Except these two, yes.Barendd Nobeard said:Well, except for Plan 9 from Outer Space and Manos, Hand of Fate!
Pielorinho said:But I think you're wrong about the whole "Is Deckard a replicant" question being one that fans invented. I watched the movie without ever having heard of that conversation (I'd barely heard of the movie when I saw it), and that came across as a central theme, from the questions he gets asked, to the way he looks at his family photographs, to the things the replicants say to him, to the final shot of the origami unicorn. The question of Deckard's biological humanity, and of the reality of his identity, pervades the movie.
There's no question in my mind but that the director intended that. I concede that the movie would be much less rich without that thread.
And Harrison Ford countered that he thought that was bulls***, and that he played Decker as a human and would always think of him thus.Cthulhu's Librarian said:Actually, when the film was rereleased in very limited cities a few years ago (NY & LA only, i believe), Ridley Scott was interviewed and said, in no uncertain terms, that he intended Deckard to be a replicant and that was a central theme of the movie as far as he was concerned. Straight from the director's mouth.
Cthulhu's Librarian said:Actually, when the film was rereleased in very limited cities a few years ago (NY & LA only, i believe), Ridley Scott was interviewed and said, in no uncertain terms, that he intended Deckard to be a replicant and that was a central theme of the movie as far as he was concerned. Straight from the director's mouth.
Cthulhu's Librarian said:Actually, when the film was rereleased in very limited cities a few years ago (NY & LA only, i believe), Ridley Scott was interviewed and said, in no uncertain terms, that he intended Deckard to be a replicant and that was a central theme of the movie as far as he was concerned. Straight from the director's mouth.