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Rob Ager's thoughts on Blade Runner 2049

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  • čas přidán 31. 10. 2017
  • Vastly overrated by critics and wisely avoided by audiences. Rob Ager gives his thoughts on Blade Runner 2049. More videos and articles at www.collativele...

Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @robag555
    @robag555  Před 6 lety +134

    Haha, shall I follow this up with a video in which I offer multiple alternative plotlines that would be better? It's not exactly difficult.

    • @DVDandFilmBloke
      @DVDandFilmBloke Před 6 lety +5

      Bloody hell yes
      Also I personally thought the film was alright but nothing amazing, Harrison Ford was wasted in the film and the score was flat. The original was much better (not a masterpiece) but much better.

    • @nicky2coats
      @nicky2coats Před 6 lety +2

      Yes, please do. This movie was incrediblt frustrating because the talent was there behind the camera, but amounted to a big heap of wasted potential.

    • @DVDandFilmBloke
      @DVDandFilmBloke Před 6 lety +3

      Yes it was wasted potential.

    • @Computer17Blue
      @Computer17Blue Před 6 lety +1

      Yes

    • @clasifi1
      @clasifi1 Před 6 lety +14

      Which begs the question...Why aren't you a succesful film director ? Why haven't you produced a single succesful novel or script ? I've found a "Rob Ager" on imdb credited for writing, directing, editing & producing a film titled: "
      Turn in Your Grave ". Are you a misunderstood genius Rob ? Should the likes of Villeneuve & Fancher ask you for your direction & advice on their next project ? You know what else is not difficult Rob? Posting videos on youtube. I wonder why you're doing that instead of directing more masterpieces like "Turn in Your Grave" ? What a waste of talent!

  • @collativelearning
    @collativelearning Před 6 lety +45

    Forgot to add in this critique Jared Leto's performance was terrible in BR 2049, though that will be half due to the script.

    • @memestealer2561
      @memestealer2561 Před 3 lety +1

      I feel if Leto and Ford weren't in the movie, it could've been a lot better. I still liked the movie

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Před 3 lety +1

      He was great in Requiem for a Dream, and his abilities fell off from there.

    • @emadSciFi
      @emadSciFi Před 3 lety +1

      You're spot on but what's weirder is that he actually did a good performance in the small youtube video that Ridley Scott's son directed. The idea of the bad guy was ill conceived and built on stereotypes. (And I don;t like Jared Leto to begin with!!)

    • @Hum0ng0us
      @Hum0ng0us Před 3 měsíci

      Plus he's just overrated.

  • @kabukiwookie
    @kabukiwookie Před 6 lety +55

    To me the original blade runner changed sci-fi in the same kinda way Road Warrior changed action movies.

  • @politikz8128
    @politikz8128 Před 6 lety +19

    I really like this style of video where Rob just sits in front of the camera giving his thoughts.

  • @marcopederzoli4939
    @marcopederzoli4939 Před 4 lety +13

    There are a couple of other issues in the movie for me: 1) the lack of a decent villain, where in the original Blade Runner we have one of the greatest villain in cinema in Roy Batty. 2049 has comic-book level villains (both the female replicant with his complex and the incredibly stupid character that Jared Leto plays. That, along with his Joker must have been the nadir of his career). 2) this movie invalidates the whole ambiguity of the original movie (and novel) where you don't know if Deckard is a replicant or not and also it voids the Final Cut that Ridley Scott released in order to restore its original ideas, after the production shoehorned the happy ending in. The ending of Blade Runner is so abruptly painful, where you are 99% sure he is a replicant because of the unicorn and 100% sure Rachel is a replicant and she (as much as probably Deckard) will die really soon, also turning the whole fight for life and hunting that was the movie into a pointless and sad game that real humans like Gaff can laugh at (as he did, with the origami)

    • @redhippopotamus9144
      @redhippopotamus9144 Před 2 lety +2

      Deckard's ambiguity wasn't ruined
      Also only the Nexus 6 had shortened lives

    • @marcustmachado
      @marcustmachado Před 11 měsíci

      This filme is really terrible. Even the replicant relationship with the artificial girlfriend is so terrible because is so predictable with his "pen drive" being broken. Its no so futuristic anymore. And the enemy only appears twice in the movie. So shallow and superficial movie. Really disappointing.

  • @joebuck7417
    @joebuck7417 Před 6 lety +15

    What I can say about the original BR and the new one is that I remember distinctly so many details of the first time I watched Blade Runner...I remember which theater it was, the time of the day (it was at night), who I was with, the intoxicating and unforgettable opening sequence with Vangelis music and the LA dystopic cityscape, the cigarette smoke of the guy doing the interrogation, beautiful Sean Young, Harrison Ford of course, Rutger Hauer who I think is the real heart of the film, the dove flying off in the rain, and hundred other details. I remember these things like I experienced them yesterday, but it was 25 years ago. The new Blade Runner, I looked forward to it so much and I went to a beautiful cinema and was so psyched, but I don't remember much of anything.

    • @marcustmachado
      @marcustmachado Před 11 měsíci

      This filme is really terrible. Even the replicant relationship with the artificial girlfriend is so terrible because is so predictable with his "pen drive" being broken. Its no so futuristic anymore. And the enemy only appears twice in the movie. So shallow and superficial movie. Really disappointing.

  • @doctorx0079
    @doctorx0079 Před 6 lety +22

    The original was a relatively tight noir detective story that takes place in the future. It was full of interesting minor characters and felt like a believable extension of our world. The original BR doesn't explain everything but rewards repeated viewings, and has great quotable dialogue, "tears in rain" etc. BR 2049 is a ponderous, dull, desaturated morass of sandstorms and junkyards from the same director who gave us the ponderous, dull Arrival. The lead actor is practically catatonic for much of the running time. We spend whole minutes watching him mope around or lie on a chaise longue. I was hoping to be pleasantly surprised. I wasn't.

  • @oocelot3040
    @oocelot3040 Před 6 lety +10

    So glad I found this video! I came out of the theater so disappointed. I thought I was going crazy seeing everyone drooling over this movie. You pretty much summed up everything really well. The point in the movie where I really lost it was that 5 min scene of Agent K slowing reaching for the wooden horse in the furnace.
    I think in the original, the city was as much of a character as anyone else. This new one, we rarely see any of the city. Lots of abandoned buildings, empty rooms, nothing interesting. Such wasted potential...

    • @marcustmachado
      @marcustmachado Před 11 měsíci +1

      This filme is really terrible. Even the replicant relationship with the artificial girlfriend is so terrible because is so predictable with his "pen drive" being broken. Its no so futuristic anymore. And the enemy only appears twice in the movie. So shallow and superficial movie. Really disappointing.

  • @danieldemayo6209
    @danieldemayo6209 Před 6 lety +13

    Finally a real review. I totally agree! With all the shit going on in that universe this is all they could come up with? It should of had nothing to do with Dekard. He should of just been mentioned in it or had a very small appearance. Why destroy the older movies legacy? Yes and fuck Hans zimmer lol. I watched the original right after, for the 100th time, and I felt 100x more entertained and emotional.

  • @Themidnightegardener
    @Themidnightegardener Před 2 lety +6

    The first time I watch this movie, I think I even fell asleep for a minute, and was very underwhelmed. As I watched it a few more times, I started understanding that the boredom was part of the film and then for some reason from that, the whole movie suddenly seemed completely intentional and it took me through every range of emotion and it is absolutely one of my top favorite films now

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Před rokem

      You are doing pointless mental gymnastics. Boredom is a terrible emotion to feel during a supposed piece of entertainment.

    • @The_ScapeGoat
      @The_ScapeGoat Před 7 měsíci +2

      Boredom isn't an emotion. It's a lack of engagement. Being boring is the worst thing a film can do.

    • @Themidnightegardener
      @Themidnightegardener Před 7 měsíci

      @@The_ScapeGoat I never called boredom an emotion.

    • @ryanpeck3377
      @ryanpeck3377 Před 7 měsíci

      So youre saying they made the film intentionally boring. I call BullSh*t, this wasnt some indie art film, or Film school project. It was multimillion dollar sequel to a classic. In a film the director can actually make boredom not boring to the audience. This is film just has a boring story, told in a boring way and filmed in a boring way (not almost every scene should be some long sweeping epic shot) it had Writers and directors that cleary dont understand Film Noir or how to make that type of film

    • @Themidnightegardener
      @Themidnightegardener Před 7 měsíci

      @@ryanpeck3377 you alright? It's not that serious.

  • @pardeeplace4480
    @pardeeplace4480 Před 5 lety +8

    The 2000s Battlestar Galactica series did the replicant story so well that any Blade runner sequel could only fall flat in comparison.

  • @43nostromo
    @43nostromo Před 5 lety +7

    You are way to polite, Rob. Let me tell you one of the key elements that ruined this movie, and that element has a name. He has been a cancer in the film industry that has metastasized over the past 30 years. I'm speaking, of course, about Hans Zimmer. I'm amazed that this imposter has brainwashed an entire generation of otherwise smart, younger film-goers. I'm sure people will tag me as a troll, but history will bear me out. Please: do a documentary comparing this hack to the brilliant, classically trained composers like Jerry Goldsmith, Bernard Herrmann, John Williams, John Barry, James Horner, Elmer Bernstein, Miklos Rozsa, Wendy Carlos, Sir Alfred Newman and so-on. The Emperor Zimmer really has no clothes. His alleged "music" consists of button pushing, creating percussion designed to blow out ear drums and solid organs. Make Film Music Great Again!

