
- Mindhole Blowers: 20 facts about Blade Runner that might leave you questioning Ridley Scotts humanity, Davis, Cindy, November 8, 2011, Pajiba.com, September 21, 2014, live, August 2, 2014
- July 5, 2007, Ford: 'Blade Runner Was a Nightmare', Moono.com, July 27, 2011, February 24, 2012
- Rebecca, Pahle, 10 Fascinating Facts About , Blade Runner, August 28, 2015, Mental Floss, March 24, 2015, live, August 29, 2015
- Rob, Carnevale, Getting Direct with Directors: Ridley Scott, September 2006, BBC News, July 27, 2011, April 13, 2014
- And beneath lies, the truth, Empire, November 2000, Colin, Kennedy, 137
- In Conversation with Harrison Ford, Empire, April 2006, 202
- Smith, Neil, The Total Film Interview, Total Film, Summer 2007, 130
- Boonstra, John, A final interview with science fiction's boldest visionary, who talks candidly about , Blade Runner, , inner voices and the temptations of Hollywood, Rod Serling's the Twilight Zone Magazine, Philip K. Dick, 2, 3, June 1982, 47–52, July 27, 2011, May 28, 2013
- Wheale, Nigel, 1995, The Postmodern Arts: An Introductory Reader, Routledge, July 27, 2011, April 14, 2021, live
- Director Maximus, The Daily Telegraph, July 27, 2011, September 20, 2003, London, Mark, Monahan, June 21, 2008, dead
- Irish Arts Review, September 27, 2014, November 6, 2014, live
- Giraud, Jean, Jean Giraud, 1988, Moebius 4: The Long Tomorrow & Other SF Stories, Marvel Comics
- The Miniature Models of Blade Runner, VFX Voice, October 2, 2017, March 20, 2018, Failes, Ian, March 21, 2018, live
- Quentin Tarantino, Ridley Scott, Danny Boyle, & More Directors on THR's Roundtables I, 2016, February 4, 2018, The Hollywood Reporter, YouTube, live, January 6, 2016
- Ridley Scott: I used footage from Kubrick's , The Shining, in , Blade Runner, Uproxx, Hitfix, December 10, 2015, February 4, 2018, Eggersten, Chris, July 11, 2017, live
- Ridley Scott Reveals Stanley Kubrick Gave Him Footage from , The Shining, for , Blade Runner, Ending, The Hollywood Reporter, Howard, Annie, December 10, 2015, live, January 14, 2016
- The Top 40 Cars from Feature Films: 30. Police Spinner, ScreenJunkies, July 27, 2011, March 30, 2010, though press kits for the film stated that the spinner was propelled by three engines: "conventional internal combustion, jet and anti-gravity"., April 4, 2014
- Lightman, Herb A., Patterson, Richard, October 7, 2020, Discussing the Set Design of Blade Runner, August 29, 2024, The American Society of Cinematographers, en, October 7, 2024, live
- Museum of Pop Culture, Experience Music Project / Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame (EMP/SFM), January 24, 2011, dead
- BladeZone, Deconstructing the Spinner, Winfield, Gene, Gene Winfield, Willoughby, Gary, July 27, 2011, September 27, 2013
- When A Newspaper Gave Blade Runner's Replicant Test To Mayor Candidates, Charlie Jane, Anders, February 23, 2015, Gizmodo, live, August 19, 2024
- Eric, Gutoski, 2003, More Human than Human: A field guide for testing if the San Francisco mayoral candidates are human or not, The Wave, dead, May 6, 2006
- How the Blade Runner soundtrack used electronic music to explore what it means to be human, June 8, 2024, The University of Sydney, en-US
- Vangelis, Vangelis, Blade Runner – Scoring the music, NemoStudios.co.uk, July 27, 2011, October 19, 2013
- Larsen, Peter, Film music, Reaktion Books, London, 2007
- Album Review: Vangelis: , Blade Runner Trilogy: 25th Anniversary, Mike, Orme, Pitchfork, July 27, 2011, February 7, 2008, October 29, 2013
