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Comments
That's exactly the type of thing I'm talkin' about! I remember something similar happened within a review of "Winter Soldier." The dialogue quoted was semi-accurate, but the inflections and intonation were ignored which of course is where the actual meaning comes from. I noticed it only because I read the review AFTER seeing the movie. I rewatched the scene just to make sure.
There's also the problem when they rely on information in press releases as the sole source of their backstory research. You can tell when this happens because you'll see multiple critics make the exact same dubious references to the same facts. This sort of thing happens all the time.
The original Blade Runner lost money as well, on it's initial release. I suspect that, just like the original, the sequel will still be making money and being talked about in 30 years time.
Cheers,
Alex.
I didn't think the new blade runner was quite the movie it could have been. But it did remain true to the feel. I enjoyed it... although I could have done with a bit less of the synth effect score. It was distracting. I would rather have more scenes without music.
I liked it a lot. It worked far better than I thought it would, and it was very different from what I imagined (and feared) a Blade Runner sequel would have been like many years ago.
I remember a professor at University of New Hampshire who did segments on Robert Frost poems for the NH PBS station and got them wrong. Drove us crazy.