Aaron Wolff

Mrs. Kolb

Intro to film

20 April 2026

What sets Blade Runner apart is the way it conveys its ideas not through direct narrative

exposition, but through the atmosphere it creates.. It is quite slow, compared to that of any other

films in the genre, which is vital in allowing the viewer to come to terms with the sheer

magnificence of the detail in what they are looking at, the dark, claustrophobic, perennially rain

soaked, futuristic city of Los Angeles. It is immediately suffocating, the neon signs are

overpowering, the towers tower, a mix of cultures and languages, disorienting the viewer.

Perhaps most disturbing on first viewing, the fact that replicants should appear so completely

indistinguishable from humans. Replicants like Roy Batty and Rachael can exhibit empathy and

emotion in the same way as a human, raising the uncomfortable question as to what distinguishes

the replicant from the human killer of replicants and vice versa. Nowhere is this issue more

explicitly drawn than in the relationship between Deckard and Rachael, which is intensely

uncomfortable and unclear. Raising issues of control and consent, not to mention that of human

identity and definition, offering no conclusive morality from the film. So why should not

replicants be considered as human as the men hunting them down.

The films visual elements can also be considered in line with this confusion the darkness and

unnatural, ever present light create an atmosphere of dread. Where the distinction between what

is real and what is not become increasingly confused. Blade Runner refuses to deliver a neatly

explained, coherent world. There are no narrative loose ends to be tied and the central premise is

just as vague.

The concept of memory in the film is also central. A replicant is constructed from artificial

memories, and these memories are what form it into what it is. One of the most moving moments

is when Rachael realizes that her memories are not true.The open ended conclusion is a further

illustration, because it doesn’t give the audience an answer, but then if you watch Blade Runner

at all, the interpretation as to the true identity of Deckard is inherently influenced, however there

remains an underlying uncertainty, and even if Deckard IS a replicant it nullifies any distinctionsthat have previously been made between human and replicant altogether. Blade Runner provides

no answers.