Blade Runner 2008 Extended Edition

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Blade Runner 2008 Extended Edition
Faneditor Name:
Original Movie/Show Title:
Franchise:
Fanedit Type:
Original Release Date:
1982
Original Running Time:
117 minutes
Fanedit Release Date:
Fanedit Running Time:
135 minutes
Time Cut:
7 minutes
Time Added:
25 minutes
Synopsis:
This edit weaves back and forth between the International Cut, the Final Cut, and the deleted scenes to provide a more detailed telling of the tormented soul of Rick Deckard, Blade Runner (Retired). It comes with 4 different audio options to chooses from.
Intention:
To make a more detailed telling of the tormented soul of Rick Deckard, Blade Runner (Retired).
Release Information:
DVD
Special Features:
Selectable audio between Voiceover Narration and No Voicover, plus two other permutations, plus a fifth audio file in the DVD-ROM folder with instructions on how to rip-and-replace.

4 Different Sound Options:
1) The original audio mix I did (no skin job n-word/father/no final voiceover at Batty’s death.
2) No voiceovers
3) skin job/father/theatrical Batty-death v.o.
4) skin job/father/workprint batty-death v.o.
Cuts and Additions:
Opens with “Reedited by ADigitalMan” logo, Blade Runner style
After the company logos, a snippet of deleted “happy ending” audio over a black screen where Rachel says, “You know what I think? That we were made for each other.”
“Tears in the Rain” opening credits.
Original “Eye on the City” opening sequence. The “reactive eye” of the Final Cut was too damn distracting … you spend your time looking at the iris and not the reflections.
Holden’s shooting cuts to black. Fade in on the advertising blimp heading downtown.
Extended intro to Deckard with more voiceovers, including the bit about Holden and the bit about his ex-wife.
Final Cut video of the whole Spinner ride to headquarters.
Removed the “Skin-Job/N-word” voiceover … Deckard refers to them as skin jobs himself later, which makes this awkward line even more misplaced.
Extended description of Leon’s abilities.
Holden in the Hospital. Brief bit the next morning as Deckard flips through the files and some of the voiceover about Tyrell growing slaves.
Alternate version of Leon’s hotel room.
Audio of Deckard trying to find four phony ones in a city of 160 million over his ride to the apartment. Deckard runs in the rain.
Deckard thinks about his wife while thumbing through photos. Note that he and his wife are on the same porch as Rachel and her mom. Hmmmmm.
No Friggin Unicorns (TM). I understand the shot’s significance, but is inserted ham-fistedly and fits with nothing else in the film. It’s the midichlorians of Blade Runner. There are enough other hints and the unicorn origami has a beautiful significance all its own without needing this to distort its meaning.
Alternate Esper analysis. I edited this down some. I especially like how this scene actually freezes on the same shot as Deckard’s printout. Why it was changed to something that doesn’t fit escapes me.
Deckard studies the fish scale at the sushi bar.
“Final Cut” video for the snake scale analysis and conversation with the snake maker.
Extended bit outside of Taffey Lewis’ bar. More hockey-masked go go dancers.
Bartender tells Deckard to talk to “the artists” about the snakes.
Deckard wonders why a replicant would be doing snake dances while he waits to corner Zhora.
Final Cut video for Zhora busting through the glass through Rachel shooting Leon.
Voiceover about “it’s not real blood” added.
Rachel and Deckard walk through the streets before heading back to his place.
Extended sequence where Rachel watches Deckard get clean.
Rachel watches Deckard sleep.
Extended love scene.
Return to visit Holden in the Hospital/Bryant and Gaff eavesdrop.
Security check as Sebastian and Roy ascend in the elevator.
“Father” remixed better than the Final Cut. Extended gore.
Roy descends in the elevator, hears the computer and calls her “Mom.”
Deckard is a smartass to the cop/”Good luck Blade Runner.”
Removed final voiceover at Roy’s death. “Final Cut” dove sequence. Final Cut video from rooftop to the end.
Gaff says “Are you sure you are a man? It’s hard to tell who’s who around here.”
No happy ending.
Blade Runner ADM 2008-disc
Blade Runner ADM 2008
Faneditor Name:
Original Movie/Show Title:
Franchise:
Fanedit Type:
Original Release Date:
1982
Original Running Time:
117 minutes
Fanedit Release Date:
Fanedit Running Time:
135 minutes
Time Cut:
7 minutes
Time Added:
25 minutes
Synopsis:
This edit weaves back and forth between the International Cut, the Final Cut, and the deleted scenes to provide a more detailed telling of the tormented soul of Rick Deckard, Blade Runner (Retired). It comes with 4 different audio options to chooses from.
Intention:
To make a more detailed telling of the tormented soul of Rick Deckard, Blade Runner (Retired).
Release Information:
DVD
Special Features:
Selectable audio between Voiceover Narration and No Voicover, plus two other permutations, plus a fifth audio file in the DVD-ROM folder with instructions on how to rip-and-replace.

