EXCLUSIVE: After revisiting his classic Alien with the upcoming 3D Fox film Prometheus, Ridley Scott is committing to direct and produce a film that advances his other seminal and groundbreaking science fiction film from the past. Scott has signed on to direct and produce a new installment of Blade Runner. He’ll make the film with Alcon Entertainment, producing with Alcon partners Broderick Johnson and Andrew Kosove. This would be the most high profile project for Alcon since The Blind Side. They got control of the franchise earlier this year, but it’s a whole different ballgame with Scott at the helm.
I’m not getting a clear sense at this point whether Scott intends to do a sequel or a prequel to the 1982 film that was loosely based on the Philip K. Dick novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Also unclear is whether they start fresh or reach out to Harrison Ford. The original took place in dystopian Los Angeles in 2019, in which organic superhuman robots called replicants escaped and are hiding somewhere on earth. Ford played Richard Deckard, a burnt out blade runner assigned to hunt them down. His tired life gets altered when he himself falls for one of the replicants and struggles to keep her from being destroyed.
The film was not a blockbuster when first released–it grossed $32 million in its original run–but the film has gained esteem over time. From the bleak but breathtaking visuals to the complex storyline and themes of mortality, Blade Runner became a classic. There has periodically been talks of doing a sequel but those never really went anywhere. After injecting state of the art 3D in reviving Alien, imagine what Scott can do with Blade Runner? Now, the filmmaker is ready to engage. Alcon has its output deal with Warner Bros, which remastered and released a 25th anniversary version on DVD and Blu-Ray in 2007. Warner Bros made the original film.
This is just the first step and the project will have to be written and it will likely evolve during that process. That’s what happened on Alien, which began as a prequel to his 1979 classic. That changed when Lost‘s Damon Lindelof came in with a different take on the subject matter that imprinted on Scott and Fox executives. They wound up making Prometheus, which Fox considers an original but which I’ve heard is a cousin to the original Alien franchise. That film will be released June 8, 2012, with Charlize Theron, Michael Fassbender, Noomi Rapace, Patrick Wilson, Idris Elba and Guy Pearce starring. Scott is repped by WME.
Here is the original Blade Runner trailer:






I feel sorry for young people in the US today, they have lived their entire lives in a cultural void that contains nothing but recycled ideas from previous decades. The top pop icon today, Lady Gaga, is the perfect example of this: absolutely nothing she does is original in any way, the entire act is things that have been appropriated from big acts of the past.
I blame the MPAA/RIAA for the situation – they have commoditized something that cannot remain genuine and be commoditized at the same time: artistic expression. So all they can produce today are rehashes of the same stuff that is proven to generate sales but has no creative, inspirational, or artistic content whatsoever.
“All this machinery, making modern music, but still be open-hearted. Not so coldly charted, it’s really just a question of your honesty.” – RUSH, Spirit of Radio
There is no honesty in the underlying society and thus none in its commercialized creative arts, either.
Hopefully the new one won’t be the snoozefest of the original.
Why not just make a better adaptation of the novel?
Blade Runner is a fine movie, but is about as similar to the book as The Running Man was to its novel.
Normally I would groan in pain and horror at the idea of any remake, let alone a Blade Runner remake. But I love Ridley Scott and I’ve been following the development of Prometheus (which I’m confident will be great). If it’s going to happen then I hope it’s going to do it justice or put a suitably good spin on the story!
Blade Runner is one of my all-time favorite films. It can not be made better. Make something original and leave a masterpiece alone. Oh, and Harrison Ford is too old for the film.
And if Hitchcock was still alive would he remake half his movies? I’m waiting for someone to remake Vertigo, or perhaps Orson Wells’ Citizen Kane? Ugh.
hey, nobody said anything about a definite remake. while that would be unfortunate, i certainly wouldn’t mind a prequel or spinoff in the same vein as the upcoming prometheus. imagine the visuals!
Agreed.
Ceasar says NNNNNNNNNOOOOOOOOOOOOO.
Leave the classics alone (rare that it works like Rise of the Planet of the Apes).
Footloose looks terrible, Total Recall really worried, so no mmmmooorrrrreeeeeeeee.
Surely, these Directors can come up with new ideas?
I say that looking forward to Oz: The Great and Powerful mmmmmmmmmm….
This is a great idea.
Blade Runner was a flawed movie. I give it points for trying to be awesome. But it’s too slow. And all the talkiness gets in the way of the action… which is kinda lame… I mean there’s like twenty minutes of people TAKING TESTS in the movie. I know that’s probably because of tech limits, but wouldn’t it be much better to test replicants with a physical action test instead of just asking questions about their famlies. The kind of low key vibe to whole thing brings it down, but you (sort of) forgive it because back then it was harder to do cool set pieces.
