Dicks' Androidsand Scotts' Replicants
Michael Tschappat
Patricia Stull
English 102
11/25/96
Philip K. Dick has written over fifty novels, and is
considered among some
of the greatest experimental writers of the 1950s and '60s, such
as; William
Burroughs, J.G. Ballard, and Thomas Pynchon.(Star 34) He has
written science-
fiction and regular fiction. His fiction usually spoke of people
trying to
figure out who they are, or what they are supposed to be. He is
best known,
however, for his work in science-fiction, and this represents the
majority of
his work. He has, also, won awards for two of his
science-fiction novels. He
won the Hugo Award for best novel in 1962 for The Man in the High
Castle and the
John W. Campbell Memorial Award for best novel of the year in
1974 for Flow My
Tears, The Policeman Said (Brians 1). An opera has been based
on one of P.K.D.
later novels, Valis (Brians 1). One of his short stories, We Can
Build It For
You, was made into a movie recently. The movie was Screamers,
starring Peter
Weller. He has also had two of his novels, We Can Remember It
for You
Wholesale (Total Recall), Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
(Blade Runner),
made into movies. Of the two, Blade Runner (B.R.) has had the
greatest impact.
B.R., however, differs greatly from Dicks' original novel, Do
Androids Dream of
Electric Sheep? (D.A.D.O.E.S.)
Blade Runner was released in 1982 under the direction of
Ridley Scott,
who also made another sci-fi classic, Alien.
The film begins in the city of Los Angeles. The year is
2019. The city of
Los Angeles is overpopulated, teeming with all sorts of humans.
Japanese ADs
are all over the place. The Japanese input was strictly the
director, Ridley
Scot's. Scott saw the future world being controlled by the
Japanese. Philip K.
Dick did not mention this. The planet is recovering from World
War III,
although I'm not sure they actually say this. In the book, the
war is clearly
stated and was called World War Terminus. The effects of the
radiation has
mutated some people. Only the ones who had not been disfigured
or altered
genetically by radiation from the nuclear bombs could emigrate,
(leave the
planet earth). Some, who were perfectly healthy chose to stay,
however. They
stayed because they were stubborn and wanted to die on the planet
they were born
on. The chickenheads had to stay, it was law. Chickenheads is
Dicks term for
the disfigured or the genetically altered. They are also
referred to as
specials. There are no chickenheads in the movie. None of this
is made clear
in the movie, but this is what is explained in the novel.
The ones who do emigrate to other planets receive one free
worker to help
them with their settling of a new home. The worker is not human.
It is an
android. In the movie they are called replicants or skin-jobs.
These are the
newest versions of androids, which were created by the Rosen
Association. They
are Nexus-6. Nexus-6 mimic humans in every way, except in one
thing, they have
no empathy.
Empathy is the ability to feel for another. For example, if
you cared for
a puppy that was beaten, skinned, and then left to die, that care
would be
empathy. Androids don't have this trait. They would watch the
puppies' skin be
removed without a blink in their eyes. They can pretend to feel,
but they'd
have to know first there was something disturbing about the
skinning of a puppy.
The nonexistent empathy of replicants is never discussed in the
movie, but it
is pretty obvious in the way they kill or try to kill. This lack
of empathy
scared many humans on earth, so a law was passed that didn't
allow androids on
the planet.
In the novel, this is where the bounty hunters come in.
Their job is to
retire (kill) the androids, who have somehow escaped to earth or
just were never
weeded out from the other humans.
You might be wondering why I said bounty hunter instead
of blade runner?
Well, the term blade runner is never used in the novel.
Apparently, Ridley
Scott wanted a specific name for the people who hunted down the
androids. He
didn't want to just call them bounty hunters. Scott was told
of a William
Burroughs book named Blade Runner: The Movie. The book was never
a movie.
Burroughs just had that in the title. Scott liked the way blade
runner sounded,
so he bought the rights of the Burroughs novel (Blackwood). That
is how he came
up with the title and a name for the hunters of the replicants.
The way a blade runner can know if an android is a human or
not is through
the Voight-Kampff test. This is shown in the movie, although not
used as much
as in the novel. The test consists of the tester setting up
several scenarios
and seeing the testes's responses. The responses are measured
through dilation
in the eyes and the blushing of cheeks. The blushing is recorded
by a device
that is placed on your face and the dilation of the eye; by a
laser that shines
in your eye. An example of something that Deckard or whoever was
administering
the test would say was: "You are watching an old movie on TV, a
movie from
before the war. It shows a banquet in progress; the guests are
enjoying raw
oysters."
"Ugh," Rachel said; the needles swung swiftly.
"The entree," he continued, "consists of boiled dog,
stuffed with rice."
The needles moved less this time, less than they had for the raw
oysters. "Are
raw oysters more acceptable to you than a dish of boiled dog?