4 Different Sound Options:
1) The original audio mix I did (no skin job n-word/father/no final voiceover at Batty’s death.
2) No voiceovers
3) skin job/father/theatrical Batty-death v.o.
4) skin job/father/workprint batty-death v.o.
Cuts and Additions:
Opens with “Reedited by ADigitalMan” logo, Blade Runner style
After the company logos, a snippet of deleted “happy ending” audio over a black screen where Rachel says, “You know what I think? That we were made for each other.”
“Tears in the Rain” opening credits.
Original “Eye on the City” opening sequence. The “reactive eye” of the Final Cut was too damn distracting … you spend your time looking at the iris and not the reflections.
Holden’s shooting cuts to black. Fade in on the advertising blimp heading downtown.
Extended intro to Deckard with more voiceovers, including the bit about Holden and the bit about his ex-wife.
Final Cut video of the whole Spinner ride to headquarters.
Removed the “Skin-Job/N-word” voiceover … Deckard refers to them as skin jobs himself later, which makes this awkward line even more misplaced.
Extended description of Leon’s abilities.
Holden in the Hospital. Brief bit the next morning as Deckard flips through the files and some of the voiceover about Tyrell growing slaves.
Alternate version of Leon’s hotel room.
Audio of Deckard trying to find four phony ones in a city of 160 million over his ride to the apartment. Deckard runs in the rain.
Deckard thinks about his wife while thumbing through photos. Note that he and his wife are on the same porch as Rachel and her mom. Hmmmmm.
No Friggin Unicorns (TM). I understand the shot’s significance, but is inserted ham-fistedly and fits with nothing else in the film. It’s the midichlorians of Blade Runner. There are enough other hints and the unicorn origami has a beautiful significance all its own without needing this to distort its meaning.
Alternate Esper analysis. I edited this down some. I especially like how this scene actually freezes on the same shot as Deckard’s printout. Why it was changed to something that doesn’t fit escapes me.
Deckard studies the fish scale at the sushi bar.
“Final Cut” video for the snake scale analysis and conversation with the snake maker.
Extended bit outside of Taffey Lewis’ bar. More hockey-masked go go dancers.
Bartender tells Deckard to talk to “the artists” about the snakes.
Deckard wonders why a replicant would be doing snake dances while he waits to corner Zhora.
Final Cut video for Zhora busting through the glass through Rachel shooting Leon.
Voiceover about “it’s not real blood” added.
Rachel and Deckard walk through the streets before heading back to his place.
Extended sequence where Rachel watches Deckard get clean.
Rachel watches Deckard sleep.
Extended love scene.
Return to visit Holden in the Hospital/Bryant and Gaff eavesdrop.
Security check as Sebastian and Roy ascend in the elevator.
“Father” remixed better than the Final Cut. Extended gore.
Roy descends in the elevator, hears the computer and calls her “Mom.”
Deckard is a smartass to the cop/”Good luck Blade Runner.”
Removed final voiceover at Roy’s death. “Final Cut” dove sequence. Final Cut video from rooftop to the end.
Gaff says “Are you sure you are a man? It’s hard to tell who’s who around here.”
No happy ending.
Cover art by ADigitalMan (DOWNLOAD HERE)
image

Trusted Reviewer reviews

2 reviews
Overall rating
 
9.7
Audio/Video Quality
 
10.0
Audio Editing
 
10.0
Visual Editing
 
10.0
Narrative
 
9.0
Enjoyment
 
8.0
I hate the voice-overs from the Theatrical Cut but I decided to watch this edit with ADM’s preferred audio track. Other than the VOs I highly enjoyed this edit. Director’s Cut is still preferred version.

