Film Noir Features in Blade Runner and The Matrix
“The Matrix” has a main science fiction theme but also includes features of film noir films. It is directed and written by Andy and Larry Wachowski. Other than Science Fiction and film noir the film can also be classed as a Hybrid.
“Blade Runner” is more of a film noir film than “The Matrix”. Although it does include action and fighting scenes but these have film noir features in them. Most ideas about the film are connected with film noir such as the mystery, the low key lighting and symbolic objects. It was directed by Ridley Scott and written by Phillip K. Dick, Hampton Fancher and David Webb Peoples.
The main characters in “The Matrix”
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“The Matrix” and “Blade Runner” both include strong female characters. In “Blade Runner” the strong female characters are Rachael and Zhora and in “The Matrix” it is Trinity. Audiences demand strong characters because it is like a role – reversal, in most films men are the hero and leading characters, which makes it unusual for women to be strong and powerful. The world war influenced film makers to make films which had strong female characters to encourage women and make them feel appreciated for all of the jobs that they were doing during the war whilst men were on the battlefields.
In “Blade Runner” the main character, Deckard, is an ex-policeman and ex-blade runner. He is found and reassigned as a blade runner to find some rogue replicants who have gone ‘On the run’. In “The Matrix” the main character Thomas A. Anderson is found by a group of people who have found out that he is ‘the one’ who will stop “The Matrix”, he is bought in to ‘The real world’ to stop agents and make the world ‘right’.
I feel that in “Blade Runner” the main issues and ideas that the film considers are that the society in the future is very separated and there are no longer family structures, also that ‘real’ is a difficult term to understand as there are replicants in their time and they are made to
The classical Hollywood narrative is one of simplicity, linear continuity, and comprehensive storytelling, something typical American audiences were used to for most of films history. Quentin Tarantino, however, is not one to abide by the rules of cinema. The arguably auteur director reconfigures this narrative style with his 1994 classic Pulp Fiction. This film not only presented itself as a completely new and innovative take on what a film could be, but also created a foundation for which many films since have built their narratives from.
What is horror? Webster's Collegiate Dictionary gives the primary definition of horror as "a painful and intense fear, dread, or dismay." It stands to reason then that "horror fiction" is fiction that elicits those emotions in the reader. An example of a horror film is "The Shining", directed by Stanley Kubrick. Stanley Kubrick was a well-known director, producer, writer and cinematographer. His films comprised of unique, qualitative scenes that are still memorable but one iconic film in his collection of work is The Shining. Many would disagree and say that The Shining was not his best work and he could have done better yet, there are still those who would say otherwise. This film was not meant to be a “scary pop-up” terror film but
Millions of people flock to the movie theater year after year on a quest to be entertained. Even a mediocre movie has the ability to take the audience to another place, escaping the realities of their own life, if only for a mere two hours. Some movies are simply pure entertainment. And then, there are those movies that provoke conversation long after the film has been viewed. Dystopian themes are not new, and have historically provided a template to gage the course of human existence. The Matrix portrays a society where humans exist without freedom. The film is not only entertaining, but also thought provoking. It paints a world with two different dimensions, one with the mind numbing
Film Noir was extremely trendy during the 1940’s. People were captivated by the way it expresses a mood of disillusionment and indistinctness between good and evil. Film Noir have key elements; crime, mystery, an anti-hero, femme fatale, and chiaroscuro lighting and camera angles. The Maltese Falcon is an example of film noir because of the usage of camera angles, lighting and ominous settings, as well as sinister characters as Samuel Spade, the anti-hero on a quest for meaning, who encounters the death of his partner but does not show any signs of remorse but instead for his greed for riches.
The issue of humanity is one of the central themes in "Blade Runner." Countless arguments have taken place over whether or not Deckard is a replicant. The replicants are supposed to be "better humans than humans." Director Ridley Scott has many ways to communicate this theme, but one of the most prevalent is eyes. Human eyes are featured both in the beginning of the film and near the end.
The Motion Picture Production Code, commonly known as the Hays Code, was adopted in March 1930, though it was not truly enforced until four years later in 1934. This set of rules had tremendously influenced the way Hollywood movies were made for a number of years. This code was based on the ethics and norms if that time. There were three main principals of the Hays Code. The first was no picture shall be produced that will lower the moral standard of those who see it. What was meant by this was that sympathy should not be portrayed towards crimes, wrongdoings, evil or sins. The second stated that only a correct standard of living could be presented that are only subject to the requirements of drama and
A Comparison of the Themes of Blade Runner and Brave New World ‘Humanity likes to think of itself as more sophisticated than the wild yet it cannot really escape its need for the natural world’ Despite different contexts both Aldous Huxley within his book Brave New World and Ridley Scott in the film Blade Runner explore the idea that humans feel themselves more sophisticated than the natural world, yet are able to completely sever relations between humanity and the nature. Through various techniques both texts warn their varied audiences of the negative ramifications that will come from such disdainful, careless opinions and actions. All aspects of the ‘New State’ within Aldous
breaking down a door and pointing a gun at the head of a woman on a
Quentin Tarantino is well known and often criticized for his depiction of violence in his films. Although at times graphic, Tarantino’s violence holds a purpose. This paper will look at two films, Jackie Brown and Pulp Fiction, and their depiction of violence and the aesthetics used. It will also look at classic film conventions and ultraviolence aesthetics used by Tarantino.
“Goodbye Mr. Anderson” (Agent Smith). Luckily, this was not the end to Neo’s road, it was only the beginning of his long journey to becoming ‘The One,’ and freeing humans from the Matrix. Similar to Neo’s story, this is only the beginning, the beginning of a discussion of the sociological concepts within the movie, The Matrix.
Many years after its release, Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner has become one of the most analyzed and debated science fiction films ever produced. The film was a failure during its initial release in 1982, the reviews were negative and it wasn’t even close to being a box office hit; however, after the director’s cut release in 1992 Blade Runner had a rebirth and it became a highly respected science fiction film. Ridley Scott’s inspiration to produce Blade Runner came from Philip K. Dick’s 1969 novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Although the screen writers for Blade Runner mostly just took the main character from Dick’s novel, they added certain key topics that kept a relationship between the two. At the film’s premier
Of the numerous books Philip K. Dick wrote in his lifetime a couple have made it onto the silver screen. One including the movie “Blade Runner” directed by Ridley Scott, was adapted by the novel, “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep”. It is clear that there are numerous thematic contrasts between the film and the novel. Ridley Scott decided to make an affection story and an analysis on mortality rather (the novel) is a tale about what it is to take care of business in a feeble, war-attacked world that is loaded with indications of death, and a real life apocalypse. Topics that can be both followed in the novel and film incorporate, humanity and the atmosphere that the plot takes place. Science fiction, the main genre is portrayed in different ways throughout the book and
audience) that he will wait in a café until he finds her. The café he
The film is about a group of 5 people fighting to find and keep the
Choosing a movie, do you take notice to whether it is a Director’s cut, the original version, or simply grab the chosen movie and pop it in taking no notice of which version is in hand? Is there even a difference? Because a director’s cut is simply a version of a movie with various cuts made by the director’s choosing, if watching both versions of Ridley Scott’s, “Blade Runner,” the subtle differences in several of the scenes will become apparent, although the scene layout and plot remains the same throughout both versions.