Incorrect, the author wrote the script and it was adapted by the screenwriter. Hauer added trhe C-beams line. It always reminds me of Joey in Friends when he says 'yeah sometimes wee write our own script'. Cut to a guy in an armchair (the screenwriter) who says..Oh Yeah...really... I like it when people get confused with fiction. The actor only presents the script and somehow people actually attribute the scene to the actor and its their true personality as if its is their words. Then type a monologue of the undercurrent, various themes and statements as if its real. They are the people that were kidnapped by aliens I suppose....same mindset. But Hauer and Ford lifted the film into extra ordinary territory. Ridley Scott was exceptional as was the cinematographer. The 80's had some of the best films ...EVER.
I didn't realize that RH wrote this speech and I just how talented he was.... this role matches his other great movie salute to the Jugger. Iconic is the word that springs to mind 🤔
Rutger Hauer was a highly underrated and under utilized actor, the fact he personally came up with the "tears in the rain" monologue speaks volumes of his skill as an actor. His death was an extremely sad loss.
He's hardly an "underrated" actor. Rutger Hauer has secured himself immortality (rather ironically, given the plot of Blade Runner), both through his magnificent performance in this iconic film, plus the fact that he alone wrote those timeless, incredibly emotive words. It's as good as it gets. Rest peacfeully, Rutger.
he was under utilized because he wanted to be. he was the one who chose b roles for himself because he didn't want to be big on the screen. he wanted to still have a semi normal life and i think that's very admirable of him; fame wasn't something he was going to let change him. i miss him dearly.
Every time I watch this movie, this ending reminds me of how fleeting and fragile life truly is for us humans. As I grow older (I'm 58 now), I realize that everything that I am: my memories, my experiences, my emotions...are all unique to me, and only me. No one else can ever live them or understand them; even if I were somehow able to upload them to a computer for future playback, no one else could possibly understand why I am who I am today. Treasure the life that you have - truly live it - and don't try to record it on a stupid phone because without context, or an explanation, no one else will understand your collection of clips that you thought were important enough to save.
Write them down. That's what I'm doing for my son. You can rediscover your past and appreciate what really happened using your superpower of accrued wisdom. Hopefully someone will learn from it, both the good and the bad.
@@charlesleggjr.5928 As sad as that seems, having ALL THOSE MEMORIES lost would be sadder. AI is still in its infancy & we should give it a BETTER role model.
He saved Deckard because it would mean he would be remembered by at least one person. It was his only way to keep on existing. Had Deckard died no one would remain to remember him. He might as well not have existed at all. The memory carries on for as long as Deckard does. But it is also at this moment that he sees they're both not so different. Roy had lived in fear of his unavoidable death, and in Deckard he sees that same fear in those final moments. He realizes if anyone were to understand him, it would be Deckard.
I always loved that he was created to be a soldier, a killer, and as a last moment of defiance he chose to spare a life instead of taking it. He also in some way will live on in Deckard's memory. Such an amazing movie.
As a soldier, in all that has entailed, while you never feel like you are a REAL soldier until you do the job you were trained for… I have always known and valued so much more. I’m a Christian, I love good prose and poetry, philosophy and history. Kindness as much and as often as possible (I and several of my fellow service members volunteer a lot). I desire a farm so much that it hurts and study animal husbandry at ridiculous amounts. I do love animals, even as I love to eat them, I enjoy caring for them, getting to know their personalities and caring for them (Ferdinand’s farm in San Diego is where I spend at least three days a month). But I can kill that which I see as having intrinsic value, for some reason this doesn’t make sense to some of my fellow soldiers and nearly all those who have never served.
@@ziraprod6090 Most of us who saw this when it came out are in our late 40s, 50s and 60s. If you are 30, you didn't see it until much later. So what is it that you are trying to point out here?
“Brother Cavil: In all your travels, have you ever seen a star go supernova? ... I have. I saw a star explode and send out the building blocks of the Universe. Other stars, other planets and eventually other life. A supernova! Creation itself! I was there. I wanted to see it and be part of the moment. And you know how I perceived one of the most glorious events in the universe? With these ridiculous gelatinous orbs in my skull! With eyes designed to perceive only a tiny fraction of the EM spectrum. With ears designed only to hear vibrations in the air. ... I don't want to be human! I want to see gamma rays! I want to hear X-rays! And I want to - I want to smell dark matter! Do you see the absurdity of what I am? I can't even express these things properly because I have to - I have to conceptualize complex ideas in this stupid limiting spoken language! But I know I want to reach out with something other than these prehensile paws! And feel the wind of a supernova flowing over me! I'm a machine! And I can know much more! I can experience so much more. But I'm trapped in this absurd body! And why? Because my five creators thought that God wanted it that way!” ― Ronald D. Moore I feel like I could have this same conversation with the Creator.
