The movie Blade Runner is very dear to my heart. It is a treatise on the nature of existence expanding on, and perhaps exceeding the reach of the Phillip K. Dick work which inspired it, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Perhaps I have missed out on some greater subtlety of PKD's work, but the point of DADoES pursues the definition of fake, while Blade Runner instead focuses on what is real. Where the replicants in the novel are sociopathic monsters who emulate emotions solely to gain traction against humans who may hunt them, the humans there rely on machines to dictate their own emotions for them. They dial for "energetic determination" or "six-hour self-accusatory depression." As much as the replicants are machines incapable of real emotion, humans are similarly reliant on a machine to simulate emotion for them. In contrast, the movie's central them is spelled out for us in Deckard's apartment, when Rachel is playing the piano. She professe...
you are SO not paying attention on tribe, these days.
ReplyDeleteThis is SO last month: http://pennsylvania.tribe.net/thread/0172bb97-c2b2-42be-adfb-6de1198c4fe8?tribeid=64752d58-ad50-42e8-82f7-da57a67055e9&r=10424
Nevertheless, interesting.
I have had a couple times where I've misstepped and lost track of which threads I've seen and which ones I've not. Without the "new" header or the orange asterisks, I can't keep track'a where I've left off.
ReplyDeleteBut, technically speaking, it's way past "last month," since it was launched in 2003.
Funny that you and Uncle Warren both hooked on the Nyman one.
It was the most interesting.
ReplyDeleteThe kazoo version and the spaghetti western versions are also great.
Ooh. Yes, those are nice.
ReplyDelete