- Blade Runner at 25: Why the Sci-Fi F/X Are Still Unsurpassed, Adam, Savage, Popular Mechanics, live, April 2, 2015, July 2007
- Los Angeles 2019 (Blade Runner) – Cinema's Greatest Effects Shots Picked by Hollywood's Top VFX Specialists, Empire, live, May 18, 2015, October 2, 2015
- Blade Runner: Spinner Vehicles, DouglasTrumbull.com, Trumbull Ventures, 2010, September 21, 2015, dead, July 4, 2015
- Harmetz, Aljean, E.T., May Set Sales Record, Section C, Cultural Desk, page 9, The New York Times, June 29, 1982
- Kaplan, Fred, A Cult Classic Restored, Again, The New York Times, September 30, 2007, July 27, 2011, December 20, 2013
- Blade Runner, British Board of Film Classification, May 27, 1982, January 8, 2016, dead, March 22, 2016
- Blade Runner, , Cut, British Board of Film Classification, September 29, 1992, January 8, 2016, dead, April 6, 2016
- Brian Tuffano Obituary, theguardian.com, January 26, 2023
- Blade Runner, , Final Cut, British Board of Film Classification, October 12, 2007, January 8, 2016, dead, March 5, 2016
- Blade Runner: The Final Cut, July 26, 2007, The Digital Bits, July 27, 2011, February 22, 2014
- 4k Movie, Streaming, Blu-Ray Disc, and Home Theater Product Reviews & News , , High Def Digest, 2025-06-08, ultrahd.highdefdigest.com
- Blade Runner (1982), Rotten Tomatoes, Fandango, June 1, 2022, June 5, 2020, live
- Blade Runner (1982), Metacritic, CBS Interactive, April 3, 2020, April 16, 2020, live
- Hicks, Chris, September 11, 1992, Movie review: Blade Runner, Deseret News, July 27, 2011, April 7, 2014
- Kael, Pauline, Taking It All In, 1984, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 360–365
- John, Christopher, Film & Television, Ares, TSR, Inc., Winter 1983, 13
- Sammon, Paul M., Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, 1996, Orion Media, en, October 1, 2020, April 14, 2021, live
- Williams, Douglas E., Ideology as Dystopia: An Interpretation of "Blade Runner", International Political Science Review, 9, 4, October 1988, 381–394, October 13, 2015, 1600763, live, July 8, 2016, Publications, Inc., Sage Publications, Ltd.
- Torres Cruz, Décio, Postmodern Metanarratives: Blade Runner and Literature in the Age of Image, 2014, Palgrave Macmillan UK, en, September 18, 2020, October 9, 2020, live
- Jenkins, Mary, 1997, The Dystopian World of Blade Runner: An Ecofeminist Perspective, Trumpeter, 14, 4, October 13, 2015, September 14, 2017, live
- Doll, Susan, Faller, Greg, Blade Runner and Genre: Film Noir and Science Fiction, Literature Film Quarterly, 1986, 14, 2, October 13, 2015, live, October 13, 2015
- Shone, Tom, Woman: The Other Alien in Alien, June 6, 2012, Slate, live, April 24, 2016
- Jagernauth, Kevin, Blade Runner, Is Almost a Religion for Me: Denis Villeneuve Talks Directing the Sci-fi Sequel, October 12, 2015, IndieWire, April 28, 2015, dead, October 1, 2015
- Blade Runner: The Final Cut, Movie Review (1982), Ebert, Roger, RogerEbert.com, June 18, 2016, live, June 27, 2016
- Rodley, Chris, Blade Runner: The Director's Cut, October 14, 2015, frieze, 1993, dead, September 5, 2008
- Bruno, Giuliana, 1987, Ramble City: Postmodernism and , Blade Runner, October, 41, 61–74, 10.2307/778330, 778330, 0162-2870
- Desser, David, 1985, Blade Runner: Science Fiction & Transcendence, Literature/Film Quarterly; Salisbury, 13, 172–179
- Barnett, David, Are we living in a Blade Runner world?, June 30, 2022, www.bbc.com, November 12, 2019, en, June 30, 2022, live