A/V Quality - 10
Editing - 10
Improvement - 9
Enjoyment - 8 (Director’s Cut 10, Theatrical 8)

Recommended drink: Johnny Walker Black

User Review

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DVD
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Overall rating
 
10.0
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10.0
This is now my favorit cut of Blade Runner (along with 82 europeen edit, but it is a nostalgia thing). What a pleasure to see a long version of Blade Runner, very well edited, and with a good sens of storytelling.
I honestly can’t rate it under 5/5.
A real treat for all Blade Runner fan. A must have. No really, I mean it! 5/5
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Overall rating
 
9.5
Audio/Video Quality
 
9.3(9)
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9.3(9)
Visual Editing
 
9.7(9)
Narrative
 
9.6(7)
Enjoyment
 
9.4(26)
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Overall rating
 
10.0
Audio/Video Quality
 
10.0
Audio Editing
 
10.0
Visual Editing
 
10.0
Narrative
 
10.0
Enjoyment
 
10.0
So, some background. I last watched Blade Runner maybe six months ago, probably longer. I've only seen the Final Cut, and everytime I've watched it I've had distractions, such as chatting with a friend about unrelated matters, or checking my phone, or whatever else. I've always loved the asthetic of the film, that at least I would never forget, but I always regret when I watch films and let myself get distracted, missing all the important story. So I've been wanting to revisit the film without any distractions since then. But then I'd decide not to, and get lost trying to choose which version and whatnot.
Then I found this edit, and I don't think it was a bad decision to watch this as my first TRUE viewing of Blade Runner.
As someone who is easily distracted, having the option to listen to the narration was wonderful. I'd always heard that the narration was cheaply tacked on at the end of production because the company thought people would be confused by the plot, though reading up more on it, I'm not sure if it's that, or just to give an overall more Noirish feeling. Regardless, I'd heard it was bad, until the description of the edit said that the editor preferred it. So I watched the film with it, and I definitely prefer it as well. There are gaps without any dialogue, which I can see the appeal of for some hardcore fans, but as a simpleton, I sort of lose focus with too many moments like that, so the narration helped to fill the void, and also generally expand upon Deckard's character and the world.
Now, the narration is the only big thing I can comment on. There isn't a whole lot of the film that I remember from previous viewings, so any changes made didn't stand out. So actually, I suppose that's something to comment on, all the sources were blended together so perfectly that I couldn't tell what strayed from the main source. For this, I gave the editing top scores, because I had no idea what was edited differently.
Nothing major is removed, the plot is intact, and I see no reason why this shouldn't be recommended to any first time viewer, or long time fan. For all I care, this IS Blade Runner.

User Review

Do you recommend this edit?
Yes
Format Watched
DVD
Report this review Comments (1) | Was this review helpful? 0 0
Overall rating
 
9.5
Audio/Video Quality
 
9.0
Audio Editing
 
9.0
Visual Editing
 
10.0
Narrative
 
10.0
Enjoyment
 
10.0
Blade Runner has long been my all-time favorite film. Having said that, I could never quite settle on what version I preferred. Key things that always bothered me were the unicorn scene and the drive-away ending, both of which felt very out of place. Yet I wanted as much extended material as possible. No silly narrative.

Quite by chance though I ended up watching with the narrative, something I've never done all the way through. I've seen the movie 10 times or more, so I figured it might be interesting. Much as I remembered, the lines were notably uninspiring at times, but the information provided by the narrative fleshed out so much of what is already a great storyline. And Decker is no poet or public speaker, why wouldn't his descriptions be dry and awkward? I think without the narrative would still be my personal go to version because the periods of silence are so powerful, but by a narrow margin, and I would recommend that first time watchers watch it with narration.

Audio/visual: worked for me. The amazing visuals and sound track kept me riveted, with such clean edits that I never was distracted.