Evidently
not."(Dick 45) A human would react more to the dog than raw
oysters. This
showed that this particular subject, Rachael Rosen, was an
android. It wouldn't
just be one question though, it would be many. All would be
something along
these lines, though. After, he found out for sure; the android,
( or in the
movie: replicant), would be retired. The Voight-kampff test is
only shown at
the beginning of the movie when Dave Holden is administering the
test to Polokov,
a replicant.
The main character of the novel and movie is Rick Deckard .
Deckard is
played by Harrison Ford. He is a blade runner (bounty hunter)
that has come out
of retirement. Rick is hired to track down four androids: Roy
Baty, Pris,
Luba, and Polokov. The original number of replicants had been
five, but one of
his colleagues, Dave Holden, had already retired one. The name
of the retired
replicant is never mentioned. The original five had killed
their human masters
on another planet, stolen a ship, and illegally come to earth.
In D.A.D.O.E.S.,
the original number of androids is eight and Holden retires two,
leaving six for
Deckard. Holden was only able to kill one; because he is
paralyzed by
Polokov, while administering the Voigt-Kampff test. This, also,
is what happens
in the novel: Polokov shoots a laser through Holdens' back. So,
Deckards'
search begins, and the hunt for the replicants' (androids) is on.
The remaining part of the film, is Deckard tracking down and
killing the
renegade replicants.
When first released, B.R. was not a commercial success.(Star
39) Some
audiences members loved it, but others didn't think it was so
great. The box
office showed the latter: not very good. The film made little
money. But, one
thing that almost all people did enjoy from the film was the
scenery and the
visionary background. The set designs were wonderful. Roger
Ebert, a critic of
the Chicago Sun-Times said, " It looks fabulous, it uses special
effects to
create a new world of it's own, but it is thin in its human
story" (Ebert 1)
Ebert gave it an overall rating of three stars. His opinion,
though, summed up
the majority opinion of the few people who went and saw it at the
theater. The
special effects and background were great, but the plot was weak.
It was just
another action film, with a lot of violence; nothing unique about
it. Even
though the movie did not make money at first; over the years, it
would become a
cult classic.
The late interest was most likely sparked by a new version
that would be
released years after the original release of the movie. The
version, Blade
Runner: The Director's Cut, was what the director, Ridley Scott,
originally
wanted (Scott). Apparently, the original movie that came out
at theaters in
1982 had been tainted by Hollywood producers, with editing (Berry
16). They
said the film was too confusing and didn't have a happy ending.
"Preview
audiences found this ending too ambiguous and bleak" (Smith 2)
You have to have
a cheesy happy ending in Hollywood.
The 1982 release has Deckard and Rachael, (a replicant that
is an exact
copy of the daughter of the President of The Rosen Association;
he falls in love
with her), at the end, riding off into the country.
Supposedly, these scenes
were out takes from The Shining (Smith 2) The producers didn't
like Scotts
ending. In Scott's ending, Deckard and Rachael enter an
elevator, and then the
movie abruptly ends. Too unhappy.
The producers also thought the movie was too confusing and
not clear, so
they added a voice-over; someone narrating the story (Berry 16).
The narrator
was Deckard (Harrison Ford).
Blade Runner: The Director's Cut, returns the original
scenes. The happy
ending is gone, and there is no more voice-over. This changed
the effect of the
movie. In the 1982 release it gave you the feel of an old Bogart
movie. In the
new version, a new mood is brought out, and a better effect is
created. The
narration was totally unnecessary. The movie becomes more
enjoyable.
The followers of B.R. grows; as the sparks of interest
touch them with
this improved movie. This is how the director had originally
created it. B.R.
should have been released this way, originally. Proof of this is
shown just in
this newfound interest. Remember, the movie originally bombed at
the box office,
but now people loved it.
The second director's cut, however, would fan those sparks
of interest up
into flames.
There had been rumors, that in the original screenplay, it
was quite
obvious that Deckard was a replicant. Deckard, the replicant
hunter, was a
replicant himself! Blade Runner: The Directors Cut II
confirmed this rumor.
Evidence is plentiful that Deckard was actually a replicant
himself. First,
is the glowing eyes (Bitnet 22) When he(Deckard) goes to meet
The President of
The Rosen Association to discuss the knowledge of any replicants
on earth, there
is a replicant owl and if you watch when the owls' head turns,
you can see an
orange glow in its; eyes. The glow is also in Rachael eyes, and
can be seen in
Roys' when he is first introduced in the movie. Later, if you
watch closely,
you can see that same glow in Deckards eye in a scene where he is
talking to
Rachel of someday someone will hunt her down. When he turns his
head, you can
see the glow. You have to be watching extremely close to notice
it, and it he
. Dicks& apos; Androids and Scotts& apos; Replicants
Michael Tschappat
Patricia Stull
English 102
. begins, and the hunt for the replicants& apos; (androids) is on.
The remaining part of the film, is Deckard tracking down and
killing the
renegade replicants.