    • @system-error
      @system-error Před 5 lety +5

      LMAO every time it's the same with me, I'm in a blockbuster movie, I hear an attention grabbing electro pulse score... It gets my attention, I'm listening... Then I'm like, oh there's nothing there, it's not a tune, it's just blaring dissonant notes. And then Hans Zimmer's comes up and I'm like oh that's why. Him again! The composer without a composition, every score sounds like he's testing out a new sound machine he just bought.

    • @Technique-kj2bp
      @Technique-kj2bp Před 4 lety

      You speak so eloquently that it amazes me that what you are actually saying is a complete load of shit. Hans Zimmer has brainwashed otherwise smart, young film-goers? What on earth are you talking about? He writes music for major films because his music is brilliant. Anyone would think you were talking about Tekashi 6ix 9ine or some other talentless twat. I'm of this generation & I have appreciation for Zimmer AND some of the composers you listed, because I'm not stuck in a one dimensional train of thought that 'everything was better back then'. Music has evolved, like everything else, move with the times. Yes some things do get worse over time, no denying that, but to slag off one of the only great modern composers suggests you are a deluded pessimist who can not decipher good from bad anymore, everything is just bad to you even when it is objectively good.

    • @amadeusdebussy6736
      @amadeusdebussy6736 Před 4 lety +1

      Zimmer is a blight.

    • @esyphillis101
      @esyphillis101 Před 4 lety +1

      Ever since his Dark Knight music theme he has been gravitating more and more towards using soundscapes than actual melodies. This became especially clear in Inception with its now parodied horn blaring.

    • @WalterSobchak91
      @WalterSobchak91 Před 5 dny

      Y’all are gay

  • @greedygolddigger3650
    @greedygolddigger3650 Před 5 lety +11

    The score, soundtrack and acting in the first movie was superb.

  • @Hereticked
    @Hereticked Před 6 lety +36

    Wow, and people say I'm a harsh critic! Agree with Rob that K's relationship with Joi was one of the best aspects of the movie. Agree that the story falls apart in the end. Disagree that it's "terrible" overall. Maybe it's because my expectations were so low, but for a sequel that was made 35 years after the original, 2049 was considerably better than I thought it would be.
    Also disagree that Harrison Ford was "wasted" in it. Harrison Ford shouldn't have been in this movie to begin with and the fact that they needed to shoehorn him into the story is probably the biggest reason it falls apart in the third act. I especially loved the final fight scene where K and Luv are locked in mortal combat and it just randomly cuts back to a pathetic looking Ford sitting there in his handcuffs doing nothing. GO AWAY HARRISON! Stop ruining 21st century movies with your re-animated corpse. (And no, I'm not blaming all the film's flaws on him, I'm just tired of seeing him SUCK in franchises that he once helped make great.)

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Před 6 lety +1

      I agree. Ford's presence sucked the life right out of the film. The 'fight' was ludicrous, and the Elvis/showgirl effects unimpressive. We already knew Deckard wasn't a particularly good fighter from the first film, and now he's old and weak. So why rub our faces in it? Just stupid. It must have been an executive decision to force Ford into the story.

    • @anasevi9456
      @anasevi9456 Před 5 lety

      it's not terrible, its just overrated and dumbed down to pander to stupid people. which is ironic because it's biggest fans sure seem to think it's the height of wit.
      A movie getting you to emphasize with a non-human incapable of many human things is clever.
      A movie that retcons the prior one via making replicants capable of just being superstrength humans with long lives and capable of everything humans are but a decent childhood is lazy.

  • @jesseyules
    @jesseyules Před 5 lety +15

    A Scanner Darkly is my favour Dick film adaptation. Linklater captured the humour and mind-altered paranoia of novel. I'd like to see Richard Linklater do a version of Do Androids Dream Electric Sheep.

  • @TimeKillersAddendum
    @TimeKillersAddendum Před 6 lety +14

    2 and half mins in you mention the film doesn’t explore the plot of a replicant telling someone they have false memories implanted. I believe something very similar to that was done (SPOILER AHEAD) K learning the memories of his childhood were actually the memories of the woman who creates the dreams to begin with. That seems to be a creative play on what you described comes from the book. I’d give the movie credit for that one.

    • @spaz288
      @spaz288 Před 6 lety

      She wasn't surprised by them. She saw them and had an emotional reaction to them, because they were hers.

    • @Technique-kj2bp
      @Technique-kj2bp Před 4 lety

      @NADS IQ You're either a troll or dyslexic. You are confusing yourself and everyone else with your comments.

  • @MrSuperninja619
    @MrSuperninja619 Před 6 lety +23

    Damn this was rough to watch because I thought the movie was incredible and I absolutely loved it. That's fine to have your opinions and I'll have mine because I'll still be able to enjoy it myself regardless. Still subscribed to see what you do in the future

  • @milkmyduds
    @milkmyduds Před 5 lety +18

    What kills it for me is how they simplify the whole story to "replicants are an oppressed minority who need a messiah to save them from the evil corporations and the uncle tom fugitive slaver blade runners". They basically just turned it into The Hunger Games.

    • @horaciosi
      @horaciosi Před 4 lety +6

      It's funny because, when I first saw Blade Runner, I thought it was going to pull off all of the
      sci-fi cliches. Main villain fights for the freedom of the oppresed kind, underground resistance, robot questions the meaning of being human, etc. And to my pleasant surprise, it did NONE of those. Roy only wants to extend his life, there's no resistance group and a robot actually PROVIDES US with the meaning of humanity.
      Bloaded Walker 2049 hour runtime on the other hand, did exactly what I thought the original would to TO A T. Main villain fights for the freedom of the oppresed kind, underground resistance (which goes nowhere, btw), robot questions the meaning of being human, etc.
      Better than the original my ass.

  • @HeronKij
    @HeronKij Před 6 lety +117

    I'm actually kind of shocked. I thought it was one of the most subtle and thought provoking films I'd seen in years. Just because they expanded on Blade Runner and not the ideas seen in Do Androids Dream doesn't mean its bad. Your expectations I think may have gotten in the way.

    • @collativelearning
      @collativelearning Před 6 lety +16

      No, it's not a bad film because it didn't use the ideas from the novel. It's a bad film because there were lots of different plots they could have come up with that would have been better, but the novel thing is pertinent because they had a source of great ideas immediately available and didn't use them either. They played it safe on pretty much every theme. Nothing challenging or insightful.

    • @HeronKij
      @HeronKij Před 6 lety +14

      Collative Learning Everything about this film leading up to its release spelled disaster for it. It was produced by Sony and WB, two studios known for their micromanaging tendencies, so we could have gotten a simple action-adventure movie set in the Blade Runner universe. And I have to disagree on the challenging part, mate. There are a plethora of understated but game-changing moments in this film that resonate both within the film itself and the original Blade Runner. Its definitely not the film I expected it to be, and I, personally, couldn't be happier for it. Is it as fresh as the original or as provocative? Not really, but thats kind of the nature of sequels. Of course it won't be as influential, because all the influence Blade Runner could have done has already been done.
      EDIT: Also it seems like you're more focussed on what the film didn't do at all rather than what it did right.

    • @eyespy3001
      @eyespy3001 Před 6 lety +14

      Collative Learning
      Again, saying it is bad because it didn’t go for inspiration where YOU thought it should isn’t a valid criticism. Blaming something for not meeting your expectations is such a self-centered point of view. Critique a movie for what it DID do, not what it should have done.

    • @Psychonaut-im3zz
      @Psychonaut-im3zz Před 6 lety +2

      This movie definitely doesn't deserve the praise, now that is shocking but what can you do. It's much easier to rant, because there's much to rant on. It's not a bad movie per se (actually it is pretty bad, but hey), it has things going for it (if I didn't know better I'd rate it a 6). It's a very empty and boring shell and wasted potential. Movie is intended for the pseudo-intellectual audience, designed to be stupid, designed for discussion-boards for sad people who can't even argue or reason. Maggots, hologram-sex, hologram nature, child slaves, feminism, bee-hives, cheese dialogue between Ford and Ryan, Leto creating replicunts for Ryan's imaginary horse penis. Come on, really? All very un-blade runner and unforgiving. There's no challenge, the entire premise of this movie sucked by design. Granted, it does look pretty. And that's about it.

    • @FrostedSeagull
      @FrostedSeagull Před 6 lety +2

      Hi HeroinKij,
      I agree with you. A you say " I thought it was one of the most subtle and thought provoking films I'd seen in years. "
      Blade Runner II is a MASTERPIECE.

  • @Tianmengliu
    @Tianmengliu Před 6 lety +36

    I respect your opinion alot, and I see your points on this. However I still think this movie was very well done, and probably ended up better than 99% of the other possibilities given all the ways it couldve been fucked up by other commercial driven directors/studios

  • @gage6209
    @gage6209 Před 6 lety +24

    Thank you. I'm sick of these pretentious critics trying to drain my wallet on crap.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Před 3 lety +3

      Well said. I don't get it. I know a few people who are bright and otherwise have good taste who were 'blown away' by BR2049. What in the actual fuck was there to be blown away by? It was dull and cliche and poor Harrison didn't look like he wanted to be there at all.

  • @gotthefeelin
    @gotthefeelin Před 2 lety +2

    Agree 100%. I was bored senseless watching this. The score using white noise to try and manipulate the audience into thinking something profound is happening was when I realized this film was BAD. They do something similar in Quantum of Solace where they reduce the sound after a boat chase, then go into a slo-mo shot to give the same affect as the white noise. It’s only there to cover a poor script.

