A
Minute With: Harrison Ford, Ryan Gosling on 'Blade
Runner 2049'
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[October 04, 2017]
By Rollo Ross
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The
long-awaited sequel to the cult classic "Blade Runner,"
a 1982 sci-fi thriller, finally hits movie theaters on
Friday.
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But there is not much that stars Harrison Ford
and Ryan Gosling can say about "Blade Runner 2049," for fear of
revealing major plot spoilers.
Ford, who reprises his role as an older Rick Deckard, and
Gosling as a new 'blade runner' Officer K, told Reuters that the
film offers a glimpse into the potential impact of a rapidly
changing climate and an increasingly isolated society reliant on
technology.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Q: The first film touched upon the future or what they envisaged
the world to be. Now we're 30 years on, what elements does this
film address which you think will resonate with audiences today?
Gosling: "Overpopulation, global warming, being isolated by
technology."
Ford: "Social inequity."
Gosling: "The false narratives we create about large groups of
people in order to make ourselves feel better about how awful
their circumstances are."
Ford: "The necessity to have a moral structure into which to
pour what's possible and to make judgments about what we use and
what we don't use."
Q: How would you say this film pushes forward messages about
humanity that weren't covered in the first one?
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Ford: Well I would just quibble with the word 'message' because it's
an experiential opportunity because you discover your relationship
to the ideas in the context of an emotional geography so I think as
an audience, it has an opportunity to engage you in a way that is
pretty rare.
Q: How did you go about playing your character with ambiguity as it
is not always known who is a human and who is a Replicant?
Ford: I don't think there's a style to the acting necessarily. There
is so much new information coming at you as a character and as an
audience that you just want to be still and make sure that you're
reading this right, that you really know what's going on so the
characters are constantly in the midst of a dilemma that is like
drinking out of a gardening hose. There is so much happening to them
that it's close to overwhelming for them.
(Reporting by Rollo Ross for Reuters TV; Editing by Piya Sinha-Roy
and Diane Craft)
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