Narrative: perfect. Everything I wanted in the movie. Some of the extended scenes I didn't remember, and I wonder if I missed them in watching the other versions, or didn't see one of them (though I own the DVD). The pacing was spot on. This was never meant to be an action film; the long periods of storyline and character development only serves to make the few action scenes all the more gripping. It's dark and romantic and stirring and disturbing. And holy frack! The casting and writing in this film blows my mind - what an epic tap into the wellspring of storytelling!

Enjoyment: There are no words for it. This is my go to version once I can figure out how to burn a DVD that is 7GB in size (I watched it on my computer in fragments and still loved it!). This is it man, this is my cut of choice!!!

User Review

Do you recommend this edit?
Yes
Format Watched
DVD
Report this review Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0
Overall rating
 
9.0
Audio/Video Quality
 
9.0
Audio Editing
 
9.0
Visual Editing
 
9.0
Narrative
 
9.0
Enjoyment
 
10.0
Really enjoyed this film. Really not fair though. I think Blade Runner is one of my favorite films so this edit really was on my "good side" as soon as it started. There are a lot of Blade Runner edits on fanedit.org and I feel this is the best. Thank you for making this.

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Yes
Format Watched
Digital
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(Updated: May 04, 2013)
Overall rating
 
9.5
Audio/Video Quality
 
9.0
Audio Editing
 
9.0
Visual Editing
 
10.0
Narrative
 
10.0
Enjoyment
 
10.0
When Ridley Scott first released the extended edition of Blade Runner I was initially ecstatic. I'd watched it all the time when I was younger and loved the concept of a Bogart-style film noir that took place in the future (of course at that age I just called it a detective movie) and when I found out it was actually butchered by bad post production I had to jump on what the real story was.

For the most part this was wonderful, but there was a fatal flaw, on a personal level if not a technical one. I missed Ford's narration, one of the main sources of that old detective movie feel I remembered. ADigitalMan evidently missed it as well, and rather than stew in his disappointment he did something about it, thus providing what he advertized: a closer look at a retired Blade Runner thrown into his most ethically complicated case.

A/V Quality: 9
-Visual Editing: 10
A small note here: I didn't watch the high quality version of this and will for the foreseeable future watch all of these edits in the very standard 640p due to technical limitations.

Deleted scenes, particularly regarding the first Blade Runner shown in the movie, were very welcome and added to a character who was just written off in virtually every official cut. Everything was smoothly edited and virtually seamless.

-Audio Editing:9
For the most part the editing was smooth and fit into the narrative.
My only problem was that the deleted narration was markedly quieter than what was already in the theatrical edition. For one, this showed what was deleted and what wasn't, but I also found myself rewinding the video in order to better hear what was said. That said it was worth listening to.

Narrative: 10

Here's where this edit shone.
The deleted narration, reintroduced in this edit, brought more insight as to why Deckard's life hit bottom, why he was so miserable, and better illustrated his internal struggle between his job and his passion. There were some very good lines here that were taken out in lieu of statements of the obvious.

Also no longer does Deckard immediately know what the flake in the bathtub is. He actually investigates into the matter a little more. It's funny how just a couple of added scenes makes me regret not watching this edit first.

Enjoyment: 10

This is my go-to copy of one of my absolute favorite movies. It convinced me that Deckard's narration in the theatrical cut was in fact a crutch, despite what I personally liked. ADM turned this crutch into something better: a bittersweet narrative force that lets one into Deckard's head and adds a little more depth to an already fantastic character.

If you wanted the narration back in the special edition, I can assure you you'll get even more than you bargained for.

User Review

Do you recommend this edit?
Yes
Format Watched
Digital
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Overall rating
 
8.0
Audio/Video Quality
 
8.0
Audio Editing
 
8.0
Visual Editing
 
8.0
Narrative
 
8.0
Enjoyment
 
8.0
First of all I would like to clarify that I have not been able to watch the DVD edition, only the mp4 archive, so I am not goint to comment anythin on the DVD menu, etc.

However I can say that this is a great edition that clearly improves the director's cut and the theater edition. I have no watch the final cut but I doubt that it can be better than what adigitalman has offered to our enjoyment.

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Yes
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