Does the people who dislike blade runner have a low IQ?

Does the people who dislike blade runner have a low IQ?

I liked movie but it feels very empty.
The original was about Deckard tracking rebelious replicants, with Rachel as subplot.
2049 one spends too much time with unnecessary hologirls and preplicant girls. It's eyecandy agree, a nice painted shell, but still emtpy shell.
Take all these scenes out and movie is meeh. Take Rachel scenes out of original, and it's still proper detective-story movie.

>Does the people who dislike blade runner have a low IQ?
>Does the people
>low IQ

yes, they does

>meeh
No one cares about your opinion, if you use words like this.

couldnt find proper word, boring is not case, bad isn't either, maybe lacking? unfinished? not complete? meeeh

You're a retard OP

Didnt know you can vote twice per movie on letterboxd...

You can vote once, but write multiple reviews with different scores (I think)

Then just say you think something is bad, but you're unable to explain it.

Seems like it's more braindead there than on IMDb

but it isn't bad

Yes, they're women after all

It's a movie about K's growth, all those scenes were instrumental.

For me, it's the ultimate pleb filter. Ask someone what they think about the film and depending on their answer, you can put them into categories of kino sense.

A shame, because it's charachter arc is actually extremely rushed and shallow.
From the time he starts to suspect there is something special about him, he's already off baseline and therefore lose all of his "robotics" attributes.

Like, I get that in the end he finally discovers that evn tho he's not special he is worthy and unique in his own way, but the viewer knows that from the very beginning. And even K is never very much conflicted about his nature

>charachter arc is actually extremely rushed and shallow.
How is it rushed exactly? We're with K literally for the entire film, almost three hours of character development
>From the time he starts to suspect there is something special about him
He's been suspecting that from the start as evident by Joi saying that she "always told him that he's special", which means he thought that from the start, he just now got the evidence for it.
>but the viewer knows that from the very beginning
No, we don't know if he's a special child right from the beginning or not
>And even K is never very much conflicted about his nature
Did you even see the film? I really don't understand how could someone say this. The entire damn film is him being conflicted beyond measure, conflicted if he had a real childhood or not, conflicted does he have parents or not, conflicted of where does he belong, is his relationship real or not etc.

>Did you even see the film? I really don't understand how could someone say this. The entire damn film is him being conflicted beyond measure, conflicted if he had a real childhood or not, conflicted does he have parents or not, conflicted of where does he belong, is his relationship real or not
What? He isn't conflicted, he's just not sure because he hasn't prrofs enough, but it's not lie this implies he daesn't know what he has to do.
He always knows what he has to do, and that's why is charachter arc is rushed. He has one moment of insecurity on the bridge and that's it, and even that isn't that meaningful since in the next scene he is doing the action man as always

>He has one moment of insecurity on the bridge and that's it
What about him finding the date on Sapper's tree? What about him finding the actual wooden horse in the furnace scene? The memory girl realisation scene? The rebellion bitch realisation scene?
He project's insecurity throughout the film, even in simple scenes like when he's walking through the halls of LAPD fast while looking down avoiding eye contact so no one notices him

>What? He isn't conflicted

But his inner conflict was the main part of the story. The very thing that motivated him.

>that isn't that meaningful since in the next scene he is doing the action man as always

But that scenes meaning was gave him his larger purpose. That if he died trying to save / dies saving Deckard, it would be OK.

**But that scene gave him his larger purpose