Trolling #10: Blade Runner SUCKS!

Prepare to crank up the crankiness and prime the hate cannons. CraveOnline‘s Trolling is about to do what it does best: Piss all over the things you love. Using my critical acumen, I build up the universally hated, and rip apart the universally loved. I will not stop until all my credibility is gone. Like Jean-Luc Godard, I seek to kill all cinema. And this week’s exercise should be a breeze, as the target of my ire is Ridley Scott’s 1982 future-noir Blade Runner, a movie that is bafflingly held to be a sci-fi classic.

Blade Runner opened to very good reviews 31 years ago, and it has since been re-released on home video and in theaters several times, each time edited differently, and each time to an increasingly excited audience. It is often considered one of the more intelligent and thoughtful sci-fi films to come out of the genre, and stands as a tentpole in the minds of sci-fi fans as one of the best movies ever made. It was nominated for two Academy Awards, and has a coveted spot in the IMDb Top 250 (at last measure, it stands at #124).

All of this is baffling, because I make the following statement: Blade Runner sucks. It’s an over-long and confusing mess of a film that should not rightfully be praised as any sort of classic beyond its visual effects. Let’s pick this thing apart piece by piece, and see if we can find the meat.  

Sometimes it can be fun to dissect an oblique film that seems to be leaving clues for you. I’m a big fan of David Lynch, and his mysterious labyrinths are endlessly fascinating to ponder. Blade Runner certainly fits the “oblique” bill, and it has thousands of fans constantly re-watching it, looking for new clues. But it’s one thing to dissect, and another thing to actually enjoy, feel, and understand. Blade Runner is barely enjoyable, low on feeling, and impossible to understand.

Until next week, let the hate mail flow.  


Witney Seibold is a featured contributor on the CraveOnline Film Channel, co-host of The B-Movies Podcast. You can read his weekly articles Trolling, Free Film School and The Series Project, and follow him on “Twitter” at @WitneySeibold, where he is slowly losing his mind. 

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