  • @sandwichsupernova
    @sandwichsupernova Před 6 lety +10

    The original "Blade Runner" is my favorite movie, I absolutely love the original book, and yet, I agree with you 100% on this new one. I was immensely disappointed. It's really not a very great or interesting movie, it's a waste of the world, its potential, and its budget. It's a weak script, underdeveloped, with too much tell-not-show, and not enough of the characters actively pushing the plot forward. This film needed to be either shorter, or denser. It could have even taken ideas from the cyberpunk anime developed since the original "Blade Runner" and inspired by it. What we got was a pretty generic story in the window dressing of "Blade Runner", but without the lived-in feel of that film's incredible Production Design or the Vangelis soundtrack. Thank you for being honest and for taking such an unpopular stance.

  • @munderpool
    @munderpool Před 5 lety +7

    Great critique! It just doesn't have the street cred to call itself a sequel.

  • @edwardmulholland7912
    @edwardmulholland7912 Před 6 lety +11

    Thanks for this, Ive always a raised eyebrow when a film gets almost only rave reviews - that’s usually a sign of marketing and hype. I was put off going to the film on the big screen because its 3 hours long. I Will check it out when i can watch it at home to find out for myself.

  • @travish6427
    @travish6427 Před 3 lety +12

    "I hate that the camera is just lingering on nothing."
    2001 Space Odyssey, "Hold my beer."

    • @dfdfdgggjhjjh5081
      @dfdfdgggjhjjh5081 Před 3 lety +2

      I’ve tried watching 2001 several times and can’t do it. I’m going to try one last time this weekend but this time I’m going to get extremely drunk and maybe I’ll get through to the end.

  • @joannicholson4156
    @joannicholson4156 Před 6 lety +21

    I think a lot of the criticisms you have for the film have been said for Kubrick films as well. Too slow, looking flat, doesn't follow the spirit of the book it's based on, etc. It shares a lot of double narrative themes with Kubrick films (eyes opening, references to dreams, recovering memories, lust, greed identity). I think the statues in the ruins of Las Vegas look much like those in A.I, and I think that's on purpose. I think this film has a lot to say hidden in the dialogue and visual storytelling, and it'll take years to decode, just like a Kubrick film.

    • @joannicholson4156
      @joannicholson4156 Před 6 lety +2

      I would hardly call referencing a single element from somebody's massive body of work being "ripped off"

  • @raoulmontefiore4803
    @raoulmontefiore4803 Před 3 lety +3

    On the surface this film seems deep but deep down it's just shallow.

  • @bud389
    @bud389 Před 2 lety +13

    I don't think the giant hologram of Joi was meant to "impress" or "shock" you, I think it was meant to act as a foil to K, to show how disillusioned he'd become. He realized how much of an empty life he had, with the woman who was his pride and joy standing nude for all to see and gawk at, society expecting him to just go and buy another one to replace the one he'd lost. Instead of choosing to go back to his life of empty bliss, he decided to sacrifice himself to save Deckard.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Před rokem

      I agree I think that was the message but there was no redemptive arc to send that point home. K just became a no-fap but didn't find a real girl to be with (there was a spark with the hooker, but it was left unrequited).

    • @bigfattrolllord
      @bigfattrolllord Před rokem

      I imagine that the tall Joi was programmed to taunt him. That's why tall Joi called him Joe. It's almost like Luv saying "I hope you enjoyed our product."

  • @dontpokethebear3893
    @dontpokethebear3893 Před 6 lety +135

    Dang, I'm surprised to see such disdain for the film. I thought it had some incredible characterization in K and explored the same themes from the first film in a new and really inventive way that looks 30 years into our future the same way Blade Runner did back in 1982. It had great cinematography and score to boot too, IMO

    • @chongli8409
      @chongli8409 Před 6 lety +11

      I think Rob forgot that original Blade Runner was shot when cyberpunk and it's predictions for future were new and uncontested by reality. In the years that followed cyberpunk lost it's ideological ground because the future humanity was marching into didn't really look like what cyberpunk had predicted. But today the rapid technological advancement of humanity again brings to light all that grim cyberpunk dilemmas. And that's why I think Blade Runner 2049 is a flawed but good movie - it's a cyberpunk manifestation that modern world needs.

    • @JordanMgordan
      @JordanMgordan Před 6 lety +9

      Doesn't surprise me after his disdain for Fury Road.

    • @collativelearning
      @collativelearning Před 6 lety +9

      BR 2049 still looks nothing like the future. We're less than 30 yrs away. Artificial intelligence is going nowhere - see my video on the subject czcams.com/users/results?search_query=rob+ager+ai Created grown human from farmed flesh is total sci-fi nonsense. We're not progressing anywhere near what ppl think. We have the internet and more media gadgets, but essentially our houses, vehicles, clothes, food etc aren't much different to fifty years ago. And I think it'll remain like that for decades to come.

    • @collativelearning
      @collativelearning Před 6 lety +5

      Initially I gave Fury Road a fair bit of praise, but after two more viewings saw it for the cash in plot-hole riddled garbage it was.

    • @chongli8409
      @chongli8409 Před 6 lety +2

      Collative Learning I mostly referred to sociological dilemmas - the ever-growing gap between the select few and the majority of people, destruction of nature in the name of technology, loosing human identity in light of, again, rapid technological advancement, the dangers of out-of-hand capitalism etc. The main plot is way too sci-fi for our time, I agree, but then again it could also be seen as devaluation of human life. The movie made me think on all those problems, it's not a masterpiece, but it's not garbage also.

  • @ankurama42
    @ankurama42 Před 6 lety +50

    You're in love with the book and this movie was a sequel. I think your thoughts were really biased to what it should've been instead of judging the movie on what it is. The giant hologram might've been done before but it hasn't been done in a context where it is an advertisement. The soundtrack was "lame" argument is so subjective that I can't even say anything about that. The lighting was glossy intentionally the way they were out of the city to contrast the scenes from city. This was a really poorly thought out video. I suggest you take your time to think and pinpoint what and why you didn't like the movie instead of pointing out subjective stuff and claiming that you could've written a better script in a week.

    • @collativelearning
      @collativelearning Před 6 lety +4

      The book and original film each have plenty of flaws, but the ideas in both were far better than the new movie. If you can't say anything good about the new soundtrack perhaps that's because it was lame - I specifically stated than none of the music was memorable - I can't remember any of the melodies, just loud blasts of noise from time to time. And simply saying all my arguments are "subjective" is pure semantics. I could use that same critique against anything good you say about the movie, but it wouldn't get us anywhere would it.

    • @ankurama42
      @ankurama42 Před 6 lety +14

      But I didn't just say your arguments were just "subjective". I also said you were judging the movie on what it was not even trying to be and that's in my view, unfair. There's nothing for me to say if you just point out that the soundtrack was "lame", that's your opinion. I think the soundtrack was very appropriately used and built the mood rather than being tacked onto the movie. And just because you can't remember the melodies or something is not memorable, it does not mean it was bad. Which brings me to cinematography where Roger Deakins' whole philosophy is not calling attention to it.
      The most important thing you're neglecting here is that a film, especially by Denis Villeneuve, is not just a string of ideas no matter how great they are. The book might be great but this is a film with different constraints and limitations which I'm sure you didn't need me to remind you but I did because you were so hung up on the ideas in the book.

    • @scotteagles4864
      @scotteagles4864 Před 6 lety +6

      "None of the music was memorable." I've listened to this soundtrack from top to tail literally every day since I first saw the movie at release. I can't get enough of it, and the emotional impact continues to reverberate for me. None of the music was memorable? I'm sincerely sorry for the insensate black hole that resides in your mind. I considered subbing you at one point, but this is a deal-breaker.