@@ziraprod6090 homie. this is stupid. The film itself if 41 years old. If you're 30 having seen this its because your 60 year old parents showed this to you
It starts earlier. As deckard is hanging on, his grip slowly slipping. Roy looks at him and sees the fear on his face. And he says with apparent detachment, “a terrible thing, to live in fear, isn’t it? “. It looks to the first time viewer like Roy is relishing Deckard’s distress and imminent fall. But this is the moment that Roy realizes that everyone who lives, lives in fear of death. This is the moment Roy sees Deckard with empathy, and chooses to save him, because he Can, just as he chose to kill his creator, because his creator couldn’t. All Roy wanted was for someone to do for him what he had the power to do for Deckard in his last moments. Give him just a little more time to live. I have always preferred the theatrical version of this movie, because it did not make Deckard a replicant. Roy’s message is far more meaningful if he is saying it to a human. To us. The central question of what makes humanity human evaporates when the the dialog is between two androids. Roy’s journey needs to be witnessed by those who consider themselves human, to enlighten them that humanity may entail more than they imagine. And I prefer the original ending, where deckard runs off with Sean Young, despite the knowledge that she’s a replicant, because he now sees her as just as human as anyone. Making him a replicant turned a story about redemption from prejudice into a runaway slave story.
For me, the difference is that even if Deckard is a replicant, he believes he is human. He acts human, he has empathy--Rachel: "would you hunt me?' Deckard: 'I wouldn't. But someone would.'. Among the points the movie makes is that the replicants are the ones who are the most human. Bryant? Please. Gaff? Nope. JF and the eye guy? Just worker bees. JF even "makes" his own friends. All the human interactions in the movie happen between replicants.
By Theatrical version do you mean the one with the Sam Spade voice over that infantalises the audience, robbing them of the opportunity to enjoy the nuances of many of the scenes? That ending was horrendous, completely incongruous with the rest of the film. Why do we have to have a happy ending? In the Director's Cut, we have the dream sequence that, along with the unicorn left at his door, leads us to believe that Deckerd may be a Replicant but the key thing is that Deckerd is completely unaware; he thinks he's human so he acts as one. I loved the original film but had some small criticisms, all of which were changed in the Director's Cut. The ending is far more open to interpretation; we each get to choose our own ending.
@@markanthony693 Not about the happy ending. I wasn’t a fan of the voice-over. But making Deckard a replicant, too, essentially turns this into a conversation between two replicants, rather than a revelation to a human being about the humanity of the replicants. Sorry. That’s just a weaker storyline with far less impact. It undermines the entire arc of the story where deckard has to kill people he’s been raised to believe aren’t people. Deckard represents the prejudices of humanity in his interaction with synthetic persons. Essentially, making him a replicant converts this from deckard having an epiphany over prejudice, into a story about a runaway slave sharing with an Uncle Tom how much slavery sucks for both of them.
I love that in his last moment Roy became what he always desired, the moment he choose compassion he became human and in that act his profound action he achieved a little immortality and lived on in Deckard.
