[HN Gopher] Digging into the odd history of Blade Runner's title...
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Digging into the odd history of Blade Runner's title (2017)
 
Author : thunderbong
Score  : 100 points
Date   : 2023-07-31 16:20 UTC (6 hours ago)
 
web link (www.vulture.com)
w3m dump (www.vulture.com)
 
| linsomniac wrote:
| A few weeks ago I read Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, and
| as a long time fan of Blade Runner it provided a lot of good back
| story on the movie. Highly recommended.
 
  | PNewling wrote:
  | Definitely read as it is a classic, just prepare yourself for a
  | lot of talking about sheep (I think it was a sheep, it's been
  | awhile).
 
    | cvwright wrote:
    | Sure you're not thinking of the John Scalzi book with the
    | similar (referential) title?
 
  | yomlica8 wrote:
  | Recently read this as well. I found the movie kind of uneven in
  | parts but felt it was mostly a better story than the book,
  | which I didn't expect to be the case.
  | 
  | I guess I didn't totally get the Mercerism and animal angle, it
  | seemed to exist mostly to highlight a difference in empathy
  | between characters. I think the film is better without it.
  | 
  | The android test Mexican standoff was amusing though.
 
    | Finnucane wrote:
    | The differences in empathy was kinda the whole point of the
    | book. Which is to say, the androids didn't have any. In the
    | context of the story, they could act and look like humans,
    | but were essentially psychopathic killing machines. PKD felt
    | that being fully human required empathy.
 
    | nidnogg wrote:
    | I had a similar impression. For me those two hit the hardest
    | and I think it can drag a bit in those moments. I expected a
    | more in depth view as is often the case with source material,
    | not an entirely different societal mindset from most
    | characters. It's as if they forked out a huge part of the
    | story for the movies and honestly I'm glad they did so.
    | 
    | I was a bit skeptic of Philip K Dick once I finished it but
    | I'm glad I took up Ubik a couple of years after - it turned
    | out to be one of my favorite reads.
 
      | lordfrito wrote:
      | Ubik is my favorite as well.
      | 
      | Another good PKD read is A Maze of Death... it has very
      | dated tech in it (satellite in orbit playing pre-recorded
      | tape)... but the ideas are very similar to Ubik (in a way).
      | A world deteriorating, an almost spiritual war between
      | forces of order and disorder.
 
| animatethrow wrote:
| The TLDR summary: "Blade Runner" comes from another SciFi
| dystopia:
| 
| > Universal health care has been enacted, but in order to cull
| the herd of the weak, the "Health Control laws" -- enforced by
| the office of a draconian "Secretary of Health Control" --
| dictate that anyone who wants medical care must undergo
| sterilization first. As a result, a system of black-market health
| care has emerged in which suppliers obtain medical equipment,
| doctors use it to illegally heal those who don't want to be
| sterilized, and there are people who covertly transport the
| equipment to the doctors. Since that equipment often includes
| scalpels and other instruments of incision, the transporters are
| known as "bladerunners."
 
  | linsomniac wrote:
  | Thank you!
 
| raldi wrote:
| [flagged]
 
  | whycome wrote:
  | A wild ride of a read. What was clickbait to you?
 
    | raldi wrote:
    | When someone sees the headline, the natural impulse is, "I
    | wonder why they called it Blade Runner; if I click the link,
    | it will tell me." But ten long paragraphs into the piece,
    | there's no sign of an answer.
 
  | xsmasher wrote:
  | Hard to TL;DR because it's a twisty tale that doesn't make a
  | lot of sense.
  | 
  | It was the name of an unrelated book by an obscure author that
  | was adapted into a "film treatment" by Willam Burroughs; and it
  | was sitting on the right shelf when Scott and Co. were
  | scratching around for a title. Neither manuscript had an
  | influence on the final film, and the term "Blade Runner" is
  | never explained in the film.
 
    | raldi wrote:
    | Thanks. Looks like the complete answer would be something
    | like, "There was a book about 'bladerunners', black-market
    | couriers of medical equipment like scalpels, and they liked
    | the name and adopted it for the unrelated film."
 
| swayvil wrote:
| Alan E. Nourse. Silverberg says he's a good sci fi writer. Hmm.
| 
| Here's one of his short story collections
| 
| http://library.lol/fiction/5318504BEFA6ADEBC97C8EF417F51104
 
| nntwozz wrote:
| Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner is a great documentary,
| really recommended.
| 
| It was to be called Dangerous Days in Fancher's last draft before
| eventually taking the name Blade Runner.
 
| neilk wrote:
| Surprising. I had assumed it was a random future-world term, but
| was also meant to evoke Deckard's dilemmas - balanced on a knife
| edge.
 
  | twoodfin wrote:
  | Probably why everyone involved liked it: It's evocative across
  | multiple interpretations.
  | 
  | In addition to yours, "runner" works as a kind of diminution of
  | the job, runners being minor functionaries who shuttle back and
  | forth at the beck of their superiors ("No choice, pal.")
  | 
  | That what Deckard's running is a "blade"--death--only
  | emphasizes either his powerlessness or his victims'. He's a
  | pageboy being made to do murder. Or a janitor cleaning up mere
  | "hazards".
 
    | coldtea wrote:
    | > _That what Deckard 's running is a "blade"--death_
    | 
    | Yeah, could be "running" as in operating ("run: be in charge
    | of; manage") a metaphorical blade, that is cutting their life
    | short.
 
      | mdp2021 wrote:
      | Or, since the original intended sense was "smuggler of
      | blades", within the world in the movie "blade runner" could
      | be interpreted as "smuggler of death in the underworld of
      | the replicants".
      | 
      | (With the dark irony that the original was meant to be
      | "smuggling equipment to heal the needy", re-applied to a
      | context of "bringing death to the desperate".)
 
| themanmaran wrote:
| Wild. Doc turned sci-fi author wrote a book [1]. Book re-written
| by someone else to be a movie [2]. Movie never published. Rights
| purchased and turned into a totally different movie [3].
| 
| [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bladerunner
| 
| [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blade_Runner_(a_movie)
| 
| [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blade_Runner
 
  | wumms wrote:
  | > Movie never published
  | 
  | "Blade Runner (a movie) was loosely adapted as the 1983 film
  | Taking Tiger Mountain [0], after co-director Tom Huckabee
  | purchased the rights to the novella from Burroughs for $100."
  | [1]
  | 
  | [0] (movie is rated 4.7@imdb)
  | https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taking_Tiger_Mountain_(film)
  | 
  | [1]
  | https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blade_Runner_(a_movie)#Adapt...
 
| [deleted]
 
| johnvaluk wrote:
| Great novel. It's a shame the author never gave it a title. /s
 
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(page generated 2023-07-31 23:00 UTC)