  • @Technique-kj2bp
    @Technique-kj2bp Před 4 lety +6

    I'm so glad I didn't have the viewing experience that Rob Ager had watching this. I kind of pity him for not being able to see, and more importantly, feel, the beauty of this film. The impression I get when listening to him talk about it is of someone who watched the film with a cold, cynical, machinelike mindset, and an unwillingness to let the film work on him on any kind of emotional/subconscious level.
    As Villeneuve eloquently put it: 'I see cinema as a sort of rhythmical dance of visuals and sound', or something to that effect.
    That's exactly how I'd describe the best cinema, and exactly how I'd describe this film. It ebbed & flowed beautifully from beginning to end. There was a poetic feeling to how it unfolded. The film flowed like a beautifully conducted orchestra, full of peaks & troughs, culminating in the final action sequence (the sea wall scene). That was like the chorus in full effect, the emotional highpoint of the film, and then the last scene winding us down from the journey like a beautiful afterglow, before the credits finally roll out. It was a beautifully orchestrated film.
    And what is wrong with the film covering themes from the original again? It's the Blade Runner sequel after all, why wouldn't it have a lot of similarities with the first? What's wrong with that? All the best sequels cover old ground whilst offering something new. And without getting too deep on plot points, there is the replicant reproduction plot point in the new film. That alone should serve as something satisfyingly new and interesting for fans of the genre/first film. It was enough for me. There was plenty of other new stuff too but without mentioning everything else, this alone was a satisfying expansion of the original films narrative. I see a lot of debate around minor plot technicalities, like how did Deckard survive the radiation of Las Vegas blah blah blah. These are things your brain should just be filling in for yourself if you're watching & experiencing the film the way it's meant to be.
    I don't want to get into an endless debate about plot intricacies & philosophical interpretations, I'd be here forever if I took the time to counter or debunk everyones criticisms (trust me I'd love to, most are incorrect!), but for the record, imo this is the most well thought out plot I've ever seen in a film. When I think of all the elements at play like characters, events, existential themes etc, it's extremely complex, and yet the films narrative ties it all up beautifully. Ok maybe there's one or two points where you have to take a slight leap in logic or assume certain things, but questioning technicalities like 'why are there no CCTV cameras in the police station?' and that sort of meaningless crap, is to miss how the film is supposed to be making you feel. Basically, if you're thinking about things like that when watching it, you're not watching it properly. The film is poetic in nature. Poetry is about feeling, not logical scrutiny. You're supposed to be on an existential journey (Like K is) while watching it, not sitting there like some machine reading binary code and waiting for anomalies.
    There's so much slander being put on this film. The worst one is branding it a cash grab. As someone who practices/creates art, & without wanting to sound arrogant, I've learned to sense when an artistic creation has got real passion & soul in it. And trust me when I tell you, the people who made this film... They put their heart & soul into it. It really does show. Plus, the film bombed at the box office, as they probably half anticipated, so that's simply not true.
    Also the pacing criticism baffles me. I've never heard anyone criticise the pacing of Breaking Bad. You know, that TV show regarded by most as the greatest TV show of all time? Because BB is not boring. Slow does not mean boring. And the pacing of BR2049 is perfect IF you are thinking about all the things the film wants you to be thinking about whilst you are watching it. Also, mega budget world building sci-fi? How often do you get to see that kind of visual spectacle? What's your rush for that to finish so quickly & be done with? If you're a genre fan you should be revelling in it's slow pacing, not growing impatient.
    And slagging off the score/sound design. I'm sorry, but listen to Sea Wall, Mesa & Joi & tell me that they are not incredibly expressive & emotive pieces of music. Again, speaking as someone who makes music, I can clearly feel the passion coming from the composers in the soundtrack. The score plays out just like the film itself does in terms of peaks & troughs, tensions & conflicts, moments of despair, hope & resolution etc.
    I could go on and I've rambled on much longer than I anticipated, but I love this film more than I can put into words, and it pains me to see people misunderstand or not appreciate the epic achievement that this film is. I hope that my words can make at least one person reconsider & see what I see in this film, and come to love it the way I do.
    Final thought. Everyone watched Blade Runner 2049. But not everyone experienced Blade Runner 2049.

    • @Tony-1971
      @Tony-1971 Před 4 lety +3

      I thought it was bland, pointless, unneeded, and unoriginal. I love the original Blade Runner movie with a passion (theatrical cut), because that version doesn't give a definitive answer as to whether Deckard is human or a replicant. We dont really get many sci-fi movies these days. I guess the modern mainstream audience dont want them. They seem to prefer Superhero movies these days.
      My favourite most recent sci-fi movies were Equilibrium (2002). Snowpiercer (2013). Europa Report (2013). Life (2017). Upgrade (2018). Blade Runner 2049 just didnt do anything for me. And im a guy who loves sci-fi movies, specially the older ones.

    • @Technique-kj2bp
      @Technique-kj2bp Před 4 lety

      @@Locksley108 is a pseudo-intellectual snob kids...
      ...
      ...
      ...
      ...
      Don't be like Furor Teutonicus.

  • @porkfrog2785
    @porkfrog2785 Před 6 lety +35

    I was bored with 2049. Had some good images and ideas, but for me was just wasn't engaging, I didnt care about it

  • @marcusmaher-triskellionfil5158

    David Webb Peoples was brought in to write the pivotal scenes in the original, Hampton Fancher was pissed. Hampton Fancher got free reign on the sequel. We know now that DWP was the key behind the dialogue and depth of the original, the poor screenwriter exposed with the nonsense of BR2049.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 Před 3 lety +1

      No question. The sequel has far too much talking in it and the dialogue is terrible at times. It comes across very much like Fancher's early draft for Blade Runner. It's basically people in rooms, talking to one another. Nothing wrong with that of course, but you can't help but compare the two films as you watch BR49 and that's when the sequel begins to fall short.

  • @km-my4un
    @km-my4un Před 6 lety +121

    Bladerunner 2049 is first and foremost a deeply personal journey mixed in with the mystery of K struggling to find his life's purpose. Is he special? The idea that he may not be a worthless, soulless android at least gave him something to believe in. I thoroughly enjoyed watching this duality play out. And having the truth come crashing down on him during The Joi advertisement scene was incredibly powerful movie making.

    • @km-my4un
      @km-my4un Před 6 lety +37

      ThisIsNotReel lol? By explaining key elements of the story I'm able to better explain the strengths of the movie. And I have every right to give my opinion, so if you don't like it you can kiss my ass.

    • @HCC788
      @HCC788 Před 6 lety +34

      People who didn't like it feel the need to explain why. People who like the movie can do the same. That's how discussions work. Open minded people may find a new perspective in other opinions. Give it a try.

    • @annne023
      @annne023 Před 6 lety +2

      This movie is the Anti-Matrix and I think is very important and relatable to perhaps millenial audiences like many of my friends.

    • @negativespace261
      @negativespace261 Před 6 lety

      The issue HoodedCobra and k m have with your comment is more that it stems from an assumption you made. The OP never clearly, or even implicitly states that Rob didn't understand the film. It's phrased as his own interpretation, and nothing more.

    • @km-my4un
      @km-my4un Před 6 lety +1

      jason shirrill thanks for your contribution mouth breather.

  • @FormatorBlack
    @FormatorBlack Před 6 lety +4

    Have to respectfully disagree with you, Rob....I love your reviews, especially on The Thing, but I loved 2049....but I agree that they did leave a lot of stuff out that was contained in the novel...the Penfield Mood Organ for one...really drove home how artificial everyone's life was....even their very moods depended on artificial stimulus....showed how basically everyone was an andy or a replicant more or less....thanks for your review, and yes, I agree, 2049 had some flaws-too long, and yes the replicant revolution was predictable,,,,I wondered why they wouldn't want to rebel peacefully, seems like they could do so with humanity dependent on them!

  • @geriatricward
    @geriatricward Před 6 lety +3

    completely agree. you summed it up well with '3 hr movie that doesn't have 3 hrs of plot'. the fact that they had lots of juicy source material to draw on but didn't suggests very poor judgement on the part of the writers. it's almost as if a cinematographer was hired to do the writing.

  • @johnstifter
    @johnstifter Před 2 lety +4

    The original film is a hundred million billion times better, 2049 is an embarrassment compare to this. Denis Villeneuve screwed it up big time. There is more feeling and thought in one frame of the 1982 film then in the entire 2049 film combined.

    • @coinraker6497
      @coinraker6497 Před 2 lety +3

      Speaking of Denis Villenueve, so much hype for both 2049 and Dune and I was disappointed with both.

  • @asifalimirza
    @asifalimirza Před 6 lety +2

    I don't even bother to waste money watching "modern" movies in the theater anymore, movies are just so shitty today. They just don't make them like they used to. Blade Runner was one of my favorites (even with it's flaws), and I just didn't want to see another disappointing sequel. I took the chance with Alien Covenant, and was so disappointed I almost walked out of the theater. I just wait for them to show up on Kodi and watch them for free, that way at least I have not paid Hollywood for more shit. As the great former President George W Bush said: "fool me once, shame on - shame on you. Fool me - you can't get fooled again"...uh never mind

  • @itnas4367
    @itnas4367 Před 5 lety +6

    I completely agree and support your analysis. It is some of the most clear and unrestrained analysis out there, and the film community appreciates it!

    • @itnas4367
      @itnas4367 Před 5 lety +3

      You're spot on about the 'sterile' note (and all of the analysis, in my view)
      and the fact that there is an entire dimension of visual language that was ignored in the film - it is truly a very undynamic and unimpressive film in that sense. I think from a writing/directing standpoint it was wrongly approached. This is symptomatic of most if not all post-millenial films, sterile, lack of genius composition and everything feels very 'assembly line' photographically and narratively. It lacked the grit of the original which was why it was an incredible film - they should have Ridley Scott direct it. There is absence of film makers out there who understand the very things you are talking about, and the massive population is being tricked into accepting this and hailing it as legendary when in fact it is mediocre and ultimately a regress in the evolution of cinema as a medium. I also despise how nullified the sexual influences are, everything feels like the edges were dulled and lost all of it's philosophical brunt. What a shame cinema is in this state - and what more shame is it to think that most people regard the new Blade Runner as impressive and innovative - truly mind boggling.

  • @passivate
    @passivate Před 6 lety +6

    I couldn't agree more. I was interested at first, but I quickly realized that everything about the BR 2049 was a cheap imitation of the original, flat and uninspired. The over hyped visuals were a distraction to mask the lack of a solid story. Early into the second hour, I couldn't wait for it to be over.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 Před 3 lety

      I should have known when I went to the cinema to see it when it was released. Honestly, the screen curtains would not open and the opening shots were projected on to them!! It's an omen from the universe!! Funnily enough, it was as exciting as the few hours got!! I have re watched it a couple of times since and it ain't bad, but I find you have to forgive the film an awful lot to actually enjoy it. Specifically, you have to forget it is a Blade Runner sequel and just think of it as a story set in a PK Dick inspired future dystopia.

  • @666cfc
    @666cfc Před 5 lety +33

    Rob Ager: "This movie is crap!"
    People who liked the movie: " You're subjectivly wrong, cause I liked it!"😂😂😂

    • @AdAstra78
      @AdAstra78 Před 4 lety +7

      I think he's wrong, but I can respect a negative opinion. Just not the way this dipsbit articulates it.