Seeing this first at age 11, it went right over my head. But it came on TV one evening. This is back in '85, the early days of basic cable, and I wasn't much of a talk shows kid, so I left it on. My dad came into the room, and asked what it was. "Kind of a long, slow sci-fi film. There's nothing else on." He sat and watched it with me. By the end, we just turned to one another, utterly dumbfounded. I think it was the first film I really bonded with my dad over. We would go see it every time it came to repertory theaters. There's nothing in this world like Blade Runner on the big screen. These days, the slow pace feels like such a treat. I love films that transport me to fictional worlds, but Blade Runner feels like a proper visit. You can really settle into its world. While most of these modern films, with their frantic pace, seem more like a layover at best. Someone on a UA-cam channel I can no longer find said something really profound about this speech. He pointed out that the speech eluded to the lore of the greater Blade Runner world, wars being fought by replicants in space in the service of, in all likelihood, rival corporations. And yet, he found that, unlike Star Wars or Star Trek or Alien, and dozens of other fan-favorite sci-fi and fantasy worlds, Blade Runner's lore is particularly sparse. What the hell is a C-beam? What even is Tannhauser Gate? This speech is the first we've heard of it. But we can infer that thousands and thousands of replicants died in space, fighting wars that no one knows about, as slaves. Died, and were forgotten, like Roy. So this is a film about erasure, about what it is to have one's humanness denied, one's history scrubbed from memory. Roy chooses to spare Deckard because he wants a witness; someone, anyone, even an enemy. He could have killed Deckard, and then died alone, with no one to see that he was more than just a malfunctioning machine. It occurs to me that, until Roy saved Deckard's life, he maybe didn't even know he was going to do that. It was a very human impulse. All over the world, I see people denying one another's humanity, dismissing people of other religions, races, skin colors, sexual or gender identities, even taste in movies (looking at you, Snyder-cut people, and people who crap on Snyder stans too). And not just dismissing their choices or their cultures or whatever. It seems like such a short leap to denying people's humanity, as though one difference, one disagreement, disqualifies them from the human race. I don't think Blade Runner was ever about A.I.. It's about us, about how eager we are to deny people's humanity, so we can feel guiltless in exploiting them, or just ignoring their suffering. It's about how easily we assume that the oppressed people are the problem, and not the victim of the problem. And how hard it is to turn the situation around and see it from the point of the view of the person being vilified. Blade Runner's greatest accomplishment as a story is how well it does that, how it uses our tendency to assume that antagonists are always in the wrong, and that the protagonist's "win" is their defeat. Blade Runner smashes us against that assumption, showing us how our assumptions make us complicit. It happens right here, in this simple, heartbreakingly beautiful speech. That, to me, is why this is the greatest monologue in film history. It's a reminder that there are no enemies, no replicants, no "them." There's only us humans, and the cruelty we commit against one another.
I was 14 years old on June 26th 1982 when I got dropped off at the theatre with some friends to see this movie. When it ended I felt like a different person. It has been my favorite movie and this speech has been my fave moment in entertainment ever since. Then we went and watched the Thing 1982. It was a good movie day.
One of the greatest movies ever made. Tears in Rain is one of the most poignantly deep pieces of work I've ever heard. It speaks to all of us on so many levels. Thank you, Rutger, for your words.
Its a crap movie... and this comes from a SF fan. Too many mistakes in the movie. The plot was good and some acting. A great monologue does not make the film great, sorry.
@@MrCostaC Wrong you are. The original monologue as written was at least four times longer. Rutger Hauer saw it as ungainly and overly long, so he "put a knife in it," as he said, rewriting it himself the night before they shot the final rooftop scene,not telling Ridley Scott of his unplanned edit. When they completed the shoot, the entire film crew themselves cried a little, so moved they were by the shorter and much more eloquent version that Rutger Hauer had delivered.
@@stuartb6827 i can't remember all, but one of them that comes to mind is towards the end, the scene with the last replicant its on top of the building, but after he dies and the police comes, they show it at street level.
All those moments will be lost, in time, like... tears...in the rain. The comparision and the Vangelis music makes the scene unique and immortal. Wonderful. 😢 Blade Runner is true work of art. One of my favourite movies ever.
I watched this with my son a few days ago. I wept like a baby. I first watched it with my late father, he got upset watching it. It's not dying, we fear, it's being lost forever, becoming without memory to anything. Just like I will and those who I followed and who will follow me. My late father is gone, as I will be one day. From ashes to ashes, dust to dust. We have all been a lot longer dead than we have been alive. We all go the same way. Somewhat incredible, somewhat tragic.
@liamhemmings9039 I simply do not care what I leave behind, I too have seen and done things most people have never done in my life. I have suffered for this. I don't care about death and what I leave. Only my type of dying worries me.
My uncle Michael told me that him and my dad used to drop LSD and go see this masterpiece in the Theater when it was out new, my dad John lost his life in a car accident a few months later. Absorb as much as you can and love as much as you can, become the main character and make it to the final scene my friends.
Saw this when it first came out in Chicago. Opening night. Up visiting family. Stoned out of my mind. Blow away then and still one of my all time favorite movies and scenes. Can’t remember the year, I’m in my 70’s now. Did it come out in the 70’s or early 80’s. No matter. Have always loved sci-fi. So much closer to reality than anything else except for maybe comedy. LOL
@@iHaveTheDocumentsWhat are you talking about, every human is the main character from their own perspective, and even if you think your the main and everyone else is a side character what's wrong with that. Should you believe you're an NPC that just sounds sad why would you want to be a side character or see yourself that way it's insane, if you see yourself as just a part of someone else's story then fine you're an underling you are an NPC in my story, and that's what you like.
