>i saw le spaceship once and when i die ill forgat that!
And this is supposed to be...deep?
>i saw le spaceship once and when i die ill forgat that!
And this is supposed to be...deep?
Why does he do it Sup Forums?
Die, retard. Can shit spam like this get deleted already?
>I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Stars and spaceships n shit
Cool dude
>americans are so plebeian that they this fucking massively assblasted when they can't understand movies
explain it to me then. why would harrison be impressed when his character already owns a flying car anyway
I've eaten beans you wouldn't believe. Black beans glistening in the pan on my stovetop. Garbanzos spilling from a can onto the floor. All of these beans, lost like tears in the rain. Time to fart.
i seriously do not get why people like the scene. it just seems retarded to me
Batty wasn't trying to impress Deckard, you autist.
How is it spam? I'm asking a question - is that dialogue supposed to be "deep"?
This is literally the equivalent of someone's last words about them being on a big boat.
Of course, not everyone has been on a big boat but everyone still fucking knows what they look like!!!!!
what was he trying to do then
Whenever a person dies all his memories and history die with him and forgotten till the end of time.
exactly. dumb fucking scene
...so?
I'll bite. Yes, it's meant to be deep. Roy is giving his death bed confession, in which he makes peace with the fact that, despite being hunted as a rogue android, he lived an intense life full of incredible human experiences, more incredible than many actual humans have experienced, experiences that were the root of his humanity but which, like his own life, were impermanent and will be lost to time after he dies. All we have in this world is the time given to us, which is both meaningful and temporary.
Here's what I'd like to see: one of you contrarian faggots explain what you, personally, consider deep. It's real easy to be a cynic.
I consider Captain America: Civil War to be deep. The conflict between whether you should keep a friendship when you find out they've betrayed you, that's deep and relatable and real. "He's my friend / so was I", that actually means something and speaks to people. "All these moments will be lost like tears in rain" is just pretentious and barely makes sense anyway, even though you do an admirable job of headcanonning it to make some sort of sense. But nobody is an android and none of what you're saying is in the actual scene.
time to die, morty *burp*
>I consider Captain America: Civil War to be deep
Oh nevermind then
My mistake for thinking you were being serious. I should've known this was a troll thread. You must be bored.
>reckoning with our mortality and discerning the line between human and not human isn't deep; whether somebody is your friend or not is deep
This explains quite a bit. You're the pretentious one, lonely and resentful of anything that punches above your weight class. If you can't relate to themes of mortality, then it also means you're too young to post on this site.
So were you arguing disingenuously then? I shared my honest opinion with you and you just quit the conversation. "It's real easy to be a cynic" indeed. It's even easier to stop replying at all when you don't have an argument beyond "durrr your taste is bad!".
Bud, you're rusing. Civil War isn't deep. You're describing playground shit. This is obvious bait.
I've had actual conversations on this site where I've come away having actually learned something and having opinions changed, mind opened, etc. But I never get that when people just pretentiously mock my opinions and tell me I'm a troll. Think whatever you want. I honestly opened up about my tastes with you and if you want to just laugh at that and stop replying and actually having a dialogue with me, go ahead.
I'm not laughing. I just can't take you seriously. You're, what, 16? One day, you'll have an experience where you realize that you are going to die. Not an intellectual understanding, which you already have, but a visceral awakening to your own end and the complete erasure of who you are. Oblivion. I had that moment the first time I looked at my kid. Looking into her little face, I realized I was going to die. Gone from the world, nothing I could do to prevent it, and it was coming quicker than I could fathom. Death wasn't an event, but total personal annihilation.
When you have that moment, you'll look a little more kindly at Blade Runner and be less impressed with Civil War. I liked Civil War just fine, but it's not a deep movie.
I can't exactly relate to the experience you shared but I can feel your passion behind it. I think you're right and I just lack the experiences to understand the scene right now. Maybe years later I'll watch it again and it'll resonate with me. Thanks for actually engaging with me.
You're talking with two people here but I'll assume you're being genuine then and explain why I don't think the scene is "pretentious"
Roy is not a human, no one in this world considers him human. Yet his entire goal in the movie was trying to extend his life because he didn't want his potential for new experiences to end. Deckard didn't think there was anything to him other than a malfunctioning robot. So you can imagine his awe when this thing saves his life and poetically talks about meaningful moments he's witnessed. He's finally accepted that there's nothing else he can do but reminisce about his fond memories to anyone who will listen.
What's the deal with the bird then? I still don't get that bit.
I'd encourage that. I wouldn't have been ready for BR 10 years ago. Your tastes and appreciation of things will change with time, as they should. Like you said yourself, right now you can't relate to Roy. That'll change.
Improv by Rutger Hauer. Prior to that, he's chasing Deckard around howling like a wolf. He comes across as a feral beast. When he grabs the dove, you're primed to see him do something awful to it. Instead, he caresses it gently and releases it. It's a visual cue that undermines our expectations as the audience just as his speech undermined Deckard's expectations as a character in the movie. Plus, seeing the dove fly away as Batty dies is a nice motif.
It's allegory to Christian literature. You can find online examples of all the religious symbolism in the movie. Replicants are akin to angels given their superhuman abilities and being created by Tyrell (God). Roy even drives a nail into his hand before he dies so that's more Christ symbolism. The dove in particular appears a lot in the bible and I think it represents Roy's soul in this case as it flies up to the sky (heavens).