This is a great opportunity to make a much more high octane thrill ride and deliver on the promise of the original.
How old are you? 11?
YES!!!
YES!!!
YES!!!!
YEAHHHHHHHHHHHH!
Please read the article before commenting. He’s not remaking Blade Runner, he’s talking about doing another film in that universe, which is exactly what he’s doing now with Prometheus. Someone was eventually going to exploit this, so isn’t it better that it’s the guy who created the original? And maybe this return to his early work will inspire him. That would be a reason to celebrate.
This is unfortunate. Possibly verging on patehtic. It shows how out-of-ideas everybody in Hollywood is.
Blade Runner was a huge influence on me. Unlike most of the world, I watched it when it came out in the theater and loved everything about it (having already known the Philip K. Dick Electric Sheep story it was based on) – style, aesthetic, and yes story (although the Director’s Cut was much better in that regard). It was unappreciated in those early years. It was daring and breakthrough and gutsy: everything that Hollywood is NOT now.
Just more proof that Hollywood cannot come up with anything new so they have to go back and remake the films of old just to shore up their dwindling profits…or so they hope!
Let’s not forget that some reboot / prequels / sequels can be very good.
Rise of the Planet of the Apes for example is supoib.
Then again it could be a “Terminator Salvation” or “Godfather 3.”
Shia LaBeouf would make a good Rick Deckard.
I hope Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Daryl Hannah, Sean Young, Joanna Cassidy and Edward James Olmos will have cameos as a tribute to the original classic 1982 film.
Perhaps they could re-team him with Megan Fox.
Just so long as they don’t turn this into another vehicle for Johnny Depp I’ll be happy.
Are you kidding? He is an horrible actor, Horrible…..did i say Horrible? As wooden as Hayden in the star wars prequels….even worse
I am shocked and saddened by the negative responses here. Blade Runner is one of the most stunning films ever made. Too bad that most commenters are so jaded and skeptical. I can’t wait!
Re: Clarity2009 comment “I’d like to see the attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion with modern CGI and 3D” — Sure. Me too. But you don’t need a Blade Runner movie for that. It could be a video game, or an at-home big-screen experience. The original Blade Runner aesthetic and meaning should be left a lone. Lord knows we have enough new dystopian themes we can cover. Be daring Ridley: make something new, with a new name, a new universe, a new aesthetic (just as dystpian, but different).
Saw the director’s cut last night. Moments of brilliance but on the whole looks very dated. Harrison Ford and Scott fell out big time over the use of Deckard’s O narrative. I believe their pals now. Anyway with Ford 30 years older now, is he really the right person to do a prequel?
The “Director’s Cut” was never really Scott’s Director’s Cut in a way. Check out the The Final Cut, completely overseen and cut together by Ridley Scott in 2007. It’s amazing.
Please don’t do this Ridley. ‘Bladerunner’ is a great cinimatic classic and you can only hurt it. Would Orson Welles have done a sequel to ‘Citizen Kane’? No, because it would destroy it.
What’s with the complaining? Let’s be clear.
1. NO, hollywood DOESN’T have any new ideas. Haven’t for years. And we see how that’s working oud.
2. The article specifically says “its not clear whether it will be a sequel”
So all the kneejerk “leave it alone” and “we dont need a remake” talk is without base. Clearly Prometheus wasn’t an Alien remake. Perhaps he has a similar vision for the Blade Runner world?
Whatever the case, its strange to me the masses complain about this stuff and let other stuff slide. At the very least it will take place in a universe that’s been established as high quality. Give me that over “The Smurfs” any day. Let Scott revisit the world of his great works. Or would you rather see more like his recent “Body of Lies,” “Robin Hood,” “A Good Year,”Kingdom of Heaven,” (and don’t even get me started on Hannibal)
And of course, for the rookies:
3: Just because Ridley Scott says he’s going to make a film doesn’t mean he will. See all 65 projects he’s announced in the past decade vs the 7 that actually got made.
Just leave it alone, will you? The original can’t be bettered.
Watching that trailer reminded me how phenomenal the original film was when released so long ago. It’s way better than most, if not all, of the CGI junk we’re force-fed these days. Well done, PKDick !!
Bladerunner is a polished and perfect gem. Please just leave it alone. Studio douches can’t come up with anything nearly as good as that film, so they seek to obtain credibility through osmosis by redoing Bladerunner? You’ll get cred for nothing, other than being obvious and pitiful little douches.
Ridley, please just walk away. You’re better than this. We love you and believe in you.
What happened to his Forever War project? That has been the most interesting ‘shovel ready’ sci fi project in decades. A tight novel that doesn’t need much modifying. Tragic if Ridley shelves that to rehash past greatness… Take a chance, Ridley! Be bold!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Forever_War