BLADE RUNNER
Early
in the 21st Century, THE TYRELL CORPORATION advanced robot evolution into
the NEXUS phase - a being virtually identical to a human - known as a
Replicant. The NEXUS 6 Replicants were superior in strength and agility,
and at least equal in intelligence, to the genetic engineers who created
them. Replicants were used Off-World as slave labor, in the hazardous
exploration and colonization of other planets. After a bloody mutiny by a
NEXUS 6 combat team in an Off-World colony, Replicants were declared
illegal on earth - under penalty of death. Special police squads - BLADE
RUNNER UNITS - had orders to shoot to kill, upon detection, any
trespassing Replicant This was not called execution. It was called
retirement.
LOS ANGELES
NOVEMBER, 2019
Intercom: |
Next subject, Kowalski, Leon, engineer, waste disposal, file
section, new employees, six days. |
[knock on door]
Holden: |
Come in. Sit down. |
Leon: |
Care if I talk? I'm kind of nervous when I take tests.
|
Holden: |
Uh, just please don't move. |
Leon: |
Oh, sorry. I already had an IQ test this year, I don't think
I've ever had one of these- |
Holden: |
Reaction time is a factor in this, so please pay attention. Now,
answer as quickly as you can. |
Leon: |
Sure. |
Holden: |
One-one-eight-seven at Unterwasser. |
Leon: |
That's the hotel. |
Holden: |
What? |
Leon: |
Where I live. |
Holden: |
Nice place? |
Leon: |
Yeah, sure I guess-- that part of the test? |
Holden: |
No, just warming you up, that's all. |
Leon: |
Oh. It's not fancy or anything. |
Holden: |
You're in a desert, walking along in the sand when all of the
sudden- |
Leon: |
Is this the test now? |
Holden: |
Yes. You're in a desert walking along in the sand when all of
the sudden you look down- |
Leon: |
What one? |
Holden: |
What? |
Leon: |
What desert? |
Holden: |
It doesn't make any difference what desert, it's completely
hypothetical. |
Leon: |
But how come I'd be there? |
Holden: |
Maybe you're fed up, maybe you want to be by yourself, who
knows? You look down and you see a tortoise, Leon, it's crawling
towards you- |
Leon: |
Tortoise, what's that? |
Holden: |
Know what a turtle is? |
Leon: |
Of course. |
Holden: |
Same thing. |
Leon: |
I've never seen a turtle -- But I understand what you
mean. |
Holden: |
You reach down, you flip the tortoise over on its back
Leon. |
Leon: |
Do you make up these questions, Mr. Holden, or do they write
them down for you? |
Holden: |
The tortoise lays on its back, its belly baking in the hot sun
beating its legs trying to turn itself over but it can't, not
without your help, but you're not helping. |
Leon: |
What do you mean I'm not helping? |
Holden: |
I mean, you're not helping. Why is that Leon? -- They're just
questions, Leon. In answer to your query, they're written down for
me. It's a test, designed to provoke an emotional response. -- Shall
we continue? Describe in single words, only the good things that
come in to your mind about... your mother. |
Leon: |
My mother? |
Holden: |
Yeah. |
Leon: |
Let me tell you about my mother... |
[Leon shoots Holden]
[cut to overhead shot of city, zoom in on Deckard, reading a
newspaper]
ad blimp: |
A new life awaits you in the Off-World colonies. The chance to
begin again in a golden land of opportunity and adventure. New...--
A new life awaits you in the Off-World colonies. The chance to begin
again in a golden land of opportunity and adventure. New climate,
recreational facilities.....absolutely free. |
Deckard: |
They don't advertise for killers in a newspaper. That was my
profession. Ex-cop, ex-Blade Runner, ex-killer. |
Sushi Master: |
...shimasho-ka. |
ad blimp: |
Use your new friend as a personal body servant or a tireless
field hand -- the custom tailored genetically engineered humanoid
replicant designed especially for your needs. So come on America,
let's put our team up there.... |
[Deckard walks over to sushi counter]
Sushi Master: |
...kimashita, kimashita. Irasshai, irasshai. Sa dozo. Nani ni
shimasho-ka. |
Deckard: |
Give me four. |
Sushi Master: |
Futatsu de jubun desuyo. [Japanese: "Two are really enough"]
|
Deckard: |
No, four: two, two, four. |
Sushi Master: |
Futatsu de jubun desuyo. |
Deckard: |
And noodles. |
Sushi Master: |
Wakatte kudasai yo. [Japanese: "Please understand."]
|
Deckard : |
Sushi, that's what my ex-wife called me. Cold fish. |
Cop: |
Hey, idi-wa. |
Gaff: |
M'sieu,
aduanon kovershim angam bitte. (1) [Fr-Hung-Ger: "Sir,
you will please come with me now."] |
Sushi Master: |
He say you under arrest, Mr. Deckard. |
Deckard: |
Got the wrong guy, pal. |
Gaff: |
Lo fa, ne-ko shi-ma,
de va-ja Blade... Blade Runner. (2) [Hung: "Ah, don't
shit me, man, you're the Blade... Blade Runner!"] |
Sushi Master: |
He say you Blade Runner. |
Deckard: |
Tell him I'm eating. |
Gaff: |
Captain Bryant to ka, me ni omae yo.