- Landsberg, Alison, 144020560, 1995, Prosthetic Memory: Total Recall and Blade Runner, Body & Society, 1, 3–4, 175–189, 10.1177/1357034X95001003010
- Blade Runner, July 27, 2011, dead, Movies & TV Dept., The New York Times, 2013, May 17, 2013
- Gandhi Wins Art Direction and Cinematography: 1983 Oscars, January 3, 2014, www.youtube.com, August 14, 2020, August 3, 2020, live
- The 55th Academy Awards | 1983, Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, October 5, 2014, August 14, 2020, April 17, 2018, live
- E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial Wins Visual Effects: 1983 Oscars, April 28, 2014, www.youtube.com, August 14, 2020, August 6, 2020, live
- The Dystopian World of , Blade Runner, : An Ecofeminist Perspective, July 27, 2011, Trumpeter, Jenkins, Mary, 1997, 14, 4, February 14, 2009, live
- Harley, Alexis, America, a prophecy: when Blake meets , Blade Runner, Sydney Studies in English, December 24, 2020, 31, 61–75, 107741379, January 29, 2022, February 10, 2024, live
- Edwards, Jacob, 'A Most Unconvincing Replicant: Allegory and Intelligence in Blade Runner's Chess Game', by Jacob Edwards, The Lifted Brow, December 27, 2013, April 7, 2019, April 6, 2019, live
- Barber, Lynn, Scott's Corner, January 6, 2002, live, The Observer, London, July 27, 2011, July 20, 2008
- Avenging nature: the role of nature in modern and contemporary art and literature, 2020, Lexington Books, Valls Oyarzun, Eduardo, Ecocritical theory and practice, Lanham Boulder NewYork London, 13, Gualberto Valverde, Rebeca, Malla García, Noelia, Colom Jiménez, María, Cordero Sánchez, Rebeca
- Representations of Ecocide in Blade Runner and Neuromancer, June 21, 2023, project.cyberpunk.ru, July 3, 2013, live
- Cheded, Farah, June 29, 2017, Quite an Experience to Live in Fear: An In-Depth Look at How the Anxieties that Inspired 'Blade Runner' Fare Today, February 13, 2024, Film School Rejects, en-US, February 13, 2024, live
- Is Deckard a Replicant? The history of Blade Runner's most enduring mystery, The Daily Telegraph, Tristram Fane Saunders, October 5, 2017, March 12, 2019, March 11, 2019, live
- Peary, Danny, 1984, Omni, 's Screen Flights, Screen Fantasies: The Future According to Science Fiction, Directing , Alien, and , Blade Runner, : An Interview with Ridley Scott, Omni, / , Doubleday, 293–302
- July 27, 2011, A Cult Classic Restored, Again, Kaplan, Fred, September 30, 2007, The New York Times, The film's theme of dehumanization has also been sharpened. What has been a matter of speculation and debate is now a certainty: Deckard, the replicant-hunting cop, is himself a replicant. Mr. Scott confirmed this: 'Yes, he's a replicant. He was always a replicant.', February 5, 2018
- What is a Blade Runner? And other questions you may have before seeing the sequel, Adam White, October 2, 2017, The Daily Telegraph, March 11, 2019, SCOTT, Gaff, at the very end, leaves an origami, which is a piece of silver paper you might find in a cigarette packet, and it's a unicorn. Now, the unicorn in Deckard's daydream tells me that Deckard wouldn't normally talk about such a thing to anyone. If Gaff knew about that, it's Gaff's message to say, 'I've read your file, mate.', March 29, 2019, live
- Blade Runner, riddle solved, July 9, 2000, BBC News, July 27, 2011, live, April 6, 2014
- 2013-11-08, The Wachowskis, DePaul Visiting Artists Series
- Rian Johnson on Looper: Plot, Influences, and Sequel Potential, YouTube, October 2012