@@aleksam1504 We're all distortions of the same being, that's what I believe. God made us equally, and we all carry the same potency so yes. Everyone is the main character
"Tears in Rain" always brings tears to myself. Yet, this exact moment in cinema history will forever be remembered. Thanks for the good memories, Rutger Hauer! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
The more time passes, the greater this film becomes - a true gem, a real work of artistry and illumination - and it touches the heart in a deeply sublime way that lasts for years
I recall watching this as a 9 year old when it was released on VHS way back in '83 and it has remained one of my most favorite films. Rutgers monologue hits me in the feels every time.
The way Roy knowingly yet apprehensively looks at Deckard when he says “like tears, in rain” is an admittance to Deckard that he is crying, but Deckard cannot see the tears. They are lost in the rain. Roy has realized his own existence enough, gained is own humanity enough, to not jut be angry but to be sorrowful that it is ending.
I've always seen that a bit differently. I see it as Roy being quite chuffed with himself at the metaphor. He's proud of his final words. It's a kind of wry smile - hey, look what I did there.
@@sallybell9548 I think it's actually both. He's feeling his own tears and comes up with the metaphor on the spot. He's still a big child at heart so these emotional experiences are overwhelming for him and he's living (and dying) to the fullest inside of each second.
I can never watch this and not shed those tears. Saw this at the theater. 40 years later, i measure myself with this as my yardstick. The rain never ends...
After his entire performance in Blade Runner, and this beautiful scene in particular, l could never understand why Rutger Hauer wasn't catapulted into the top ranks of movie stars. I mean, he has always had plenty of work since then but I'm not sure he ever got to participate in very many true masterpieces of film following this performance.
Being a Dutch actor (goat there ) with even the faintest of accents makes one suspect in hollywood . Arnie and even Jean claude got away with murder (pun intended) because they were action heroes But for Rutger, a truly great actor , it was all or nothing , and he had to settle for many action films as well, despite being a triple A actor , in contrast to Arnie. European Hollywood stories are complex . Anglo saxons world tends to revolve around it's own sun What might have saved rutger could've been being picked up by someone like David Lynch , I will never understand why this combination didn't happen in that era . Could've been special for the ages
@@stupidburp Blood of Heroes is grossly overlooked and underrated ... it should be regarded on the same level as Mad Max as far as excellent post-apocalyptic movies goes
I've been battling PTSD for over a decade now. It has robbed me of a life...of being able to see light. This scene really gets to me. It expresses exactly how I feel
When I'm struggling especially hard, I watch this scene from Blade Runner. Over and over. It brings me peace. As Tom Hanks said in The Green Mile, "time takes it all, whether you want it to or not." This speech by Rutger Hauer reminds the viewer that time comes for it all. Everything we hold dear, everything we see, whether we want it to, or not, time takes it all. The only thing we can do is recognize our moments, and understand that like us, they too, will be lost in time. Like tears.. in rain.
It was in his Eulogy because it was Rutger his absolute favorite role, He is dearly missed, I am fortunate to have known him, He was a true gentleman and a fantastic actor
I fist saw this movie as a teenager. My brother had sent me the VHS by post, telling me I had to watch it... This, for me was the crowning scene of the whole film. The teenage me was completely mesmerised. Today, as I approach my own twilight years and watch my daughters grow, this scene hits harder than ever.
When I saw this movie in the 80’s I couldn’t wait to tell my co-workers the next day I’d just seen the best movie final scene ever created. I tried to describe it and what it felt like to witness it. The power and purpose of Roy’s actions pulled me to edge of that building and the edge between life and death as surely as if I was actually there. I’m sure my feeble efforts were mostly for naught but some things are too valuable to keep to ourselves. Pass it on.
This monologue I'd one of the reasons I love this movie so much, I still can't stop thinking about it. It's also one of few moments in movies that make me cry.
This is my favorite scene from my favorite movie, even more so now, I recently turned 60 and 2 days later went into cardiac arrest and required 20 minutes of cpr, and woke up from an induced coma in the hospital, then less than two weeks ago I underwent open heart surgery to replace my Aortic valve, watching this again now makes it even more poignant and has me in very visible tears.
One day when I was 14, my Dad took me out to the middle of nowhere and showed me how to fire a powerful hand gun. After 3 rounds all I could think of was how ethereal and fragile human life really is. A minute motion of an index finger can destroy a lifetime of experiences and emotions as well as creating crippling emotional voids in those who shared that life. Never held a gun since and i try very hard not to judge others. In the end we only get one chance at it. Great analogy from a brilliant movie.