[Japanese: "It's Captain Bryant wants to see you, y'
know!"] |
Deckard: |
Bryant, huh? |
Sushi Master: |
Hai! |
[Deckard and Gaff take off vertically in spinner to see
Bryant.]
Spinner: |
...This is yellow three. Climb and maintain 4000 ... when
approaching pad six ...caution... |
Deckard: |
The charmer's name was Gaff. I'd seen him around. Bryant must
have upped him to the Blade Runner unit. That gibberish he talked
was city-speak, guttertalk, a mishmash of Japanese, Spanish, German,
what have you. I didn't really need a translator. I knew the lingo,
every good cop did. But I wasn't going to make it easier for him.
|
Spinner: |
...now on glide path, on course, over the landing
threshold. |
[Police Station, Bryant's office]
Bryant: |
Hi ya Deck. |
Deckard: |
Bryant. |
Bryant: |
You wouldn't have come if I'd just asked you to. Sit down pal.
C'mon don't be an asshole Deckard. I've got four skin jobs walking
the streets. |
Deckard: |
Skin jobs, that's what Bryants called replicants. In history
books he is the kind of cop used to call black men
niggers. |
Bryant: |
They jumped a shuttle off world -- killed the crew and
passengers. They found the shuttle drifting off the coast two weeks
ago so we know they're around. |
Deckard: |
Embarrassing. |
Bryant: |
No sir. Not embarrassing, 'cause no one's ever going to find out
they're down here. 'Cause you're going to spot them, and you're
going to air them out. |
Deckard: |
I don't work here anymore. Give it to Holden, he's good. |
Bryant: |
I did. He can breathe okay as long as nobody unplugs him. He's
not good enough, not good as you. I need you, Deck. This is a bad
one, the worst yet. I need the old Blade Runner, I need your
magic. |
Deckard: |
I was quit when I come in here, Bryant, I'm twice as quit
now. |
Bryant: |
Stop right where you are. You know the score pal. If you're not
cop, you're little people. |
Deckard: |
No choice, huh? |
Bryant: |
No choice pal. |
[Video room]
video: |
Leon: |
I already had an IQ test this year, I don't think I've ever had
one of these- |
Holden: |
Reaction time is a factor in this, so please pay attention.
Answer as quickly as you can. |
Leon: |
Yeah, sure. |
Holden: |
1-1-8-7 at Unterwasser. |
Leon: |
Yeah, that's the hotel. |
Holden: |
What? |
Leon: |
Where I live. |
Holden: |
Nice place? |
Leon: |
Yeah, sure I guess-- |
Bryant: |
There was an escape from the off-world colonies two weeks ago.
Six replicants, three male, three female. They slaughtered
twenty-three people and jumped a shuttle. An aerial patrol spotted
the ship off the coast. No crew, no sight of them. Three nights ago
they tried to break into Tyrell Corporation. One of them got fried
running through an electrical field. We lost the others. On the
possibility they might try to infiltrate his employees, I had Holden
go over and run Voight-Kampff tests on the new workers. Looks like
he got himself one. |
|
video: |
Holden: |
So you look down you see a tortoise. It's crawling towards
you. |
Leon: |
Tortoise, what's that? |
Holden: |
Know what a turtle is? |
Leon: |
Of course. |
Holden: |
Same thing. |
Leon: |
I've never seen a turtle. |
|
Deckard: |
Well I don't get it. What do they risk coming back to earth for?
That's unusual. Why--what do they want out of the Tyrell
Corporation? |
Bryant: |
Well you tell me pal, that's what you're here for. |
Deckard: |
[funny look]. [pause] What's this? |
Bryant: |
Nexus 6. Roy Batty. Incept date 2016. Combat model. Optimum
self-sufficiency. Probably the leader. This is Zhora. She's trained
for an off-world kick-murder squad. Talk about beauty and the beast,
she's both. The fourth skin job is Pris. A basic pleasure model. The
standard item for military clubs in the outer colonies. They were
designed to copy human beings in every way except their emotions.
