More than just a box office flop that resurrected itself in the midnight
movie circuit, Blade Runner (1982) achieved extraordinary cult status
through video, laserdisc, and a five-disc DVD collector's set. Blade
Runner has become a network of variant texts and fan speculations--a
franchise created around just one film. Some have dubbed the movie
"classroom cult" for its participation in academic debates, while others
have termed it "meta-cult," in line with the work of Umberto Eco. The
film has also been called "design cult," thanks to Ridley Scott's
brilliant creation of a Los Angeles in 2019, the graphics and props of
which have been recreated by devoted fans. Blade Runner tests the
limits of this authenticity and artificiality, challenging the reader to
differentiate between classic and flop, margin and mainstream, true cult
and its replicants.
Sean Redmond excavates the many significances of the film -- its
breakthrough use of special effects as a narrative tool; its
revolutionary representation of the future city; its treatment of racial
and sexual politics; and its unique status as a text whose meaning was
fundamentally altered in its re-released Director's Cut form, then
further revised in a Final Cut in 2007, and what this means in an
institutional context