



🚀 Own a piece of cinematic history!
The Blade Runner (Five-Disc Complete Collector's Edition) [Blu-ray] offers fans an unparalleled viewing experience with multiple versions of the film, enhanced 4K visuals, and exclusive bonus content, all packaged in a stunning collector's box.
| ASIN | B000UBMWG4 |
| Actors | Edward James Olmos, Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Sean Young |
| Aspect Ratio | 2.40:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #39,443 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #619 in Science Fiction Blu-ray Discs #982 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV) #3,864 in Action & Adventure Blu-ray Discs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (20,156) |
| Director | Ridley Scott |
| Dubbed: | Spanish |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Language | English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 2.0), French (Dolby Digital 5.1), Unknown (Dolby TrueHD 5.1) |
| MPAA rating | Unrated (Not Rated) |
| Media Format | AC-3, Blu-ray, Closed-captioned, Collector's Edition, Color, Dolby, Multiple Formats, NTSC, Original recording remastered, Restored, Subtitled, Widescreen |
| Number of discs | 5 |
| Product Dimensions | 6.5 x 5.25 x 0.75 inches; 4.94 ounces |
| Release date | December 18, 2007 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 57 minutes |
| Studio | Warner Brothers |
| Subtitles: | English, French, Spanish |
D**S
Great film
Excellent movie with young Harrison Ford . The movie is ahead of it's time. I won't tell what it all entails....Watch..you will enjoy!
S**G
A Cult Classic Redone to Near Perfection
Seldom does a movie come around that is as popular or more popular than it was decades ago. Blade Runner was a Box Office flop when it originally debuted in 1982. Although the film quickly gained a cultish following of hardcore fans that enjoyed it as an epic Sci-fi classic. Now in 2007 the movie can once again be enjoyed by it's masses. A newly remastered collection of five discs has made it's way to hi-def world. So how does it look and play all these years later. Extremely well. I am probably one of the few to buy this movie who has actually only watched it once before. I was a child when this movie first came out and it was hard to understand how good of a movie this is until now as an adult. The story takes place in a futuristic world set in 2017. From the first moment on you can realize the epic scale this movie was put on. A corporation has created these cyber humans called replicants. Nearly identical to real people they were created to do slave labor. Although the replicants are very human like and that causes problems. Thus brings in Blade Runners. These bounty hunters go searching for rogue replicants. The replicants have been banned from Earth which means the Blade Runner must find any that find there way here. Harrison Ford plays one of the Blade Runner by the name of Rick Deckard. Fresh from his first Indiana Jones movie he shows why he is a action/sci-fi star. Four replicants free themselves from a planet and have come to Earth to search for their maker. From the first moment on this movie begins to raise philosophical questions. Right or wrong and should all replicants be retired(killed) for just being a replicant. Especially when these replicants become so human like. This becomes evident in the character played by Sean Young named Rachael. So human like and yet created by science. Most of the movie appears dark in many scenes, night seems to be when people live in this futuristic world. Despite the darkness much of the color is illuminated in a light blue color which is fascinating to the eyes. The music sets the tone thru the movie in which it can be rather pleasant to sometimes eery. The Blu-ray version of this film is quite a feat. The sheer beauty of it in high definition is the clear vision that Ridley Scott intended. From the first scene to the last you can tell this movie went thru more than a once over. The sound is excellent and really brings out the film. Blade Runner is without a doubt another classic. Although a sci-fi movie the story delves much deeper than that. This is a movie that should be seen by everyone. Any fan of sci-fi or just a good plot will love this movie. Age has only made it better. Without a doubt this is one collection that should be in any Blu-ray movie owners collection.
C**E
AP Literature Project
Blade Runner opens with a panoramic shot of the scenery of what is meant to be futuristic Los Angeles. In this shot, the lighting is very dark with the main colors coming from advertisement billboards and flames. This type of lighting is found in most scenes throughout the film, which contributes to the dark and mysterious tone of the movie. It gives it the aura of an old-timey detective movie, which attributes the plot well considering that it centers around an ex-cop on the hunt for synthetic humans. Not only does the lighting help this 1950’s-esque feel, but the voice over created by Harrison Ford’s character, Rick Deckard, contributes to this as well. The voice over also makes up for the lack of dialogue in the film, as Deckard explains some key points to the plot that the dialogue didn’t, and possibly couldn’t, cover. The lighting isn’t always just dark and brooding, though, as there are scenes where the light is incredibly bright, such as the scene where Deckard meets Rachael. This further proves how the lighting sets the tone for the plot, as in this scene, everything is golden and very bright which invokes a feeling of warmth. This could be a premonition of the relationship that develops between Deckard and Rachael later in the movie. The golden light shows that Rachael is the good turning point in Deckard’s life, as it was because of her that Deckard started to feel real emotion again. Not only that, but she did save him from being killed by Leon, thus making her his “savior” of sort. Rachael is also the cause of other innuendos and premonitions throughout the movie. For instance, the story that she, and technically Deckard, tell of the spider and its egg can be considered to an elusion of how the replicants are trying to get to Tyrell so he can extend their 4 year life span. Just as the baby spiders ate the mother so they can live, the replicants are hunting down their creator, a father of sorts, so that they can live as well. The camera angles in the film are also done in a well, and strategic way as well. There are a few scenes that include both humans and replicants in which the replicant is on the complete opposite side of the shot of the human. The significance of this is that it shows the divide between the replicants and the humans. That the replicants will never truly be human, despite the memories and such implanted in them. Despite the fact that they are made to be “more human than human”. That brings into question the dilemma the whole movie seems to be centered around. What makes a human human? Throughout the movie, photos seem to play a significant role to this question. It would seem that photos are a representation of memories for the replicants. In fact, Rachael tried to deny that she was a replicant by trying to show a picture of her and her “mother” to Deckard. Leon also had photos of which he deemed precious. Because of this, it could be argued that memories and emotions are what make a human human, but then how would that differentiate them from replicants, as replicants can be implanted with memories and such. Maybe replicants are human in a sense too.
