This film is mediocre by today standards

This film is mediocre by today standards.

No, it's still one-a the most visually striking sci-fi films ever.

VIsually very good but kinda weak in general. I hope the sequel is better

It has one of the best sci-fi aesthetics that has ever graced a screen, what are you on about?

Like tears in rain

Nice visuals, but severely lacking in other areas.

What the fuck was with the final showdown between androids?

Running away from a weakened Deckard, then back flipping slowly towards him?

Today's standards are lower than the 80s

If anything its better by today's shitty standards of science fiction

Thank you OP. I saw this for the first time a few years ago in a theater doing classic movie nights, it was really disappointing compared to all the hype you hear about it. Even the 'aesthetic' mostly boils down to (a) in the future it's always pouring rain for some reason and (b) advanced technology has apparently made US cities look like Thailand or something.

Yeah this movie had a lot of weird vibes
Why was her body convulsing like crazy when she got shot?
Why did he stab his own hand?
What's with the eye-gouging?
Why did Deckard suddenly have a weird hard-on for the girl?

There were a few moments where the editing was weird too, like it some shots didn't follow the previous one

Shitty poster. I've seen better fanmade posters.

As time goes on, standards get higher. Obviously a movie from 1982 might not be great when you look at it with standards from 2017.

I have a good one on my wall, let me find it online

It's like that Seinfeld thing. It invented all the tropes like robots, cyberpunk, Chinatown etc.

You're a shitty poster

And what are modern standards?

>endless capeshit
>endless reboots
>blatant China pandering

Not a single original idea

THis
Needs more piew piew lazor battles and martial arts fights. They could learn a lot from Matrix 3.

Is Suicide Squad the 'today standards' you're talking about or is Deadpool?

Yeah I agree, this poster is way better

Yeah, because there's clearly no East Asian influence on Blade Runner

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>Cyberpunk that takes inspiration from Japanese neon metropolises is the same as pandering to the shit taste of the Chinks and appeasing the Chink Communist Party

But they don't even run on blades in the movie