C3PX said:
Kind of funny, I bought the DVD box set when it was first released, but I had never actually watched the Final Cut on it until about a month ago. When I first got it I excitedly watched the international cut and all the special features, and I guess I got Blade Runnered out and never got around to sitting down and watching the FC.
Anyway, Blade Runner is a movie I have introduced to a small handful of my braver and more versatile friends, and usually by the time the film was over, they would look at me as if to say, "Why the hell did you just make us watch that!" One of my friends who is big into artsy foreign films exclaimed, "Why did we just watch that?" as the credits were rolling (Brazil has had much the same effect on them, obviously I have some really lame friends). This has pretty much discouraged me from recommending the film to people beyond saying, "Ah yes, I really love that movie. You should see it sometime." Well, recently one of my less brave and not so versatile friends saw it in my collection and asked if we could watch it. I warned him he probably wouldn't like it, but he still really wanted to see it. So we watched the Final Cut together, and he absolutely loved it. Perhaps I had been sharing it with the wrong sort of friends all these years.
I bought the set and overloaded on Dangerous Days and the Deleted Scenes. I then found out that i could see it in 35mm so i waited to watch the DVD. I've showed it to friends and others and it always gets this blank reaction. They either don't know what to think, hate it, are indifferent-but I have yet to find someone that actually loves it.
Chewtobacca said:
I initially disliked it, but I have warmed to it. It is better on some of the deleted scenes, especially the deleted scene where Batty dies.
The happy ending really does not fit, so I would have to say no, but I like the "I think we were made for each other" line and Ford's reaction, as it can be read in two ways.
I hated it in Roy's death scene. It felt so intrusive and unnecessary. That is true about the ending. What really kills it is the fact that they are in a lush forest, driving off into the sunset, basically telling us that the entire plot setup doesn't matter-and that cheesy closing line. The elevator door is perfect.