The second time I watched the movie, I found many details that I hadn't noticed before. For example, when Rachael came to Deckard's house for the second time, it was also the time when their emotions sublimated, Rachael said "I can't rely on...", without thinking about it the first time, now Only then did I know that the unspoken word should be memory. When she suddenly discovered one day that the bottom of her world, the things she had experienced from childhood to adulthood, the bits and pieces in her memory, were purely illusory and artificial, and she was just a ridiculous experiment for the whole world. The product, the kind of collapse, sadness, and extreme despair, like the huge waves on the sea, instantly drowned the beliefs on which she lived - and this process of changing her entire world, for others (Deckard), even It's just an unimportant routine.
Rachael's helplessness makes people naturally think, is this all correct? When replicators have become "more human than human", what right do others have to determine their memory, their meaning, and even their death? When replicators become "humans", who has the right to label their lives as "slaves"?
No one wants to live in fear all the time. Human existence needs meaning, and no one is willing to spend a lifetime in meaningless nothingness.
Replicants have only a short lifespan of four years, and death is like a sword hanging over their heads, and their final fate is written to death when they come to this world. But even so, several replicants still chose to defect and chose to live for themselves once and give themselves a chance that did not exist without even knowing how many days they had left. We witness all the efforts Zhora, Leon, Pris, Batty do to survive, we deeply understand that they are not machines at the mercy of others, and we watch them hoarse every minute for the meaning of their existence Crying and fighting, but unable to escape the doomed ending. But when batty's life comes to an end, we share the same sense of powerlessness and sadness with them.
The scene and statement of Batty's death are enough to go down in the history of human cinema. I can't describe the shock of seeing this episode for the first time...
His life disappeared like tears in the rain, and this short and peaceful statement was his acceptance of his own death; he lowered his head and raised his head, it was himself and the clone group fighting against fate, never bowing his head of pride.
The essence of science fiction movies is to think about human relations and the bottom-level morality of society. We unscrupulously imagine wonderful stories one after another, depicting possible future scenarios, and reflecting on the logic, values, and moral principles at the bottom of the current society in the strange, psychedelic, and terrifying future trends, guiding human beings Step by step towards the unknown. It is my great fortune to be able to feel and participate in this great process.
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