- Moore, Ronald D., Ronald D. Moore, Daniel Solove, Deven Desai and David Hoffman, Battlestar Galactica, Interview, Eick, David, October 3, 2011, November 1, 2011, dead, Concurring Opinions, February 21, 2008, David Eick
- Exclusive: Christopher Nolan Talks 'Batman Begins' 10th Anniversary, Forbes, Hughes, Mark, July 30, 2015, August 9, 2024, October 3, 2017, live
- Denis Villeneuve's Favorite Movies: 29 Films the Director Wants You to See, IndieWire, Sharf, Zac, Foreman, Alison, Zilko, Christian, February 26, 2023, August 9, 2024, August 6, 2024, live
- How Ridley Scott's 'Blade Runner' Changed the Look of Cinematic Sci-Fi Forever, October 3, 2017
- Nathan, Ian, Ridley Scott A Retrospective, 2025, Thames and Hudson
- The Creator, Working with Chappel Roan, & the Empire Strikes Back with Cinematographer Oren Soffer by Intermission
- Aren't We All Just Replicants on the Inside?, October 2, 2007, Rapold, Nicolas, The New York Sun, July 27, 2011, September 5, 2008
- Librarian Announces National Film Registry Selections, March 7, 1994, Library of Congress Information Bulletin, May 20, 2020, March 8, 2021, live
- Complete National Film Registry Listing, Film Registry , , National Film Preservation Board , , Programs at the Library of Congress , , Library of Congress, May 20, 2020, October 31, 2016, live
- The Visual Effects Society Unveils '50 Most Influential Visual Effects Films of All Time', Visual Effects Society, July 27, 2011, June 4, 2012
- Crazy: , Blade Runner, Parody, Kissell, Gerry, BladeZone, July 27, 2011, April 28, 2014
- Albedo, #0, Grand Comics Database, Project, Gallacci, Steven A., "Bad Rubber" section, July 27, 2011, April 6, 2014
- Red Dwarf: Back To Earth, – This Weekend's Essential Viewing – NME Video Blog, Howard, Rob, NME, July 27, 2011, October 11, 2012
- Red Dwarf: Back to Earth, – Director's Cut DVD 2009: Amazon.co.uk: Craig Charles, Danny John-Jules, Chris Barrie, Robert Llewellyn, Doug Naylor: DVD, live, June 14, 2009, July 27, 2011, June 15, 2009
- Directors's Panel with Katsuyuki Motohiro, Naoyoshi Shiotani, and Atsuko Ishizuka, March 30, 2013, December 30, 2013, Anime News Network, live, December 31, 2013
- Jha, Alok, Rogers, Simon, Rutherford, Adam, August 26, 2004, July 27, 2011, 'I've seen things...': Our expert panel votes for the top 10 sci-fi films, The Guardian, London, May 13, 2007, dead
- Blade Runner, tops scientist poll, BBC News, August 26, 2004, September 22, 2012, live, May 13, 2014
- Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence, Jim, Omura, September 16, 2004, FPS Magazine, July 27, 2011, October 29, 2013
- Hollywood is haunted by , Ghost in the Shell, Steve, Rose, The Guardian, October 19, 2009, July 27, 2011, March 8, 2013
- Coplan, Amy, Davies, David, Blade Runner, 2015, Routledge, July 13, 2017, February 25, 2018, live
- Booker, M. Keith, Alternate Americas: Science Fiction Film and American Culture, 2006, Greenwood Publishing Group, July 13, 2017, February 26, 2018, live
- Milner, Andrew, Literature, Culture and Society, 2005, Psychology Press, July 13, 2017, February 25, 2018, live
- Brown, Steven T., Tokyo Cyberpunk: Posthumanism in Japanese Visual Culture, 2016, Springer, July 13, 2017, February 25, 2018, live
- Evans, Josh, What Is Biopunk?, June 20, 2015, September 18, 2011, ScienceFiction.com, June 2, 2015, live
- Wohlsen, Marcus, Biopunk: Solving Biotech's Biggest Problems in Kitchens and Garages, Current Publishing, 2011, August 24, 2017, October 20, 2021, live
- One Movie Both Invented and Perfected the Tech Noir, Game Rant, Ben, Sherlock, February 21, 2021, November 4, 2023, August 26, 2022, live