    • @thecocktailian2091
      @thecocktailian2091 Před 3 lety

      Isnt that just defining differing opinions?

  • @racewiththefalcons1
    @racewiththefalcons1 Před 6 lety +1

    A movie trying to be thought-provoking and intelligent should never end with a fistfight.

  • @EugeniaLoli
    @EugeniaLoli Před 6 lety +2

    I did not like BR2049. It was slow, and it did not go to the point. The art direction was not as detailed as the first film either.

  • @Anubis22774
    @Anubis22774 Před 6 lety +35

    I proudly declare that I’ve seen this film six times and it has become my favorite film of all time. It’s hypnotic, intelligent and surreal. Absolute perfection and yes, much better than the first. Villeneuve, Nolan and Paul Thomas Anderson are the directors of our time but I feel Villeneuve just stepped into the forefront with this one.

  • @SecondSight
    @SecondSight Před 6 lety +12

    When I saw it in the cinema, there were 3 girls who left in the middle of the movie. :P That aside, my own reaction to the movie was that I was surprised by how stark and dystopian it was. The world is bordering on being gross and completely alienating in every way and I feel like that is more modern, and something that is a theme in a lot of media today. I feel like it sacrificed the blade runner vibe in order to make this more general futuristic vision based on todays trends. I'm not disagreeing with your points directly, but I feel like it was an interesting experience nonetheless and some modern themes to dig into. Edit: I'm also curious what you thought of Alien Covenant

  • @woozyrocketman1784
    @woozyrocketman1784 Před 5 lety +3

    No story, another dystopia, miserable, poverty, no new technology, slums and rubbish dumps, victorian style poverty. .. they could have done something interesting, about space travel or something.

  • @trins9932
    @trins9932 Před 6 lety +1

    Hi Rob, this is completely unrelated but I was wondering what monitor you have as it looks just the right size that I want. Thank you in advance!

  • @BretHiggins
    @BretHiggins Před 6 lety +6

    Couple of questions for you, Rob -
    Did you have the same or similar reaction when you first saw the original?
    Did you read Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep before or after watching Bladerunner and how much do you think it affects your thought process and expectations of both movies?
    I liked the new entry, but I did think it suffered from pacing issues and a soundtrack that didn’t know what it wanted to be. (The loud BWAAAAHHHHHs as K approaches Deckard’s place being a prime example.)
    I haven’t read the novel and am now wondering if it would change my perspective.
    Cheers, B.

    • @BretHiggins
      @BretHiggins Před 6 lety

      The book has a lot to do with Rob's opinion of the movies.

  • @vbr2
    @vbr2 Před 6 lety +52

    “but it doesn’t have three hours worth of story..” i think the same could be said about 2001

    • @MrAustinGman
      @MrAustinGman Před 6 lety

      more accurately said about 2001

    • @andresbrimley5689
      @andresbrimley5689 Před 6 lety +8

      2001 is not 3 hours long, its 2 hours & 22 minutes long.

    • @bradley6386
      @bradley6386 Před 6 lety +1

      True. I have never made it through 2001 without falling asleep

    • @uraveragedude9957
      @uraveragedude9957 Před 5 lety +5

      Bradley good for you

    • @gconst01
      @gconst01 Před 5 lety

      BR2049 has 2h33mins onscreen action and 11mins of end credits.The reviewer
      couldn't even get that right.

  • @Tony-1971
    @Tony-1971 Před 4 lety +2

    I hated it. And i love the original Blade Runner movie, theatrical cut, ( the cut where he doesn't tell the audience whether Deckard is human or a replicant).
    Upgrade (2018) is a far better sci-fi/cyberpunk movie than BR2049 in my opinion. More original, more interesting story, killer ending, and an absolutely incredible soundtrack.

  • @9imack
    @9imack Před 6 lety +1

    Gotta say I pretty much agree. It was far from being shite but I felt that after the promise it showed for most of the first half of the film, I was left feeling somewhat disappointed by the end. Certainly, when compared to the vast majority of recent releases, it was much better than the standard Hollywood fare & maybe it suffered from people's expectations being too high but ultimately I feel the film failed to deliver on it's initial potential, which is a shame when I think it could have been so much better in different hands.

  • @TheDecatonkeil
    @TheDecatonkeil Před 6 lety +3

    I personally really liked it, even though I still think the original is the superior one of the two.
    I also thought that it would take more after the original novel when I saw the shots of the larvae and the bee in the trailers and the wasteland... and in the end it wasn't about that, but it still, I think, was a worthy sequel to the first movie and also felt very much in the spirit of Philip K. Dick., but in a way that it felt somewhat original.
    What I most liked about it is that it complemented the original's themes by subverting them and used the whole Dick thing of "What is reality?" (which is his whole thing, though many talk about how BR is about "what makes us human").
    Now on to spoiler territory so that I can expand on everything.
    What I meant is that, well, while the first one starts under the pretence that Deckard is a human, he assumes his memories are his and real and he uses the Voight Kampff test to subject the replicants to a very artificial vision of what human empathy is (based on the novel, it's more a sense of guilt for turning the ecology to shit leading animals to near extinction, aided again only in the novel, by Mercerism which is more a collective hallucination of patting oneself in the back for how connected and empathetic one is... while being people who program their own moods and emotions, basically a humanity turned sociopaths who still think they're better than artificial sociopaths who are content in demonstrating how the former's pretence of empathy is a facade)... whereas 2049 turns all of this upside down:
    K would be a replicant, knowing he's a replicant, using an upside down Voight Kampff test as a sick therapy so that he accepts better his slavery by associating it with positive or natural things.
    I also liked how the K and Joi relationship played out. It was visually interesting. I thought it was uncomfortable and tragic. This society, it would seem, grants some status of humanity to K, they acknowledge he needs "a place" that is just so slightly above a storage room and that he has emotional needs... so it's again playing into the real important issue of the original: Does it even matter if he's a replicant or a human? He might as well be a human with a shit job (and one where he enacts genocide on his own kind) from which he returns to a shit life (a simulacra of life: simulacra of food, of love...).
    I also thought that what you found as the plot crumbling to pieces and to some might seem as it turning uneventful... was really a somewhat clever way of dodging a bullet. One of the few things I wasn't sold on was the premise that K would be actually Rick Deckard 2.0, his heir, his actual son. That felt kinda lazy and like it would tie in too much into the trend of the soft reboot this movie seemed to be going for if we take some of the events in Blackout (which on the other hand I found fantastic)... Cyberpunk (and I know technically BR wasn't completely cyberpunk, but then again, everything is a continuum and the New Wave is where Do Androids Dream... and The Stars my Destination were written and both of them are essential to cyberpunk being even born) isn't about chosen ones, special people, people pre-destined to greatness or inheriting great legacies... so I found it great that K's emotional investment was this kind of rollercoaster: he got super invested in the case when he seemed to catch a glimpse of him being special... then found out he wasn't... then he kinda realised that was ok.
    Like I said, I dunno, I still think it was a more than decent movie and follow-up, actually really intelligent and thought provoking. I even liked its slow, drawn out pace as it got me into the feel of the world and it expanded upon it quite a bit (it also showed us little things like that in this world slavery still exist outside the whole replicant thing...).

  • @AlanGChenery
    @AlanGChenery Před 6 lety +24

    I think a lot of the positivity comes from it not being the offensively bad garbage that I think most viewers expected. They likely were relieved that there were some interesting ideas and some interesting visuals, and that it didn't turn into a shit by the numbers action film... Or a stealth reboot.

  • @johnmckinzey127
    @johnmckinzey127 Před 6 lety +1

    The movie looks great and Harrison Ford helps any movie, but it's pace was glacial. There were long periods where I was bored. Good movies don't bore.

  • @davidunger222
    @davidunger222 Před 5 lety +1

    Right off the bat the reviewer is disappointed in the movie because it wasn’t the story he wanted. After he says the movie was “visually flat” I had to bail out. He seems to be an angry, bitter gentlemen.

  • @briancollins1296
    @briancollins1296 Před 6 lety +81

    A lot of this video is you complaining about the screenwriters not taking ideas from the book that weren't adapted in the first Blade Runner. This is really fucking stupid. The most obvious reason for this is that Hampton Fancher, who also co-wrote the screenplay for the original, was never a fan of the book. In fact, the filmmakers of the original kept a certain distance from the source material, which always struck me as odd because it's a really good book, but that's the case. And 2049 is a sequel to Blade Runner that compliments the original in many ways; it is not a closer adaptation of the book, not is it meant to be. It is a thematically dense narrative that expands on the themes of the original while also bringing new ones to the table, ones that I didn't even think the movie would delve into, but it did.
    On a final note, if you thought 2049 was slow and boring, then I'm not sure how you survived the original.

    • @skellzzed8255
      @skellzzed8255 Před 6 lety +4

      I survived the original a lot better than this one.

    • @timetogo888
      @timetogo888 Před 6 lety +1

      Nicely worded senor

    • @HyenaXS
      @HyenaXS Před 6 lety +1

      Kaneda!

    • @briancollins1296
      @briancollins1296 Před 6 lety +1

      TETSUOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!