A**R
As per description.
R**B
Een van die films waar het beeld en de fotografie wezenlijk bijdraagt tot de sfeer en geheel van de film. Met zo'n mooie 4K transfer wordt die nog beter!
T**H
Zu Aller erst: Als "Blade-runiac" der jüngeren Generation (Baujahr Ž81) muss ich gestehen, dass dieser Film (in ALL seinen Versionen) ein absoluter Meilenstein des "not-just-fictional-Science-Fiction" ist. (für die, die vielleicht irgendwann mal was darüber gehört haben aber nichts damit anzufangen wissen) Zugegeben, wer auf poppig bunte Farben und spassige Klamaukunterhaltung steht wird sich schwer mit Ridley ScottŽs Film tun (auch hier, egal in welcher Version). Der Film ist, bis auf wenige Ausnahmen dunkel, düster und verregnet. Dem Zuschauer drängt sich sofort ein behaglich-klaustrophobisches Unwohlsein auf, ohne jedoch aufdringlich zu werden. Man wird einfach gefesselt. Nun aber will ich auf einem kleinen Umweg zur Box an sich kommen: Vor Jahren habe ich bereits einige Versionen von "Bladerunner" auf VHS gehabt und muss zugeben, dass ich ziemlich angep***t war, wieviel Platz die fetten Boxen weggenommen haben. Ein Paar Jahre später auf DVD ebenfalls nahezu das gleiche Spiel. JETZT, dank der qualitativ hochwertigen und schön mit Relief geprägten Tinbox sieht das Ganze schon wieder anders aus. Optischer Eindruck: 1a Nachdem ich die Box geöffnet hatte ertappte ich mich, wie mir ein "häääääääää? wasŽn DAS?" entfleuchte. Der erste Blick des neuen Besitzers nach dem Öffnen fällt auf ein Schaumstoffrechteck in dessen Mitte "irgendwas durchsichtiges, aber in Folie eingepacktes steckt. Also gleich mal Žrausgenommen und geschaut. Es ist das 35mm Hologramm. Allerdings nicht so ein "billiges" wie man es von Spec-Ed DVD-Covern kennt, es ist eine komplette Bewegungsabfolge von Harrison Ford. Super geili gemacht! Bei richtiger Kippweise entsteht wirklich der Eindruck als schaue man ein Stück Film auf einem transparenten Hintergrund. Also mal weiter ausgepackt 5 DVDŽs mit sämtlichen, jemals erschienenen Versionen des Films, PLUS der ultimative Final Cut des Films. Was es damit auf sich hat, bzw. mit welchem technischen Aufwand und Methoden dieser hergestellt worden ist, verrät uns Ridley Scott in einem "Brief", der auf "transparentem Papier" gedruckt ist. Will heissen natürlich auf stabiler, formbeständiger Klarsichtfolie. Wer das Teil in den Händen hält, fühlt sich sofort ein Stück näher in die Bladerunnerwelt versetzt. Dieser typische "irgendwie schon kitschig aber kultig-geil" Eindruck. Weiter in der Box gegraben und wir finden in einer Hülle: Sketches des Films, Konzeptzeichnungen "der ersten Stunde"....natürlich als Repro, aber einfach nur *pardon* endgenial. Über die verschiedenen Filmversionen möchte ich hier garnicht viel verlieren. Warum nicht? Weil dies zu einer Kontroverse führen würde. Jeder Film hat seinen ganz eigenen Fankreis und ICH kenne keinen, der alle Filme gleich gut findet. Einer ist IMMER der Fave und die anderen Versionen werden darauf hin als "eben nicht ganz so gut" eingestuft. Wir kennen alle die Gespräche in denen irgendwann der Punkt kommt "...ja, aber DIE Version von dem Film find ich 1000 Mal besser..." Sehenswert sind sie ALLE und zwar allemal! Also mein bisheriger, persönlicher Favorit ist die Version mit HFordŽs Stimme aus dem off, quasi das "the all seeing I" Mal schauen ob der Final Cut dieser Fassung den Rang streitig machen, oder gar abluchsen kann. Ich habe mir den Final Cut zusätzlich auch nochmal als Blu-Ray bestellt, um für mich selbst zu schauen ob es gelungen ist, soviele Jahre nach Release der Urfassung eine zeitgemäße Aufbereitung vorzunehmen. Auch wenn der BD-Player die normalen DVDŽs schon recht gut hochskaliert, so erwarte ich trotzdem noch eine sichtliche Steigerung von der reinen Blu-Ray Version. Mein Fazit für diese Box: Unbedingt zulegen - spart Platz - sieht super genial aus - beinhaltet alles was man braucht ob man nun neu oder alt eingesessen ist, was das Thema angeht. - spart unter Umständen auch noch Geld im Vergleich zum Kauf der Einzel DVDŽs - Preis-/Leistungsverhältnis meiner Ansicht nach optimal
J**E
Great movie
A**S
Excelente calidad de edición. Se ve mucho mejor que la original. Muy recomendable. Llegó en tiempo y forma, y en excelentes condiciones.
TrustPilot
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