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Ridley Scott uses the plot of Blade Runner to make the viewer question the qualities that they see all humans as having. By using human characters, such as Gaff and Sergeant Bryant, genetically engineered characters like Roy and Rachel, and characters that could be either, for example Deckard, Scott leaves us, after viewing the film, with a question in our minds. ... Blade Runner makes us think of the possibility that something can earn the right to be human, whether it be a machine or a “real” human. ... Blade Runner challenges the way we see humans, and opens our minds to the possibility that there are many different things that can define a human, and that these things differ from person to person.
Blade Runner introduces us to a dark, depressing world of the future. ...
The five replicants we encounter in Blade Runner do not fit this stereotype. Certainly, at the start of the film we form an idea of what the replicants are like. ...
In this way, Ridley Scott challenges to viewer to question what makes us human. ... Scott makes us wonder whether it is these imperfections, as well as emotions, that make humans human.
Approximate Word count = 967 Approximate Pages = 3.9 (250 words per page double spaced)
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