    • @JohnSmith-ls4dn
      @JohnSmith-ls4dn Před 6 lety

      The original had Ridley Scott directing at his peak, Vangelis, Harrison Ford gave his best acting preformance, Retuger Howe , Edward James Olmos, and Sean Young were a great supporting cast, the script from Peoples and Fincher. The new one reminded me of the shitty Babylon X and AI. Along with lousy pacing drawn out climax and third rate acting from Mr notebook and emo boy letto. Plus Harrison Ford is too damn old. You asked

  • @natemartinez8421
    @natemartinez8421 Před 6 lety +53

    It's difficult to take any of your criticism seriously because it seems like this was just an impulsive rant. I would like to see your passionate disdain for this film to be presented in a more thoughtful and articulated manner. Until then, hate on if you must.

  • @Computer17Blue
    @Computer17Blue Před 6 lety +2

    I came round to Rob though I didn't hate it as much as him.i made a previous comments which git a Lot of up votes saying this the best sequel ever.I think I went full on phantom menace mode with it though.
    I watched did three times in the cinema and I just watched it on digital at home and that's when it hit home for me.
    This films plot is just NOTHING.WHY does Wallace want natural reproduction so much?The replicants will then be born and have to be looked after for 18 years until they are fully grown adults. Wallace made the Rachel clone within at most a month from her bone and hair samples.We see am replicant birth in a big plastic bag,you could store thousands and thousands in a large space and then when they are born grow some more like.
    Why does K. Automatically assume the memory is real that it's him that experienced it?He gets mad for no reason as if it's him that been conned into thinking he's a replicant
    The SLOOOOW pacing,Vileneuves must have thought we'd miss the gorgeous cinematography so he lingers and lingers on it for eternity,that and Ryan goslings face.
    Leto ss always is fucking AWFUL.I HATED him in this film,yeah he probably played him as a pretentious bastard but still the crummy dialogue about angels.
    Why was Dec kard to be sent to ANOTHER FUCKING PLANET to be tortured?
    Thus film is faux deep,this raises NOTHING that the original didn't do all ready and far better.
    Luv was okay I guess but I don't know why the actress played her as a terminator that sometimes cries.
    Robin Wright plays stock bitch you but inside deeply caring because she wants some of that replicant
    Gosling Dick.
    Joi was fine but it just like Her.
    Harrison Ford is Harrison Ford,he took me out force awakens too with his cranky old man act who for some reason wants loads of money with all these reboots.
    This film is Hollywood dying it's last breath.185 million was pumped into this,a sequal to what is only a cult film.
    Did they honestly think this would gross over 800 million?Showtimes were much less because for the run time.
    Hollywood will shove money at anything that has any semblance of a return.
    I can honestly say I won't look forward to any future vulieneve films,supposedly he is going to an do dune but that will probably just be three and a half hours of gazing at Roger deakin cinematography.
    This just didn't feel like a blade runner film.It was slapped on for marketing,Hollywood claims another great film that just simply didn't need a sequel like at all.

  • @happiaxxident
    @happiaxxident Před 6 lety +139

    Can we see your one week script that’s better? Kinda need proof now.

    • @collativelearning
      @collativelearning Před 6 lety +29

      I might actually put up a video on how BR 2049 could have been better and include some alternate plot lines. Though I won't be taking a full week of my schedule to the write a script because I wouldn't be able to earn back a living from it without severe copyright infringement.

    • @happiaxxident
      @happiaxxident Před 6 lety +5

      Collative Learning sounds good and look forward to it!

    • @starwarsroo2448
      @starwarsroo2448 Před 6 lety +9

      gruszala Blade Bummer 2069

    • @dennispotter4236
      @dennispotter4236 Před 6 lety +4

      Raid Plumber 01-21814567
      Mick Flexford is a retired plumber who now hides out in South end on Sea. Officer P is a new breed of plumber who uncovers a hidden secret......theres your start any Rob...a serious script, bu using this scenario to avoid copyright infringements...and away ya go! :)

    • @starwarsroo2448
      @starwarsroo2448 Před 6 lety +1

      Dennis Potter he's trying to find out what happened to Roy Bathy and if Deckard replaced that pipe he hit him with

  • @RawandCookedVegan
    @RawandCookedVegan Před 6 lety +47

    Sometimes I think Rob is simply making the contrarian point for its own sake. I liked how they tried to connect the soundtrack to the first movie and yet make it appropo for 2017, they succeeded IMO. I thought it was visually stunning. It was too light? Too sandy? Come on Rob, you'll have to do better than that. The visual sequences were amazing. There was a delicacy to them. And as to the feminine symbols; The point wasn't to show the most pornographic images possible. I think the film was saying very interesting things about men's perception of women and the public's perception of celebrity as well. You're wrong. This was a very good film.

    • @renzokukenleneyoyo522
      @renzokukenleneyoyo522 Před 6 lety +1

      Agreed! Good movie, enjoyable. Amazing in visuals and sound... loved it.

    • @jonnemesis11
      @jonnemesis11 Před 6 lety +1

      "the visual sequences" lol it's a movie, everything in it is "visual"

    • @zbdot73
      @zbdot73 Před 5 lety +4

      "You're wrong. This was a very good film.", Rob was simply expressing his point of view, you have your point of view ~ a movie is a subjective experience. To say someone is wrong over something that inherently has no correct or absolute answer is immature. You need to accept that other people on the planet are going to have differing points of view to your own and craft your responses accordingly.

    • @miiks...5...3...9...
      @miiks...5...3...9... Před 5 lety +1

      yep he's a contrarian

  • @RD-lt3ht
    @RD-lt3ht Před 6 lety +24

    I've seen BR2O49 twice and liked it both times but I still had issues with it. The story was not as compelling as I'd hoped, but I can live with it as is. I thought the new cast were all good, but found the new replicants to be lacking in that "more human than human" quality that Batty, Pris, Zora and Leon had, and Gosling just wasn't intimidating as both a Bladerunner or a replicant. There weren't any confrontation scenes in '2049 as intense as Holden's interrogation of Leon or Batty's wolf-like pursuit of Deckard. But, my biggest gripe with '2049 is a flaw that, subjectively perhaps, I think all movies have shared since the superceding of celluloid...digital photography. Digital photography looks so damn FLAT to me, and it's precisely because of all that ultra-sharp detail; foreground, middleground and background are all equally sharp, nothing pops in particular because it ALL pops at once.
    I'm not a filmmaker but the best celluloid photography of the past seems to have more "roundedness" to it, perhaps due to the very limitations inherent to analogue film stock and older lenses. When something is in focus in digital photography, it's ALL in focus from front to back; on celluloid, even a frontal closeup of an actor has the face sharp and clear but the actor's hair just back of the ears is slightly less sharp...this is what I meant by "roundedness", closer to the way humans see with their own eyes and the brain's attenuating vision centre. Would love to know what you as a filmmaker, think of the comparison between celluloid and digital.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 Před 3 lety +3

      If you look at any Villeneuve film, they all look flat and rather boring. He has a great eye for composition, no doubt, but as you say nothing pops out. Everything has that dull look to it. After watching the trailer for Dune, that film looks the very same, flat and lacking in luster! It's not just a celluloid versus film thing either. Chris Nolan's films all look flat and matter of fact. It works for a scene like the fight in the hotel corridor in Inception, but despite the extensive use of visual and in camera effects, Interstellar looks bloody boring! It's not just the 'film' stock, it's the colour pallet. Since Heat, film makers seem to think blue and grey equals style. Speaking of Michael Mann, for an example of how to use digital photography, just look at Collateral. He shines up every reflective surface in the frame so they reflect light and colour. That's how to make an image pop!

  • @rundbaum
    @rundbaum Před 5 lety +2

    i am in total agreement w/you . . . the only thing i liked about this film was the love relationship btween gosling & the 'VI -girl!!" i hated this film b/c it didn't star sean young. how in the world could there be any follow up to the original which wasn't completely about the love relationship btween deckard & rachel?? i guess sean young is a wingnut so she ruined it for the rest of us, i'm sure harrison ford refused to work with her . . .

  • @yxuokikalipe
    @yxuokikalipe Před 3 lety +2

    the female boss being itself just a dum reference to James Bond? the constant sense of haven't I seen this before

  • @brettjackman3696
    @brettjackman3696 Před 5 lety +7

    It was complete rubbish...Would have walked out but the person I went with fell asleep and I didnt want to wake them.True story.

  • @DorktimeBwuds
    @DorktimeBwuds Před 5 lety +6

    3 hours long but it doesn't have 3 hours worth of story. You got that right! I started dozing off when I wine to see this.

  • @mikesmovingimages
    @mikesmovingimages Před 5 lety +4

    He's right. BR2049 was a bloated mess. The director was not good enough to maintain tension at such a slow pace. He overshot and missed.

  • @interqward1
    @interqward1 Před 6 lety +1

    Best sci-fi movie in the last twenty years is the film short that is available for free on YT, called 'True Skin' produced by N10N and written and directed by Stephan Zlotescu.

  • @davidbradford4847
    @davidbradford4847 Před 5 lety +3

    This review is right on. BR2049 emphasizes visuals over plotting, and it wastes a lot of time wandering pointlessly in its world. Also, I'd like to hear Rob's analysis of the theory that the female replicant is actually Deckerd's and Rachel's daughter.

    • @craftpaint1644
      @craftpaint1644 Před 4 lety +1

      There were no meaningless scenes in BR2049 and no throw away lines, even the line about the fish that's "always jumping" is central to the plot. But hate the movie because it's not your style I guess.

    • @Technique-kj2bp
      @Technique-kj2bp Před 4 lety

      @@craftpaint1644 Agreed the script is masterful, nearly every line has a double meaning or more significance than it initially appears to have. I was wondering about the fish jumping line. Can you explain that one for me please?