- September 1, 2004, Cigéhn, Peter, The Top 1319 Sample Sources (version 60), live, July 27, 2011, Sloth.org, Semimajor.net, October 27, 2013
- Deus Ex Machina – , I, Human, Review, The Metal Crypt, February 22, 2010, July 27, 2011, April 7, 2014
- Gaming Gurus, 14, 4, April 1, 2006, Wired, August 28, 2009, September 3, 2013
- Webster, Andrew, Cyberpunk meets interactive fiction: The art of , Cypher, The Verge, October 17, 2012, February 27, 2013, February 1, 2014
- Rise of the Dragon, OldGames.sk, November 10, 2010, February 2, 2014
- dead, July 18, 2012, Tracing Replicants: We examine , Blade Runner, 's influence on games, November 11, 2010, 1Up
- Blade Runner, and , Snatcher, AwardSpace.co.uk, November 10, 2010, July 25, 2013
- The Top 10 Best Game Detectives, NowGamer, live, March 16, 2012, May 16, 2011
- Beneath a Steel Sky, Softonic.com, November 10, 2010, October 19, 2013
- Lambie, Ryan, Den of Geek, Bubblegum Crisis, 3D live-action movie on the way, November 10, 2010, January 4, 2012
- 3D Live Action , Bubblegum Crisis, Movie Gets a Director and a Start Date, Bleeding Cool, November 10, 2010, April 7, 2014, November 4, 2010
- Retrospective: , Perfect Dark, November 10, 2010, February 21, 2011
- Ripper, The, Europa!, GameFan, 2, 12, December 1994, August 20, 2018, March 2, 2019, live
- Robertson, Andy, Skyhammer – Now here's a game that really soars!, The Atari Times, June 2, 1996, August 20, 2018, April 1, 2018, live
- Syndicate Wars, : Review, Chuck, Schrank, Gamezilla PC Games, Lubie.org, November 10, 2010, September 8, 2013
- Syndicate, HardcoreGaming101.net, November 10, 2010, January 1, 2014
- Lukas, Mariman, Chapman, Murray, December 2002, 4.1, alt.fan.blade-runner, FAQs.CS.UU.nl, Blade Runner, : Frequently Asked Questions, February 4, 2018, February 5, 2018
- The curse of Blade Runner's adverts, BBC Newsbeat, September 11, 2018, February 27, 2015, October 20, 2018, live
- Why the Tesla Cybertruck Looks So Weird, Wired, December 5, 2019, December 5, 2019, live, Marshall, Aarian
- Blade Runner's art director Syd Mead is a huge fan of Tesla's new Cybertruck, Aaron, Holmes, Tyler, Sonnemaker, Business Insider, December 5, 2019, November 28, 2019, live
- Elon Musk Says Tesla Truck Reveal Will Coincide With 'Blade Runner' Date, Bill, Roberson, Forbes, December 5, 2019, November 27, 2019, live
- 100 Best Films of the 20th Century, Hoberman, J., 2001, Village Voice Critics' Poll, The Village Voice, FilmSite.org, July 27, 2011, March 31, 2014
- OFCS Top 100: Top 100 Sci-Fi Films, OFCS.org, Online Film Critics Society, June 12, 2002, July 27, 2011, March 13, 2012
- Sight & Sound Top Ten Poll 2002, Sight & Sound, BFI.org.uk, British Film Institute, 2002, May 15, 2012, February 4, 2018
- Schröder, Nicolaus, 2002, 50 Klassiker, Film, Gerstenberg, de
- 1001 Movies to See Before You Die, 1001BeforeYouDie.com, July 22, 2002, May 28, 2014, February 4, 2011
- Top 50 Cult Movies, May 23, 2003, Entertainment Weekly, July 27, 2011, March 31, 2014
- Top 10 sci-fi films, The Guardian, July 27, 2011, July 25, 2013, dead
- Scientists vote , Blade Runner, best sci-fi film of all time, The Guardian, August 26, 2004, July 27, 2011, Alok, Jha, March 8, 2013
- How we did it, The Guardian, August 26, 2004, July 27, 2011, July 26, 2013, dead
- Film news: Who is the greatest?, Total Film, Future Publishing, October 24, 2005, July 27, 2011, January 23, 2014
- The Complete List – All-Time 100 Movies, Time, May 23, 2005, July 27, 2011, August 22, 2011, dead