The designers reckoned that after a few years they might develop
their own emotional responses. You know, hate, love, fear, anger,
envy. So they built in a fail-safe device. |
Deckard: |
Which is what? |
Bryant: |
Four year life span. |
Bryant: |
Now there's a Nexus 6 over at the Tyrell Corporation. I want you
to go put the machine on it. |
Deckard: |
And if the machine doesn't work? |
[Deckard flies to the enormous Tyrell building]
Deckard : |
I'd quit because I'd had a belly full of killing. But then
I'd rather be a killer than a victim. And that's exactly what
Bryant's threat about little people meant. So I hooked in once more,
thinking that if I couldn't take it, I'd split later. I didn't have
to worry about Gaff. He was brown-nosing for a promotion, so he
didn't want me back anyway. |
[inside the Tyrell building]
Rachael: |
Do you like our owl? |
Deckard: |
It's artificial? |
Rachael: |
Of course it is. |
Deckard: |
Must be expensive. |
Rachael: |
Very. I'm Rachael. |
Deckard: |
Deckard. |
Rachael: |
It seems you feel our work is not a benefit to the public. |
Deckard: |
Replicants are like any other machine. They're either a benefit
or a hazard. If they're a benefit, it's not my problem. |
Rachael: |
May I ask you a personal question? |
Deckard: |
Sure. |
Rachael: |
Have you ever retired a human by mistake? |
Deckard: |
No. |
Rachael: |
But in your position that is a risk? |
Tyrell: |
Is this to be an empathy test? Capillary dilation of the
so-called blush response? Fluctuation of the pupil? Involuntary
dilation of the iris? |
Deckard: |
We call it Voight-Kampff for short. |
Rachael: |
Mr. Deckard, Dr. Eldon Tyrell. |
Tyrell: |
Demonstrate it. I want to see it work. |
Deckard: |
Where's the subject? |
Tyrell: |
I want to see it work on a person. I want to see a negative
before I provide you with a positive. |
Deckard: |
What's that going to prove? |
Tyrell: |
Indulge me. |
Deckard: |
On you? |
Tyrell: |
Try her. |
Deckard: |
It's too bright in here. |
[the window changes shade, letting less light in]
Rachael: |
Do you mind if I smoke? |
Deckard: |
It won't affect the test. All right, I'm going to ask you a
series of questions. Just relax and answer them as simply as you
can. -- It's your birthday. Someone gives you a calfskin
wallet. |
Rachael: |
I wouldn't accept it. Also, I'd report the person who gave it to
me to the police. |
Deckard: |
You've got a little boy. He shows you his butterfly collection
plus the killing jar. |
Rachael: |
I'd take him to the doctor. |
Deckard: |
You're watching television. Suddenly you realize there's a wasp
crawling on your arm. |
Rachael: |
I'd kill it. |
Deckard: |
You're reading a magazine. You come across a fullpage nude photo
of a girl. |
Rachael: |
Is this testing whether I'm a replicant or a lesbian, Mr.
Deckard? |
Deckard: |
Just answer the questions, please -- You show it to your
husband. He likes it so much he hangs it on your bedroom wall. |
(Deckard: |
...bush outside your window...) |
Rachael: |
I wouldn't let him. |
(Deckard : |
...orange body, green legs...) |
Deckard: |
Why not? |
Rachael: |
I should be enough for him. |
[audio fades out and in, time passes.]
Deckard: |
One more question. You're watching a stage play. A banquet is in
progress. The guests are enjoying an appetizer of raw oysters. The
entree consists of boiled dog. |
Tyrell: |
Would you step out for a few moments, Rachael -- Thank
you. |
Deckard: |
She's a replicant, isn't she? |
Tyrell: |
I'm impressed. How many questions does it usually take to spot
them? |
Deckard: |
I don't get it Tyrell. |
Tyrell: |
How many questions? |
Deckard: |
Twenty, thirty, cross-referenced. |
Tyrell: |
It took more than a hundred for Rachael, didn't it? |
Deckard: |
She doesn't know?! |
Tyrell: |
She's beginning to suspect, I think. |
Deckard: |
Suspect? How can it not know what it is? |
Tyrell: |
Commerce, is our goal here at Tyrell. More human than human is
our motto. Rachael is an experiment, nothing more. We began to
recognize in them strange obsession. After all they are emotional
inexperienced with only a few years in which to store up the
experiences which you and I take for granted. If we gift them the
past we create a cushion or pillow for their emotions and
consequently we can control them better. |
Deckard: |
Memories. You're talking about memories. |
[Deckard and Gaff drive to Leon's apartment in spinner,
watching Leon's video.]
video: |
Holden : |
Reaction time is a factor in this, so please pay attention. Now,
answer as quickly as you can. |
Leon: |
Sure. |
Holden: |
One-one-eight-seven at Unterwasser. |
Leon: |
Yeah, That's the hotel. |
Holden: |
What? |
Leon: |
Where I live. |
Holden: |
Nice place? |
Leon: |
Yeah, sure I guess--that part of the test? |
Holden: |
No-- |
[Deckard and Gaff inspect the apartment. Deckard finds a
scale in the bathtub and some family photos. Gaff watches quietly, folding
an origami statue of a man with an erection.]
Deckard: |
I didn't know whether Leon gave Holden a legit address. But
it was the only lead I had, so I checked it out -- Whatever was in
the bathtub was not human. Replicants don't have scales. And family
photos? Replicants didn't have families
either. |
[Leon meets Roy outside of phonebooth]
Roy: |
Time enough -- Did you get your precious photos? |
Leon: |
(shakes his head no.) Someone was there. |
Roy: |
Man? |
Leon: |
(nods yes) |
Roy: |
Policeman? |
[Roy and Leon enter Chew's laboratory]
Chew: |
(mumbles to himself in Chinese -- screams when hoses are pulled
by Roy) |
Roy: |
Fiery the angels fell. Deep thunder rolled around their shores,
burning with the fires of Orc. |
Chew: |
(Chinese). You not come here. Illegal -- Hey. Hey. (Chinese)
Cold! Those are my eyes! Freezing! |
Roy: |
Yes, questions. |
|
[Leon removes Chew's jacket.]
|
Chew: |
(Chinese, screams) |
Roy: |
Morphology, longevity, incept dates. |
Chew: |
Don't know -- I, I don't know such stuff. I just do eyes. Just
eyes -- Just genetic design -- just eyes. You Nexus, huh? I design
your eyes. |
Roy: |
Chew, if only you could see what I've seen with your eyes.
