Blade Runner 2049: the four-hour cut we'll never see
At one stage, Blade Runner 2049 was even longer: a four-hour cut with an intermission. Its editor explains why we may never see it...
NEWS
Ryan Lambie
Oct 31, 2017
NB: The following contains a few mildly revealing plot details for Blade Runner 2049.
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Over the past few weeks, there's been much talk about
Blade Runner 2049's box office performance, and whether its duration - approximately 163 minutes - harmed its bottom line. Had the sci-fi sequel been a few minutes shorter, the thinking goes, cinema owners could have added more screenings to each day and by extension boosted their takings.
Others have suggested that, by making the film close to three hours long,
Blade Runner 2049's makers limited its adult audience still further (factoring in babysitters, time off work, that kind of thing). We're not sure how much stock to put in the theory that its duration harmed its success, though: even when measured against some other summer movies,
Blade Runner 2049 isn't exactly an outlier when it comes to its run time. Michael Bay's
Transformers: Age Of Extinction, for example, was 165 minutes long, and it made $1.1 billion worldwide.
No Director's Cut Of Villeneuve's Blade Runner 2049
Pro Video Coalition (via
Yahoo), and it's well worth reading in full; what's striking, though, is that Villeneuve and Walker - who previously made
Arrival and
Sicario together - initially toyed with releasing
Blade Runner 2049 as a four-hour movie, with an old-fashioned intermission splitting it into two parts.
"The first assembly of the film was nearly four hours and for convenience sake and – to be honest – my bladder’s sake, we broke it into two for viewings," Walker said. "That break revealed something about the story – it’s in two halves. There’s K discovering his true past as he sees it and at the halfway mark he kind of loses his virginity. (laughs) The next morning, it’s a different story [...]We toyed with giving titles to each half but quickly dropped that. But what does remain is that there’s something of a waking dream about the film."
Indeed there is. Elsewhere in the interview, Walker talks about cutting the film down to a more manageable 163 minutes, without harming either the meat of the story nor its measured, lonely spirit: paring down dialogue and even dropping entire sequences, including a longer scene where K and Joi are shown flying to Las Vegas.
Those who've hungrily devoured the theatrical cut of the movie may find themselves hankering after that earlier, two-part edit - though for them, Walker has bad news. Barring some intervention from the studio, it's unlikely we'll ever see that four-hour version.
"Denis doesn’t like deleted scenes on Blu-Rays and I tend to agree," Walker says. "There’s a reason why you chop scenes out and although I respect the fact that there’s some fan interest out there, we wanted to make one definitive cut of
Blade Runner 2049."
Blade Runner 2049's still playing in some cinemas. We'd suggest you go see it again on a big screen while you still can.
Blade Runner 2049 Blu-ray Release Date and Special Features Announced
Published
2 weeks ago
on
December 14, 2017
By
Mike Sprague
Hoo-ray! I have been waiting for this day for the past two months (or, you know, 36 years) as this is the day that we have the release date, cover art, and special features for director Denis Villeneuve’s
Blade Runner 2049.
As we told you guys a few weeks back, the film was considered a disappointment at the box office (considering its budget) so hopefully once the film hits Blu-ray it will become a cult hit – just like the original.
You can check out all of the details below. Do you plan on buying
Blade Runner 2049 on Blu-ray? Let us know below!
Blade Runner 2049 was directed by Denis Villeneuve from a script by Hampton Fancher (who wrote the original) and Michael Green. The script was based off a story by Hampton Fancher, which in was turn based on the original film’s source material,
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Phillip K. lord helmet.
The film stars Ryan Gosling, Harrison Ford, Ana de Armas, Dave Bautista, Jared Leto, Robin Wright, Mackenzie Davis, Edward James Olmos, David Dastmalchian, Lennie James, Barkhad Abdi, Sylvia Hoeks, Hiam Abbass, Carla Juri, David Benson, Ellie Wright, and Kingston Taylor.
Blade Runner 2049 hits Digital on
December 26th and 4K Ultra HD, 3D Blu-ray, Blu-ray, and DVD on
January 16th.
Special features:
- Designing the World of Blade Runner 2049 featurette
- To Be Human: Casting Blade Runner 2049 featurette
- Blade Runner 101:
- The Replicant Evolution
- Blade Runners
- The Rise of Wallace Corp
- Welcome to 2049
- Jois
- Within the Skies: Spinners, Pilotfish and Barracudas
- 2022: Black Out prologue
- 2036: Nexus Dawn prologue
- 2048: Nowhere to Run prologue
BUY IT HERE.
Synopsis:
Thirty years after the events of the first film, a new blade runner, LAPD Officer K (Ryan Gosling), unearths a long-buried secret that has the potential to plunge what’s left of society into chaos. K’s discovery leads him on a quest to find Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford), a former LAPD blade runner who has been missing for 30 years.