- All-Time 100 Movies, Time, July 27, 2011, February 12, 2005, August 31, 2011, dead
- All-Time 100 Movies: , Blade Runner, (1982), Time, July 27, 2011, February 12, 2005, Corliss, Richard, March 5, 2011, dead
- Sci-fi special: Your all-time favourite science fiction, Alison, George, New Scientist, November 12, 2008, July 27, 2011, April 6, 2014
- New Scientist, 's favourite sci-fi film, Alison, George, New Scientist, October 1, 2008, July 27, 2011, April 6, 2014
- Empire, Features, Empire, July 26, 2011, October 14, 2013
- Film Features: 100 Greatest Movies of All Time, Total Film, Future Publishing, July 27, 2011, December 22, 2013
- 2012, Sight & Sound, 2012 critics top 250 films, Sight & Sound, BFI.org, British Film Institute, September 20, 2012, October 26, 2013
- 2012, Sight & Sound, 2012 directors top 100 films, Sight & Sound, BFI.org, British Film Institute, September 20, 2012, April 18, 2014
- The 100 Greatest Movies, Empire, March 20, 2018, October 7, 2018, October 13, 2018, live
- Top 25 Sci-Fi Movies of All Time, IGN, June 30, 2022, June 7, 2022, June 30, 2022, live
- The Greatest Films of All Time, Sight & Sound, December 24, 2022, December 1, 2022, March 18, 2021, live
- November 21, 2024, The FBI reveal the 10 most accurate movie psychopaths, March 8, 2025, faroutmagazine.co.uk, en-US, November 21, 2024, live
- Shone, Tom, 2004, Blockbuster, Simon & Schuster
- June 24, 2001, Future Noir, : Lost Chapters, 2019: Off-World, Scribble.com, February 4, 2018
- Riesman, Abraham, October 2, 2017, The Weird World of Blade Runner Spinoffs, August 1, 2020, Vulture, en-us, October 28, 2020, live
- Google Books, Blade Runner: (Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), Dick, Philip K., 2007, Del Rey Books, July 27, 2011, April 14, 2021, live
- Hear , Blade Runner, , , Terminator, , , Videodrome, & Other 70s, 80s & 90s Movies as Novelized AudioBooks, Colin, Marshall, Open Culture, September 14, 2015, live, December 24, 2016
- Marvel Super Special, #22, Grand Comics Database, April 6, 2014
- Jonathan, Law, Cassell Companion to Cinema, 1997, 1995 , Brewer's Cinema, Cassell, London, England, Internet Archive
- Stein, Michael, Blade Runner, June 1982, Fantastic Films, Fantastic Films Inc., Chicago, IL, 4, 5, Ad, 0273-7043
- Bates, Jason, Westwood's Blade Runner, PC Gamer, 4, 9, BladeZone, September 9, 1997, July 27, 2011, November 27, 2012
- Robb, Brian J., Counterfeit Worlds: Philip K. Dick on Film, 200–225, Titan Books, 2006
- Platt, John, March 1, 1999, A , Total Recall, spin-off that's an awful lot like , Blade Runner, Science Fiction Weekly, 5, 9 , issue #98, July 27, 2011, January 15, 2008
- On the Edge of , Blade Runner, Ingels, Nicklas, Los Angeles, 2019, Tyrell-Corporation.pp.se, July 27, 2011, April 7, 2014
- Future Shocks, TVO.org, TVOntario, , Ontario Educational Communications Authority, July 27, 2011, dead, December 24, 2014
- Interview: Charles de Lauzirika (, Blade Runner, ), July 27, 2011, CHUD.com, Fischer, Russ, February 8, 2007, February 2, 2014
- Blade Runner, – The Final Cut: 2-Disc Special Edition DVD Review, July 27, 2011, FilmEdge.net, Weitz, Scott, December 16, 2007, usurped, May 17, 2013
- Goldberg, Matt, Ryan Gosling Confirms He's in , Blade Runner 2, ; Talks Shane Black's , The Nice Guys, Collider, November 16, 2015, November 16, 2015, November 17, 2015, live
- Nudd, Tim, Ryan Gosling Set to Join Harrison Ford in , Blade Runner, Sequel, People, live, August 23, 2015