Questions. |
Chew: |
I don't know answers. |
Roy: |
Who does? |
Chew: |
Tyrell. He -- He knows everything. |
Roy: |
Tyrell corporation? |
Chew: |
He's big boss. Big genius. He, he design your mind, your
brain. |
Roy: |
Ah, smart. |
Chew: |
Cold. |
Roy: |
Not an easy man to see-- |
Chew: |
Me cold. |
Roy: |
I guess... |
Chew: |
Se-, Sebastian he take-- take you there, he take you
there. |
Roy: |
Sebastian who? |
Chew: |
J. -- J. F. Sebastian-- Sebas... Sebas... |
Roy: |
Now--where... would we find this.... J. F.
Sebastian? |
[In spinner, listening to Leon's video]
video: |
Holden: |
Let's continue, shall we? Describe in single words, only the
good things that come in to your mind about... your mother. |
Leon: |
My mother? |
Holden: |
Yeah. |
Leon: |
I'll tell you about my mother. |
[shot fired]
[In front of Deckard's apartment]]
Elevator: |
Voice print identification. Your floor number please. |
Deckard: |
Deckard, ninety-seven. |
Elevator: |
Ninety-seven, thank-you, (danke) |
Rachael: |
I wanted to see you -- So I waited. Let me help. |
Deckard: |
What do I need help for? |
Rachael: |
I don't know why he told you what he did. |
Deckard: |
Talk to him. |
Rachael: |
He wouldn't see me. |
Deckard: |
You want a drink? Huh? No? |
Rachael: |
You think I'm a replicant, don't you? |
Deckard: |
Hah. |
Rachael: |
Look, it's me with my mother. |
Deckard: |
Yeah. -- Remember when you were six? You and your brother snuck
into an empty building through a basement window. You were gonna
play doctor. He showed you his, but when it got to be your turn you
chickened and ran. Remember that? You ever tell anybody that? Your
mother, Tyrell, anybody huh? You remember the spider that lived in a
bush outside your window? Orange body, green legs. Watched her build
a web all summer. Then one day there was a big egg in it. The egg
hatched-- |
Rachael: |
The egg hatched... |
Deckard: |
And? |
Rachael: |
And a hundred baby spiders came out. And they ate her. |
Deckard: |
Implants! Those aren't your memories. They're somebody else's.
They're Tyrell's niece's -- Okay, bad joke. I made a bad joke.
You're not a replicant. Go home, okay? No really, I'm sorry. Go home
-- Want a drink? I'll get you a drink. I'll get a
glass. |
[Rachael runs away when Deckard turns to get a
glass.]
[Deckard, on balcony.]
Deckard: |
Tyrell really did a job on Rachael. Right down to a snapshot
of a mother she never had, a daughter she never was. Replicants
weren't supposed to have feelings. Neither were Blade Runners. What
the hell was happening to me? Leon's pictures had to be as phony as
Rachael's. I didn't know why a replicant would collect photos. Maybe
they were like Rachael. They needed memories.
|
[Outside J. F. Sebastians's apartment building. Pris covers
herself in trash pile.]
|
Pris: |
Pugh... Uhhh... Ungh... Ungh... |
Sebastian: |
Hey! You forgot your bag. |
Pris: |
I'm lost. |
Sebastian: |
Don't worry, I won't hurt you. -- What's your name? |
Pris: |
Pris. |
Sebastian: |
Mine's J. F. Sebastian. |
Pris: |
Hi. |
Sebastian: |
Hi. Oh, where were you going? Home? |
Pris: |
I don't have one. We scared each other pretty good, didn't
we? |
Sebastian: |
We sure did. |
Pris: |
I'm hungry J. F. |
Sebastian: |
I've got some stuff inside. You want to come in? |
Pris: |
I was hoping you'd say that. |
[Pris and Sebastian enter building.]
Pris: |
Do you live in this building all by yourself? |
Sebastian: |
Yeah, I live here pretty much alone right now. No housing
shortage around here. Plenty of room for everybody. |
Pris: |
(cough). |
Sebastian: |
Watch out for the water. |
Pris: |
Must get lonely here J. F. |
Sebastian: |
Mmm... Not really. I make friends. They're toys. My friends are
toys. I make them. It's a hobby. I'm a genetic designer. Do you know
what that is? |
Pris: |
No. |
Sebastian: |
Yoo-hoo, home again. |
Toys: |
Home again, home again, jiggity jig. Good evening J. F. |
Sebastian: |
Good evening, fellas. |
Toy 1: |
Oooh! |
Sebastian: |
They're my friends. I made them. Where are you're folks? |
Pris: |
I'm sort of an orphan. |
Sebastian: |
Oh, what about your friends? |
Pris: |
I have some, but I have to find them. I'll let 'em know where I
am tomorrow. |
Sebastian: |
Oh. Can I take those things for you? They're soaked aren't
they? |
[Deckard's apartment, Deckard uses the Esper
machine]
Deckard: |
Enhance 224 to 176. Enhance, stop. Move in, stop. Pull out,
track right, stop. Center in, pull back. Stop. Track 45 right. Stop.
