Blade Runner 2049 (2017)
An admirable and inspired attempt to further continue the story as presented in the highly influential 1982 classic, Blade Runner, sees modern visionary Denis Villenueve (Arrival, Enemy) supplant Ridley Scott (who executive produces) as director, further opening up the world of the future beyond Los Angeles in order to ponder on more of the themes of the first film: what makes us uniquely human, and what our obligation is to other life (including that which we’ve engineered to be just like us)?
The original Blade Runner, through its Directors Cut to its Final Cut, put back in a story angle in which Ridley Scott had wanted to suggest that Rick Deckard is a blade runner (a cop who retires – aka, executes – rogue replicants) who doesn’t know that he’s also a replicant. Though Harrison Ford (The Force Awakens, The Age of Adaline) does return to one of his most iconic roles, the answer to that question continues to be complicated, if not outright directly ignored, by what happens in 2049. Along those lines, 2049 also brings back one of the original screenwriters of Blade Runner, Hampton Fancher, though his original script had been retooled and overhauled by David Webb Peoples, at Ridley Scott’s request way back when. Michael Green (Logan), who already worked on a revisionist expansion of a classic Ridley Scott original property in Alien: Covenant, also shares a screenwriting credit.
This new chapter picks up thirty years after what happens in Los Angeles, 2019. We follow a new Los Angeles-based blade runner, this time one that knows he is a replicant, named K (Gosling, La La Land), in an era in which humans and new-model replicants on Earth (ones without a limited lifespan) are allowed to co-exist, albeit in a tenuous master-and-servant hierarchy. The blade runners are still tracking down and targeting the models that may be at large who’ve chosen to buck from the lives of servitude they were designed for. On one case, K discovers clues that lead up to the revelation that there may have been a replicant that had been able to reproduce a child. K’s superior on the force, Lt. Joshi (Wright, Wonder Woman), knows this would result in global chaos should this information go public, putting a certain war between slave replicants and humans who devalue their lives, and orders K to destroy all evidence that emerges.
At nearly three hours in length, Blade Runner 2049 finds time to explore fully its themes, as well as the expansive world of the future, showcasing the dump of the regions south of Los Angeles, as well as the under-populated radioactive wasteland of Las Vegas. Cinematographer Roger Deakins (Hail Caesar!, Sicario) captures the beauty, as well as the ugliness, of the futuristic dystopia environment, making 2049 as visually appealing in its time as its predecessor, though not exactly in the same groundbreaking of ways. Perhaps it is a bit overdone at times, as there’s a clean and anesthetized look to the film that makes it feel like more style over substance. Deakins use of light and shadow is still second to none. One could certainly attribute the same criticism to the Ridley Scott original, but that film took place in a world that felt lived in, even if idealized, whereas Blade Runner 2049 seems to solely reside in its own pocket universe, despite exploring beyond the single-city setting.
The best coup of the film is in getting Harrison Ford to return to the role, which gives the entire project the cred it needs to keep highly skeptical audiences on board. Even though he isn’t the main star, only coming along in support in the film’s second half, there’s enough of him here to sate long-time fans, and a few cameo appearances from familiar faces also reminds us of the origins of the story, even if the fan-servicing can encroach into superfluous scene territory. The performance isn’t stellar, but this is in keeping with the detached Deckard we witnessed in the first film. Stand-out performances aren’t really the lure of this franchise anyway, though 2049 could sure have used the scene-stealing talents of a Rutger Hauer type to offset the rampant stoicism of most of the characters in this follow-up.
As for the new actors in the mix, they’re fine, with Gosling delivering an interesting take on a replicant who must deal with his own feelings of being not worth as much as a human, but also discovering that there may just be something special about him after all. That he has feelings for another form of artificial intelligence makes his descent inward all the more poignant. Jared Leto (Suicide Squad) plays Niander Wallace, who, as the new Tyrell Corporation head, is at the forefront of the artificial intelligence community, though both his look (he’s blind but loves visual pop surrounding him) and his abode that favor aesthetics over function make an already cold and distant film seem almost clinical in approach, especially as he begins to conduct experiments on his replicant specimen in his attempt to recreate recreation. Sylvia Hoeks (The Best Offer) plays Luv, the dangerous “henchwoman” to Wallace in a way that would be more at home in a Matrix sequel than in building upon the Blade Runner epic arc. Ana de Armas (War Dogs) is a stunning companion to K, as Joi, a hologram that one wonders could have reciprocal feelings for him, or if it is just part of her programming (echoes of Her resound through this entire story element, including a surrogate sex scene that is nearly identical in its concept).
Overly long, occasionally inert, Blade Runner 2049 tries to catch up to the original film in both weighty themes and technical razzle-dazzle, and while a very respectable and challenging effort, it is a bit of a disappointment in the roads it travels, and, in the end, that it doesn’t offer much more of interest to ponder or marvel at than what had been brought forth by the 1982 opus. Unlike the prior entry, which had a few moments of levity and a comic twist in some of the performances, Villeneuve keeps the story almost completely on the level of the serious. While the original Blade Runner pushes forward the look at humanity and creation in the metaphors offered by its replicants, Blade Runner 2049 continues the challenging look, but struggles to offer up enough connective tissue for us to look at our own human selves afterward.
All in all, while I’m content with the follow-up, I walked out of the theater feeling less than ecstatic, which, given how much of a rabid fan I am of the 1982 masterpiece, leads me to feel a bit deflated, especially as I ultimately don’t see the events that transpire in 2049 to be really part of the canonical story, only a “what if” type take. I suppose it is fitting that a film that gives us more technical achievements to be enraptured by would embody the themes of both films on how humanity has become more isolated the further it relies on technology. Like the replicants themselves, it very much resembles the original in terms of lofty ideals and a stunning, atmospheric look at a potential future world, but this effort is more of a very impressive copy that has its own ideas than it is a fully organic entity on its own.
Qwipster’s rating: B
MPAA Rated: R for violence, some sexuality, nudity and language
Running Time: 163 min.
Cast: Ryan Gosling, Harrison Ford, Robin Wright, Sylvia Hoeks, Ana de Armas, Jared Leto, Mackenzie Davis, Carla Juri
Small role: Dave Bautista, Barkhad Abdi, Edward James Olmos, Sean Young
Director: Denis Villenueve
Screenplay: Hampton Fancher, Michael Green