- Blade Runner 2, Officially Starts Filming This July, Haleigh, Foutch, January 25, 2016, Collider, October 6, 2016, July 22, 2016, live
- The 90th Academy Awards | 2018, Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, August 14, 2020, April 17, 2018, live
- Blade Runner 2049: five things we learned from the shorts, Ben, Child, September 29, 2017, The Guardian, February 1, 2022, February 1, 2022, live
- Black Lotus: Everything you need to know about the Blade Runner anime, Martyn, Casserly, November 15, 2021, Tech Advisor, February 1, 2022, February 1, 2022, live
- Hear Alessia Cara's New Song 'Feel You Now' in 'Blade Runner: Black Lotus' Opening Sequence, Heran, Mamo, August 5, 2021, Billboard, February 1, 2022, February 1, 2022, live
- Blade Runner 2049, Prequel Short Connects Events to Original 1982 Film, D'Alessandro, Anthony, August 31, 2017, Deadline Hollywood, October 3, 2017, November 2, 2017, live
- September 16, 2022, 'Blade Runner 2049' Sequel Series Ordered at Amazon, variety.com, September 16, 2022, September 16, 2022, live
- Caddy, Becca, Blade Runner 2099: everything we know so far – Everything we know about Amazon's upcoming Blade Runner 2099 series, October 12, 2022, TechRadar, October 12, 2022, October 12, 2022, live
- Andreeva, Nellie, 'Blade Runner 2099' To Premiere In 2026 On Prime Video, Deadline Hollywood, September 11, 2025, August 22, 2025, August 23, 2025, live
Bibliography
- Doll, Susan, and Greg Faller. 1986. "Blade Runner and Genre: Film Noir and Science Fiction." Literature Film Quarterly 14 (2): 89–100.
- Eagan, Daniel (2010) America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry, A&C Black, isbn 0826429777, pages 775–776
- Morgan, David. Blade Runner at National Film Registry
External links
Category:Blade Runner (franchise) films
Category:1982 American films
Category:1980s dystopian films
Category:1980s English-language films
Category:1982 Hong Kong films
Category:1982 action thriller films
Category:1982 films
Category:1982 science fiction films
Category:American action thriller films
Category:American detective films
Category:American dystopian films
Category:American neo-noir films
Category:American science fiction action films
Category:BAFTA winners (films)
Category:Fiction about biorobotics
Category:Films about climate change
Category:Cyberpunk films
Category:English-language action thriller films
Category:English-language science fiction films
Category:Existentialist films
Category:Fiction about flying cars
Category:Films about androids
Category:Films about genetic engineering
Category:Films about memory erasure and alteration
Category:Films about psychopaths and sociopaths
Category:Films adapted into comics
Category:Films based on works by Philip K. Dick
Category:Films directed by Ridley Scott
Category:Films scored by Vangelis
Category:Films set in 2019
Category:Films set in Los Angeles
Category:Films set in the future
Category:Films shot in England
Category:Films shot in Los Angeles
Category:Films with screenplays by David Peoples
Category:Films with screenplays by Hampton Fancher
Category:Hong Kong action thriller films
Category:Hong Kong detective films
Category:Hong Kong neo-noir films
Category:Hong Kong science fiction action films
Category:Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation–winning works
Category:The Ladd Company films
Category:Postmodern films
Category:Saturn Award–winning films
Category:Shaw Brothers Studio films
Category:United States National Film Registry films
Category:Warner Bros. films
.png?resolution=330px)