Center and stop. Enhance 34 to 36. Pan right and pull back. Stop.
Enhance 34 to 46. Pull back. Wait a minute, go right, stop. Enhance
57 to 19. Track 45 left. Stop. Enhance 15 to 23. Give me a hard copy
right there. |
[Market]
Deckard: |
Fish? |
Cambod. Lady: |
I think it was manufactured. Look. Finest quality. Superior
workmanship. There is a maker's serial number 9906947-XB71.
Interesting. Not fish. Snake scale. |
Deckard: |
Snake? |
Cambod. Lady: |
Try Abdul ben Hassan. He make this snake. |
[Abdul Hassan's]
Deckard: |
Abdul Hassan? I'm a police officer, I'd like to ask you a few
questions. Artificial snake license XB71, that's you? This is your
work, huh? Who did you sell it to? |
Abdul: |
My work? Not too many could afford such quality. |
Deckard: |
How many? |
Abdul: |
Very few. |
Deckard: |
How few? Look my friend. |
Abdul: |
Taffy Lewis's, down in First Sector, Chinatown.
|
[Taffy Lewis's]
Deckard: |
Bartender? Taffy Lewis? Taffy, I'd like to ask you a few
questions. |
Taffy: |
Blow with me. |
Deckard: |
You ever buy snakes from the Egyptian, Taffy? |
Taffy: |
All the time, pal. |
Deckard: |
Y'ever see this girl, huh? |
Taffy: |
Never seen her, buzz off. |
Deckard: |
Your licenses in order pal? |
Taffy: |
Hey Louie, the man is dry. Give him one on the house, okay? See
ya. |
[Deckard calls Rachael on a public videophone.]
Rachael: |
Hello? |
Deckard: |
I've had people walk out on me before, but not when I was being
so charming. I'm at a bar here now down in the Fourth Sector. Taffy
Lewis's on the line. Why don't you come on down here and have a
drink? |
Roy: |
I don't think so, Mr. Deckard. That's not my kind of
place. |
Deckard: |
Go someplace else? |
[Deckard returns to Taffy's]
Announcer: |
Ladies and Gentlemen. Taffy Lewis presents Miss Salomé and the
snake. Watch her take the pleasures from the serpent that once
corrupted man. |
[Miss Salomé's dressing room.]
Deckard: |
Excuse me, Miss Salomé, can I talk to you for a minute? I'm from
the American Federation of Variety Artists. |
Zhora: |
Oh, yeah? |
Deckard: |
I'm not here to make you join. No ma'am. That's not my
department. Actually, uh. I'm from the, uh, Confidential Committee
on Moral Abuses. |
Zhora: |
Committee of Moral Abuses? |
Deckard: |
Yes, ma'am. There's been some reports that the management has
been taking liberties with the artists in this place. |
Zhora: |
I don't know nothing about it. |
Deckard: |
Have you felt yourself to be exploited in any way? |
Zhora: |
How do you mean, exploited? |
Deckard: |
Well, like to get this job. I mean, did you do, or- or were you
asked to do anything lewd or unsavory or otherwise, uh, repulsive to
your person, huh? |
Zhora: |
Ha. Are you for real? |
Deckard: |
Oh yeah. I'd like to check your dressing room if I may. |
Zhora: |
For what? |
Deckard: |
For, uh, for holes. |
Zhora: |
Holes? |
Deckard: |
You'd be surprised what a guy'd go through to get a glimpse of a
beautiful body. |
Zhora: |
No, I wouldn't. |
Deckard: |
Little, uh, dirty holes they uh, drill in the wall so they can
watch a lady undress. -- Is this a real snake? |
Zhora: |
Of course it's not real. Do you think I'd be working in a place
like this if I could afford a real snake? -- So if somebody does try
to exploit me, who do I go to about it? |
Deckard: |
Me. |
Zhora: |
You're a dedicated man. |
[Fight and chase]
Hari Krishnas: |
Hari, Hari. Hari, Hari. Hari, Hari. |
Street Thing: |
Cross now... Don't walk... |
Deckard: |
Move! Get out of the way! |
[Deckard fires. Kills Zhora in dramatic slow motion
scene.]
Deckard: |
The report would be routine retirement of a replicant which
didn't make me feel any better about shooting a woman in the back.
