Even so, that wouldn't present a problem with the logic at all...it would
only place him in a similar category as Sean Young's character. Note the
scenes where Deckard is asked if he himself has ever taken the test. The
movie inverts the theme of the book to arrive at a similar conclusion; the
book illumines the difference between humanity and androids while the movie
plays on the commonality. In the former, Deckard discovers his humanity via
the difference - in the latter, he arrives there through the commonality.
Phillip K. Dick, who at first did not like the movie at all, later came to
this appreciation of the film.
Ridley Scott has also stated that in "Blade Runner", Deckard was
indeed and android. One of the edited scenes of the film features Deckard
cutting himself and finding gears. There are 3 main cuts of "Blade Runner"
and probably 7 versions of it floating around.
jeff
At 07:42 AM 2/24/2002, forel wrote:
quoted 19 lines Mxyzptlk wrote:
>Mxyzptlk wrote:
>
> > Are you sure about that? Take a close look at the scene where he discovers
> > some of the 'fake memory' photographs of the replicants' are the same ones
> > which he himself has in his home. The movie takes a different course than
> > Dick's book.
> > jeff
>
>The problem in that logic is that Sean Young's character is the only one
>with a fake memory- the others know that they are replicants and haven't
>been alive very long and won't live much longer.
>
>-- forel
>elitist fuck
>
>
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