    • @craftpaint1644
      @craftpaint1644 Před 4 lety

      @@Technique-kj2bp "Always jumping that one. Never a thought for what would happen if it succeeded."
      The fish wants more than what has been provided for it and the limits placed on it. What Wallace has made wants to break out of its design just like the replicants.
      Edit : even if it means dying like the free replicants woman said. Cynical viewers might say they are just being fed up. Another ailment of consciousness I'm afraid and just proves the meaning I think the jumping fish is.

    • @Technique-kj2bp
      @Technique-kj2bp Před 4 lety

      @@craftpaint1644 Yeah had a feeling it meant something along those lines. Thanks for clarifying. One thing I picked up on was at the end when K says 'all the best memories are hers' and Deckard replies 'what am i to you?'. But he mumbles the line. I've listened multiple times on top quality headphones & the line could also be heard as 'what about you?'. It really isn't clearly worded. But both questions in the context make sense and are interesting as to what the answers are.
      'What am i to you?' Answers could be "You feel like a father to me" or "You're not anyone to me, but I believe this is the right thing to do" etc.
      'What about you?' Would raise more questions from Deckard to K like "what about your memories?" "You've had experiences too. Even if some aren't real, does it matter?' etc.
      I could be wrong but I'm convinced this is a masterful little detail they did intentionally, considering most of the dialogue throughout the film has a duality to it.

  • @larryparks1520
    @larryparks1520 Před 6 lety +3

    2049 SUCKED. It sucked BAD. I actually thought the "hologram love" girl scene was the worst in the film.

    • @codywirth8190
      @codywirth8190 Před 3 lety

      The whole AI girlfriend thing was also ripped off beat for beat from Her (2013).

  • @LockSteady
    @LockSteady Před 6 lety +1

    "So little else out there that's any good, anyway." yep you're dead on, that's exactly why so many of us felt this was good, there's just nothing good out, so it seemed great

  • @Matthew9444
    @Matthew9444 Před 4 lety +1

    "it probably didn't appeal to women because it was SLOW AS FUCK" lmaooooooooooooooooooooooooo

  • @TheRickRoller1
    @TheRickRoller1 Před 6 lety +65

    You missed it. The movie did not collapse. It's the main character's arc that collapses and as he loses everything he becomes human. The soundtrack is meant to make you feel how K walks in a life/city that is just a big machine and he is a cog. As for the visuals, some passages are flat I'll admit but some are brilliant, such as the scene where K explores the replicant factory. I am willing to pardon some mistakes because I can see that the filmmaker really tried to make something special and took risks.

    • @arizeal
      @arizeal Před 6 lety +6

      TheRickRoller1 k explores the replicant factory??
      Do you mean the orphanage? Jfc

    • @TheRickRoller1
      @TheRickRoller1 Před 6 lety +4

      Maybe. Maybe I understand what he thought where flaws. Who knows. I'm just discussing here. Obviously I value Rob's opinion since I learned a lot from his channel. I always felt that simply saying this or that is bad (in arts) is vastly insufficient. You have to be able to say why and what is the good aspect of it, how could it have been better, etc... Here I saw a good trashing and not much more.

    • @TheRickRoller1
      @TheRickRoller1 Před 6 lety +2

      No the Wallace building. The interior was very symbolic and I thought that was very charming.

    • @eyespy3001
      @eyespy3001 Před 6 lety

      TheRickRoller1
      Exactly. This “review” comes off as “This movie was terrible because it wasn’t all these other things that I think are better,” rather than offering anything constructive.

    • @skellzzed8255
      @skellzzed8255 Před 6 lety +3

      Well but he is right on that. The material is extremely important for the originality of the story, and an opportunity to explore new subjects in film not explored before, that could bring the movie home with a much bigger impact on the audience. So all those other things that are better, are indeed better and more interesting, and a movie like Blade Runner 2049 limited itself by recycling already explored ideas. Which is why movies today feel extremely dull. I was way more invested watching the original Blade Runner than this one.

  • @karbin89
    @karbin89 Před 6 lety +3

    I respect your critique and I think there's some merits, especially because I also thought the sets and backdrops didn't feel lived in but instead were just like someone at Ikea designed the city. But I think you're being overtly harsh on the script and expecting too much. While I agree 2049 is far from perfect it's one of the better movies to come out in a long time, one I think will stay in the minds of audiences in the future. It wasn't endlessly overhyped and poorly written like say Ex Machina.

  • @DTL0VER
    @DTL0VER Před 3 lety +1

    The fact you have nearly 1000 dislikes tells you your review isn’t well received... It’s a class film mate, come on...

  • @Rose_Macabre
    @Rose_Macabre Před 6 lety +1

    The original Blade Runner is one of my all-time fave films. BR2049 was in no way better. I enjoyed BR2049, Gosling was fab, I loved the hypnotic music, and there are, refreshingly, really strong female characters. I liked the the visuals, with little vignettes that set a mood. The hero is a machine, so that smooth-sterile feel seemed on point, to me. I agree, Deckard was utterly useless, and the plot took a dive in the 2nd half. I felt like it was too unresolved, set on a cliffhanger, more like a tv show. I also felt the boss baddie was disappointing and underdeveloped. There was no clarity in his motivation. But, all that said, I did enjoy it.

  • @Ultizer
    @Ultizer Před 6 lety +3

    I thought Wallace as a villain was shit & his motivations generic, they should have cut him out.

    • @olserknam
      @olserknam Před 6 lety +1

      Many people criticize Wallace for having little screen time, but I think that's justified. He's supposed to be a puppet master manipulating things behind the scenes (that's even emphasized by how he never actually even touches anyone he interacts with except for his own creations). It would look silly for him to have some kind of showdown with K.

    • @Tamacat388
      @Tamacat388 Před 6 lety +1

      This film doesn't really have a "villain". Much like Blade Runner Classic.

    • @horaciosi
      @horaciosi Před 4 lety

      Talk about a downgrade in antagonist.
      We go from a man with a relatable fear of death trying to extend his life, only to realize his impending death and go on a rampage, but grows to appreciate life in his final moments by saving another man, thus coming to terms with his mortality......to a generic "try to take over the world" plot? Better than the original my ass.

  • @QueenJneeuQ
    @QueenJneeuQ Před 5 lety +4

    Rob Ager is the epitome stereotype of "back in my day" kind of person.

  • @davidhalladay2068
    @davidhalladay2068 Před 6 lety +2

    Excellent analysis. 100% in agreement with you Rob, on all points. There's no point in my adding my own thoughts as you cover it all in the video. This definitely correlates with your other video about the decline of good movie making.

    • @davidhalladay2068
      @davidhalladay2068 Před 6 lety +1

      He does give specifics. The narrative drives well to begin with but dissolves midway into predictable generic territory. The interesting plot device of the relationship with the A.I./Holographic love interest goes nowhere after setting it up as an interesting dynamic that is straight out of K. Dick's story building/existential philosophy, the kind of dynamics that made the original film worthwhile in terms of having three dimensional depth. The second half of the film is a hodge-podge of tired old Hollywood tropes, from the Communist style revolution of the replicants to the pointless introduction of Decker near the end of the movie. Yes I understand Decker's place in the plot but Ford's use in the movie seems contrived given how little screen time he gets, in short the film fails because of lazy plot devices. Blade Runner was innovative, well executed and contained much of the essence of Dick's work which essentially is existentialism. This follow up film is merely style over substance, like almost every film Hollywood churns out these days. Nobody takes risks anymore. Independent producers outside of Hollywood are another story entirely. Story telling is an art and it seems to me that this art is being sacrificed for commercial interests. As Rob points out, there is so much that could have been gleaned from the novel, a more absorbing plot could have been written without instead relying upon plot devices that have become cliched and predictable. Take away the CGI and Blade Runner 2049 becomes a hollow experience. Such a shame.

  • @dimatadore
    @dimatadore Před 6 lety +1

    I was very scared to go see it because I felt it would be disappointing. I left feeling very opposing and contradictory thoughts about it and I couldn't put my finger on what about it I was so disappointed with. I am glad someone out there is better able to formulate opinions than I am. I think you covered some of my feelins about it.

  • @NeoLudditevisons
    @NeoLudditevisons Před 6 lety +6

    BR 2049 is up there with the best sci fi sequels ever! Its boss

  • @mathieuvanleeuwen7127
    @mathieuvanleeuwen7127 Před 6 lety +3

    Krieger, the mad german scientist in "Archer" has also a 'serious' relationship with a hologram.

  • @transmissionggb2820
    @transmissionggb2820 Před 5 lety +2

    That's what happens when you make a sequel to a film that should be a stand alone film that said nearly everything that was said in the this sequel.

  • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017

    Ridley Scott himself said this film was SLOW and needed 30 minutes chopped off. I have the distinct impression that Villenueve (who I think is terribly overrated) fell in love with his stupid masturbatory movie and refused to cut it down.

  • @deadreckoner5276
    @deadreckoner5276 Před 6 lety +3

    Does not using plot lines from the book make it a bad movie? I personally don't think so. I like your ideas and it's always fun to brainstorm what could have been but the first ten minutes hooked me all the way through this one.
    I will say I thought the scene with Elvis could have been cut and K and Deckard's meeting could be a bit more serious. I also didn't like the prostitute-planting-the-tracking-device trope. Other than that I really enjoyed it.
    The best scene in my opinion was when K got shot down and the marauders begin to surround him. Subconsciously I could feel the need through Hollywood programming to see a Blade Runner take on everyone in an open setting in tropey-cliche action movie style . Instead Luv calls out missile drone strikes while getting her nails done. Awesome.