There it was again. Feeling, in myself. For her, for
Rachael. |
Deckard: |
Deckard. B-263-54. |
Street thing: |
Move on... |
Lady: |
...a minute. Yeah what do you want? |
Deckard: |
Tsing tao. This enough? |
Lady: |
Yeah. |
Gaff: |
Bryant. |
Bryant: |
Christ, Deckard, you look almost as bad as that skin job you
left on the sidewalk. |
Deckard: |
I'm going home. |
Bryant: |
You could learn from this guy, Gaff. He's a god damn one man
slaughter house. That's what he is. Four more to go. Come on, Gaff,
let's go. |
Deckard: |
Three. There's three to go. |
Bryant: |
There's four. That-- That skin job that you V-K'ed at the Tyrell
Corporation, Rachael. Disappeared. Vanished. Didn't even know she
was a replicant. Something to do with a brain implant says Tyrell.
Come on Gaff. Drink some for me, pal. |
|
[Leon stops Deckard in the street]
Deckard: |
Leon. |
Leon: |
How old am I? |
Deckard: |
I don't know. |
Leon: |
My birthday is April 10, 2017. How long do I live? |
Deckard: |
Four years. |
Leon: |
More than you. Painful to live in fear, isn't it? Nothing is
worse than having an itch you can never scratch. |
Deckard: |
Oh, I agree. |
Leon: |
Wake up! Time to die. |
[Rachael shoots Leon]
[Deckard's apartment]
Deckard: |
Shakes? Me too. |
Rachael: |
What? |
Deckard: |
I get 'em bad. It's part of the business. |
Rachael: |
I'm not in the business. -- I am the business. |
|
[Deckard gurgles blood.]
Rachael: |
What if I go north. Disappear. Would you come after me? Hunt
me? |
Deckard: |
No. No, I wouldn't. I owe you one. But somebody would. |
Rachael: |
Deckard? You know those files on me The incept date, the
longevity, those things. You saw them? |
Deckard: |
They're classified. |
Rachael: |
But you're a policeman. |
Deckard: |
I didn't look at them. |
Rachael: |
You know that Voight-Kampf test of yours? Did you ever take that
test yourself? Deckard? |
[Deckard falls asleep while Rachael plays the piano and lets
down her hair.]
|
Deckard: |
I dreamt music. |
Rachael: |
I didn't know if I could play. I remember lessons. I don't know
if it's me or Tyrell's niece. |
Deckard: |
You play beautifully. |
[A little rough-housin']
Deckard: |
Say kiss me. |
Rachael: |
I can't rely on... |
Deckard: |
Say kiss me. |
Rachael: |
Kiss me. |
Deckard: |
I want you. |
Rachael: |
I want you. |
Deckard: |
Again. |
Rachael: |
I want you. Put your hands on me. |
[Sebastian's apartment]
|
Sebastian: |
Whatcha doing? |
Pris: |
Sorry, just peeking. |
Sebastian: |
Oh. |
Pris: |
How do I look? |
Sebastian: |
You look better. |
Pris: |
Just better? |
Sebastian: |
Well, you look beautiful. |
Pris: |
Thanks. -- How old are you? |
Sebastian: |
Twenty-five. |
Pris: |
What's your problem? |
Sebastian: |
Methuselah's syndrome. |
Pris: |
What's that? |
Sebastian: |
My glands. They grow old too fast. |
Pris: |
Is that why you're still on earth? |
Sebastian: |
Yeah, I couldn't pass the medical. Anyway, I kind of like it
here. |
Pris: |
I like you just the way you are. Hi Roy. |
Roy: |
Ah, gosh. You've really got some nice toys here. |
Pris: |
This is the friend I was telling you about. This is my savior J.
F. Sebastian. |
Roy: |
Sebastian. I like a man that stays put. You live here all by
yourself, do ya? |
Sebastian: |
Yes. -- How 'bout some breakfast. I was just gonna make some.
Excuse me. |
Pris: |
Well? |
Roy: |
Leon... |
Pris: |
What's going on. |
Roy: |
Ah... There's only two of us now. |
Pris: |
Then we're stupid and we'll die. |
Roy: |
No we won't. |
|
[Sebastian and Roy at chess board]
|
Sebastian: |
No, knight takes queen, see. No good. |
Roy: |
Why are you staring at us Sebastian? |
Sebastian: |
Because. You're so different. You're so perfect. |
Roy: |
Yes. |
Sebastian: |
What generation are you? |
Roy: |
Nexus six. |
Sebastian: |
Ah, I knew it. 'Cause I do genetic design work for the Tyrell
Corporation. There's some of me in you. Show me something. |
Roy: |
Like what? |
Sebastian: |
Like anything. |
Roy: |
We're not computers Sebastian, we're physical. |
Pris: |
I think, Sebastian, therefore I am. |
Roy: |
Very good Pris, now show him why. |
[Pris throws hot egg at Sebastian]
Roy: |
We've got a lot in common. |
Sebastian: |
What do you mean? |
Roy: |
Similar problems. |
Pris: |
Accelerated decrepitude. |
Sebastian: |
I don't know much about biomechanics, Roy, I wish I did. |
Roy: |
If we don't find help soon, Pris hasn't got long to live. We
can't allow that. -- Is he good? |
Sebastian: |
Who? |
Roy: |
Your opponent. |
Sebastian: |
Oh, Dr. Tyrell? I've only beaten him once in chess. He's a
genius. He designed you. |
Roy: |
Maybe he could help. |
Sebastian: |
I'd be happy to mention it to him. |
Roy: |
Better if I talk to him in person. |
Sebastian: |
Umh. |
Roy: |
But I understand he's a sort of hard man to get to. |
Sebastian: |
Yes, very. |
Roy: |
Will you help us? |
Sebastian: |
I can't. |
Pris: |
We need you Sebastian. You're our best and only friend. |
Roy: |
(strange accent) We're so happy you found us. |
Pris: |
I don't think there's another human being in the whole world who
would have helped us. |
[Tyrell's apartment]
Tyrell: |
66 thousand Prosser and Ankovich. Hmm.. Trade. Trade at-- |
Computer: |
New entry. A Mr. J. F. Sebastian. 1-6-4-1-7. |
Tyrell: |
At this hour? What can I do for you Sebastian. |
Sebastian: |
Queen to Bishop 6. Check. |
Tyrell: |
Nonsense. Just a moment. Mmm. Queen to Bishop 6. Ridiculous.
Queen to Bishop 6. Hmm... Knight takes Queen. -- What's on your mind
Sebastian? What are you thinking about. |
Roy: |
(whispered) Bishop to King 7. Checkmate. |
Sebastian: |
Bishop to King 7. Checkmate, I think. |
Tyrell: |
Got a brainstorm, huh, Sebastian? Milk and cookies kept you
awake, huh? Lets discuss this. You better come up, Sebastian. |
Sebastian: |
Mr. Tyrell. I-- I brought a friend. |
Tyrell: |
I'm surprised you didn't come here sooner. |
Roy: |
It's not an easy thing to meet your maker. |
Tyrell: |
And what can he do for you? |
Roy: |
Can the maker repair what he makes. |
Tyrell: |
Would you like to be modified? |
Roy: |
Stay here. -- I had in mind something a little more
radical. |
Tyrell: |
What-- What seems to be the problem? |
Roy: |
Death. |
Tyrell: |
Death. Well, I'm afraid that's a little out of my jurisdiction,
you-- |
Roy: |
I want more life, fucker. |
Tyrell: |
The facts of life. To make an alteration in the evolvment of an
organic life system is fatal. A coding sequence cannot be revised
once it's been established. |
Roy: |
Why not? |
Tyrell: |
Because by the second day of incubation, any cells that have
undergone reversion mutations give rise to revertant colonies like
rats leaving a sinking ship. Then the ship sinks. |
Roy: |
What about EMS recombination. |
Tyrell: |
We've already tried it. Ethyl methane sulfonate as an alkylating
agent a potent mutagen It created a virus so lethal the subject was
dead before he left the table. |
Roy: |
Then a repressive protein that blocks the operating cells. |
Tyrell: |
Wouldn't obstruct replication, but it does give rise to an error
in replication so that the newly formed DNA strand carries the
mutation and you've got a virus again. But, uh, this-- all of this
is academic. You were made as well as we could make you. |
Roy: |
But not to last. |
Tyrell: |
The light that burns twice as bright burns half as long. And you
have burned so very very brightly, Roy. Look at you. You're the
prodigal son. You're quite a prize! |
Roy: |
I've done questionable things. |
Tyrell: |
Also extraordinary things. Revel in your time. |
Roy: |
Nothing the god of biomechanics wouldn't let you in heaven
for. |
[Tyrell screams as his eyes are gouged out.]
[On the street...]
[voices...]
Bryant: |
Body identified with Tyrell a twenty-five year old male
caucasian named Sebastian. J. F. Sebastian. Address Bradbury
apartments, ninth sector. NM46751. I want you to go down
there--- |
Cop: |
This sector's closed to ground traffic. What are you doing
here? |
Deckard: |
I'm working. What are you doing? |
Cop: |
Arresting you. That's what I'm doing. |
Deckard: |
I'm Deckard. Blade Runner. Two sixty three-fifty four. I'm filed
and monitored |
Cop: |
Hold on. Checking. -- Okay, checked and cleared. Have a better
one. |
[Deckard calls Sebastian's apartment.]
Pris: |
Hello? |
Deckard: |
Hi, is J. F. there? |
Pris: |
Who is it? |
Deckard: |
This is Eddie. An old friend of J. F.'s. |
[Pris hangs up.]
Deckard: |
Ooh. That's no way to treat a friend. |
[Deckard enters Sebastian's apartment.]
Toys: |
Home again, home again, jiggity jig. Good evening J. F. |
Toy 1: |
Oooh! |
[Lots o' background noise from the toys... Deckard
searches... He takes off Pris's veil. Pris attacks, crushing his heard
between her legs. Deckard shoots Pris... again... again. Roy arrives.
Deckard fires, but misses.]
Roy: |
Not very sporting to fire on an unarmed opponent. I thought you
were supposed to be good. Aren't you the good man? Come on Deckard.
Show me what you're made of. |
[Roy breaks through wall.]
Roy: |
Proud of yourself, little man? This is for Zhora. |
Deckard: |
Arrggh. |
Roy: |
This is for Pris. |
Deckard: |
Arrgghh. |
Roy: |
Come on, Deckard, I'm right here, but you've got to shoot
straight. |
[Deckard fires again.]