  • @finnmaccool2665
    @finnmaccool2665 Před 6 lety +3

    People want to like modern movies so they try to convince themselves that they are good. Like this movie. I was bored and annoyed about 20 minutes in. I eventually became so disinterested that I was nodding off and having to force myself to stay awake. There's NOTHING good about this movie. The narrative sucks. The acting is bland. There's nothing memorable about it. Certainly no Rutger Hauer "Tears in the rain" moments. Just another cynical, mediocre money grabbing sequel. I HATE Hollywood and I hope Kim Jong Un nukes it.

  • @Gilliatt83
    @Gilliatt83 Před 6 lety +2

    i was disappointing in the movie too, i found my self skipping through it.

    • @RighteousBrother
      @RighteousBrother Před 6 lety +2

      You didn't see it in IMAX? You're not even experiencing the film then.

  • @JimmyDThing
    @JimmyDThing Před 6 lety +8

    I think that 2049 is for a different audience. I'll use just the score. I am NOT a Zimmer fan. I hate most of his work, but I actually really liked this score. I can't quite put my finger on why but I think it ha to do with it's ability to highlight how distractions turn into background noise.
    I don't hate you for not liking it haha. But I don't really get why you are using the book so much... to me that'd be like talking about the King book as criticism of The Shining. Both of the films ask us "What makes us human? At what point do robots become human? How do we identify it." The first one made a big claim about real memories, the new one seems more focused on physicality... namely birth and touch, which I find pretty interesting.
    I do think the film was too long, I don't think it needed to be as long as it was. But I did find it visually interesting and compelling and I didn't see it as overly clean or smooth at all. And yeah, actually when I was watching it I specifically recalled AI. But I don't know why that's a bad thing. I don't think it was done worse, I think it was done differently. Buildings like those wouldn't make scene in the Blade Runner world which is an earth that's been virtually abandoned by humanity.... except by the souls that humans don't want to recognize as souls.

    • @collativelearning
      @collativelearning Před 6 lety +2

      The book thing was just to show there was ane easy and immediate source for better ideas. The plot could have gone in other ways too.

  • @simonmacomber7466
    @simonmacomber7466 Před 6 lety +5

    Neither Blade Runner, nor Blade Runner 2049 are an adaptation of "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" There may be elements from the book used in both, but they are their own things.

    • @CAMZAB
      @CAMZAB Před 5 lety

      Arnie and his one liners aren’t in ‘We can remember it for you wholesale.’ and Total Recall is it’s own thing. That, BR, Paycheck, Minority Report and maybe more I’ve seen but can’t think of right now, they must’ve been good, are all from the mind of PKD, but through the lens of various things such as writers, director etc. When you’re reading one of his books you’re in the same universe as the vast majority of his books you read before. This movie doesn’t sound like it’s closely connected to the mind of PKD or anything he wanted to say. Not really ranting at you a year ago and plenty agree with your comment. I haven’t seen BR2049. But I’ve seen different versions of BR a handful of times including again when the Blu-ray with ‘Dangerous Days’ came out and still can see it is from PKD.

  • @osbournerudock8587
    @osbournerudock8587 Před 6 lety +1

    I think it's pretty unfair to compare this film with the Philip K Dick novel - after all, the original Blade runner was only loosely based on the book.

  • @deaddropholiday
    @deaddropholiday Před 6 lety +1

    It's like all Villeneuve movies - plenty of things to like with one or two drawbacks. What I will say is it featured an absolutely *mesmerising* performance from Sylvia Hoeks as Luv. She only gets maybe fifteen minutes of the film but every second she burns up the screen. The scene in Joshi's office where she's projecting terrifying menace whilst tears are streaming down her cheeks really transformed what was a fairly stock villain into a character who I could empathise with. She is a slave made to witness and participate in all of Wallace's violence and cruelty whilst her soul is crying in protest. Can't think of an actress recently who literally had me re-winding every single frame to scrutinise the subtleties of her facial expressions, body movement etc. So much acting these days is oratory and it makes a refreshing change when you see an actress/actor who can communicate such a range of emotions without ever opening their mouths.

  • @GovenorJerryBrown
    @GovenorJerryBrown Před 5 lety +5

    Movie attempted to make you feel sad for a robot who you knew was a robot from the beginning; unlike the original which was commentary on memory, consciousness, dreams, and left you with ambiguity (especially between the multiple edits.) Unfortunately, the generations brought up on Wall-E and Spike Jones' "Her" thought Bladerunner 2049 was so deep and emotional. I thought soyboy Ryan Gosling was a good casting choice for a robot character though, since he seems to be always imitating emotion and masculinity through cliche and faux pas.
    But basically the movie is like crying over a character in the Sims after they burn down their house with a microwave.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 Před 3 lety

      Wall E is a great movie!! It's 2001 ASO for kids. I would have loved to have been a kid seeing it for the first time and getting that sense I now knew something about the real nature of the world. Her, to me at least, is more or less Videodrome, but done as a romance!!

    • @LuisAngel-mu4zv
      @LuisAngel-mu4zv Před 3 lety

      Lol the sims comparison, its true though, whats with these modern movies blowing their load and telling you everything from the very bigining, there was nothing to expect

  • @BarbaPamino
    @BarbaPamino Před 6 lety +2

    This film like all new films suffers for the same reason all films suffers; it's made by film fans.
    The old films were so masterful because they were made by masters of different backgrounds. Directors were trained to direct actors and trained in theater. Directors of Photography were masters of both photography and of visual art. They spent their years studying the masters of old. The screen writers came up studying the master playwrights and authors.
    Today everyone comes up just studying film and trying to master film based on film. Rather than master storytelling based on histories greatest storytellers.
    There's no going back. Cinema hot it's peak in the 40s to 70s and it's been a slow rolling down hill since then. Such is life.
    I'm sure there will be a few gems here and there and if they last the test of time then I'll watch them in 30 years. But I no longer watch new films. Waste of time.

  • @woozyrocketman1784
    @woozyrocketman1784 Před 5 lety +2

    Yep, I agree. .. it was a huge disappointment. I watched the original, and it was a big film, back in the 80s.

  • @Bennett_Hennessey
    @Bennett_Hennessey Před 6 lety +2

    I cannot agree more. I went to see the film a second time, thinking perhaps I was missing something, or I would discover deeper brilliance. The film is a weaker copy of the original. As you said, the music has touches of the original score, but it is weaker, and less memorable. Ridley Scott remarks how he made the waving background moving water shadows on the original- a neat subtle effect. This film just completed goes overboard on the same effect. The film is just not deeply thought-out like Ridley Scott's. And without his artistic flare. The incredibly slow scene where he discovers the wooden toy, is just utterly boring on second viewing- like they did not even consider how this would play down the years. For me, this was a corporate creation, along the lines of the first run of Blade Runner with the narrative and the happy ending. Their "how to cash in at the box office" tricks all played out, including bringing back Harrison Ford. I am sure there is some big film executive banging his head- " I gave them romantic returned characters, action, intrigue, sex, and mystery- where is the money?"

  • @8yerbrain
    @8yerbrain Před 6 lety +12

    The hologram girl stole loads from the movie "Her". I liked the new bladerunner, I appreciated the story arc for the protagonist, and it's implications on the limitations of our sense of "self" along with all of the spiritual baggage that comes with that, but sadly I have to admit that I agree with you overall. It needed more. It deserved more.

  • @michaelmichaelson6766
    @michaelmichaelson6766 Před 6 lety +2

    i think the good reviews comes from people that think they are above mainstream if they watch and like this boring movie, but there is a difference between a slow movie and a pretentious movie that is very shallow. i even was disappointed in the visual aspect of the movie because i thought at least that will be great, but nope.

  • @brockelever
    @brockelever Před 6 lety

    Personal opinion: If you didn't see the original in a movie theater, in 1982 then you don't get to compare the two. The impact the first one made, even thought it was considered a box office failure, is unimaginable to Millennials.

  • @john_carpenter_fanboy
    @john_carpenter_fanboy Před 6 lety +3

    Rob, you're obviously a smart guy and excellent at film analysis. I found your analysis of Blade Runner 2049 interesting and I respect it. I don't agree with your opinions, but more importantly was a bit taken aback by your calling people who found the lack of a strong female character "idiots." Thoughtful film criticism should always be encouraged. Name-calling and condescension is not helpful, and usually hurtful. I thought you'd be above that.

  • @lionelfischer2184
    @lionelfischer2184 Před 6 lety +11

    Not liking a movie ist OK but saying it it's bad because it's not trying to ape it's far far removed source material ist silly saying it should have been more like AI ia silly. I liked AI but it's not exactly in the sweet spot between a smart movie a entertaining one, Blade Runner 2049 ist a bit of both and some people prefer that.

    • @lylehimself9287
      @lylehimself9287 Před 6 lety +3

      he says lots of stuff in 2049 were done before and better than 2049.

    • @Tamacat388
      @Tamacat388 Před 6 lety +4

      Feng Jun A lot of the ideas he mentioned from the book would have only contradicted what was established in the original film. His AI comparison was strange too. Building s and highways like that would have made the film a joke. Blade Runner is supposed to feel grounded, AI is not. Being that overt would have ruined it and again contradicted the design of the world from the original.

    • @AgentLemmon
      @AgentLemmon Před 6 lety +1

      No shit, i personally think there is stuff that is better fleshed out in this movie then the original Blade runner, but also ofcourse there are plenty movies that has the same thematic stuff in it. That's like not watching The exorcist because Rosemary's baby had the same stuff in it.