Roy: |
Straight doesn't seem to be good enough. Now it's my turn. I'm
gonna give you a few seconds before I come. One, Two. Three, Four.
-- Pris... |
Deckard: |
Arrghhh. |
[Chase starts... Roy begins howling.]
Roy: |
(singing) I'm coming. -- Four, five. How to stay alive. -- I can
see you! -- (grasping hand) Not yet. Not... |
[Roy puts spike through hand and screams.]
[Roy puts head through wall.]
Roy: |
You better get it up, or I'm gonna have to kill ya! Unless
you're alive, you can't play, and if you don't play... Six, seven.
Go to hell, go to heaven. |
[Fight, Deckard hits Roy with pipe.]
Roy: |
Good, that's the spirit. |
Roy: |
That hurt. That was irrational. Not to mention,
unsportsman-like. Ha ha ha. Where are you going?
|
[Deckard does some amazing climbing, then jumps to next
building. Roy follows, holding a white pigeon.]
Roy: |
Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is
to be a slave. |
[Deckard spits at Roy as he falls; Roy catches him with one
hand.]
Roy: |
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on
fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the
darkness at Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time
like tears in rain. Time to die. |
[Bird flies off...]
Deckard : |
I don't know why he saved my life. Maybe in those last
moments he loved life more than he ever had before. Not just his
life, anybody's life, my life. All he'd wanted were the same answers
the rest of us want. Where did I come from? Where am I going? How
long have I got? All I could do was sit there and watch him
die. |
Gaff: |
You've done a man's job, sir. I guess you're through, huh? |
Deckard: |
Finished. |
Gaff: |
It's too bad she won't live. But then again, who does? |
Deckard: |
Rachael? Rachael? Rachael? |
[Deckard uncovers Rachael.]
Deckard: |
Do you love me? |
Rachael: |
I love you. |
Deckard: |
Do you trust me? |
Rachael: |
I trust you. |
Deckard: |
Rachael? |
[Deckard picks up paper unicorn.]
Gaff's voice: |
It's too bad she won't live. But then again, who
does? |
Deckard : |
Gaff had been there, and let her live. Four years, he
figured. He was wrong. Tyrell had told me Rachael was special: no
termination date. I didn't know how long we had together. Who
does? |
THE END
[Top]
JERRY PERENCHIO and BUD YORKIN present
HARRISON FORD (Deckard)
BLADE RUNNER
RUTGER HAUER (Roy Batty) SEAN YOUNG (Rachael) EDWARD JAMES
OLMOS (Gaff) M. EMMET WALSH (H. Bryant) DARRYL HANNAH (Pris)
WILLIAM SANDERSON (J.F. Sebastian) BRION JAMES (Leon Kowalski)
JOE TURKEL (Dr. Eldon Tyrell) and JOANNA CASSIDY (Zhora)
MORGAN PAULL (Holden) JAMES HONG (Chew)
Supervising Editor TERRY RAWLINGS
Music Composed, Arranged, Performed and Produced by VANGELIS
Associate Producer IVOR POWELL
Production Designed by LAWRENCE G. PAULL
Director of Photography JORDAN CRONENWETH
Screenplay by HAMPTON FANCHER and DAVID PEOPLES
Produced by MICHAEL DEELEY
Directed by RIDLEY SCOTT
[Top]
Notes
1. |
M'sieu, aduanon
kovershim angam bitte. (suggested by Peter
Gervai:) Most probably the original (what the actor was
supposed to say) was like the Hungarian phrase "azonnal kövessen engem", which means "follow
me immediately", and "bitte"
is German meaning "please". Resulting in "Monsieur (French), azonnal kövessen engem (Hungarian),
bitte (German)"
Sir, you will please come with me
now. |
|
2.
| Lo-faast! Nehod[y] maar! Te
vad[y] a Blade... Blade Runner! (from Silverman's
transcription:) The meaning of Gaff's sentences in
Hungarian: lo-faast is a
rude expression, originally written as lofaszt, a combined form of lo, "horse" and fasz, "prick", "dick". Together, and with the
accusative suffix -t, it's a
shortened form of lofaszt a
seggedbe, "have a horse's dick in your ass". In this context
it means that Gaff tolerates Deckard's answer as nuts and refuses to
be ignored. nehod[y]
maar, originally nehogy
mar, is an informal spoken formula, shortened from nehogy mar ugy legyen! meaning
"wish it wouldn't be that way!", enforcing Gaff's expression about
Deckard's lame "leave-me-alone-sucker" answer. te vad[y] originally te vagy, simply means "you are", and a is "the" So, a close
translation is:
Ah, don't shit me man, you're the
Blade... Blade Runner. |
|
3. |
Captain Bryant to ka, me ni
omae yo. This sounds like slightly ungrammatical
Japanese: "Captain Bryant,
to ka (for one), me ni (at his eye, in front of him)
omae (you, [familiar]),
yo (y' know!)"
It's Captain Bryant wants to see you,
y' know. |
[Top]
back to
script
|