I remember watchi g this movie when I was like 10, and even though I didnt understand a lot of the movie, I understood what he felt and what this scene meant. Incredible.
Tears in Rain inspired me to write the one part of my short story Bosun's Journal which ended up moving readers to tears. Every tear shed over a story is a badge of honor for its author. And for me, it's thanks to this one scene. What an amazing scene. What an amazing movie.
@@KutWrite Until I get around to properly set up my website, only on Reddit. And because UA-cam hates links, just google Bosun's Journal, the TVTropes page should be the first result, quickly followed by the posts themselves. I suggest to start with the first entry for the full experience.
I thought so too. From the first time I ever saw that scene, and the hundreds of times I've watched it since. You don't get that from the book. What a great movie.
Rutger Hauer remained one of my favorite actors ever after this movie. Horridly underappreciated. That "greatest monologue" was actually written by Rutger Hauer himself!
@@MrCostaC There's a Rotten Tomatoes interview with Ridley Scott who says Rutger wrote it, but not the last 3 words. ua-cam.com/video/uPUIDHQv8rM/v-deo.html
Agree. I had no idea that Rutger Hauer penned this. This monologue still brings tears to my eyes 41 years later, it true it sums all of it up in 42 words. Thank you for making and posting this video.
It’s the way he says “moments” that gets me every time. Like he’s realising the implication as he’s saying it. That’s all we ever really have, in the end: moments.
It's hope, despair and wanting all at the same time.. and said by a replicant, humanoid, part robotics, just think about that. Such a great memorable line. It's a moment you just savour.
The most beautiful moment in the context of this speech is when Roy protects Deckard and doesn't let Deckard vanish like a falling tear in the rain. Deckard is the remembrance of Roy that will live on. It's a beautiful scene.
Sometimes I'll watch things, like this, intentionally to feel sad because I like to feel something good or bad. The odds of me being here are almost non existent, so to feel emotional is a blessing I can never fully understand but be forever thankfull for
When I first watched Blade Runner, this monologue sent shivers down my spine that no other film had done! To later find out that it was written by Rutger Hauer himself made it all the more impactful! It is the greatest monologue in cinema!
Yes, strongly agree. The video game Homeworld 2 has a scenario named Tanhauser Gate as a tribute to this movie. I would also like to point out Vangelis' score in this scene.
TRULY the best monologue - period! I can relate totally to this and probably my ending. I have loved and lost a couple of times and as i come to the end of my days I am alone, there is no one left, only me. All i was, did and achieved will be forgotten. There will be no one shedding tears over me it will all wash away - like tears in rain as I go back to the earth. So UTTERLY and uniquely powerful - I have realised I will be at peace like Roy..........I always watch this alone and it does bring tears but also a calm as to what is to come and how it will end.
Rutgers/Roy Batty's words were touching especially after saving his nemesis from a certain death you feel and see the compassion he has for life and the passion of wanting more life , these words easily apply to us we each have seen things in our lives unique only to ourselves that will mostly be lost "like tears in the rain"
It is my mantra, this capped the off the best film ever made. It is so so deep and life affirming. As for Vangelis, just a perfect combination. I just love it beyond words.
Rutger Hauer played the part beautifully, with subtle menace and sad tragic hope. I’ve always loved that scene like many and it is probably the scene that makes Bladerunner the film it is..
One of my favorite bands from NJ, Sticks and Stones, sampled this and it has always stuck with me. Sadly, Peter (singer) passed on in 2021 but this film and this quote (as well as his life and legacy) has always resonated with me.
Born as a replicant, died as a true Human. This scene will always be my favorite and will always remind me that one day everything we know and care about will be lost like tears in rain and all we can do is live life to the fullest and make everything worth it. Those who burn twice as bright - Burn half as long,,,,,,,,,
Rutger Hauer once talked to me about this monologue. It was 2007 and I was participant in the Rutger Hauer Film Factory course that he set up in Rotterdam. We were making short films in a 4 day course, one of them being some rainy night scene inside a car on a dark film set with artificial rain equipment which made the mood match this Blade Runner scene to some degree. Because I was attending the course as an editor I didn't have anything to do during shooting so I decided to film a sort of second angle with a DV camera. In between takes Rutger once suddenly came up to my camera and did some weird over the top Marlon Brando style madness which was quite funny but didn't really fit in the story of the thing we were shooting so it was left out. Later during that shoot, out of the blue he started talking to me about having created some lines of text in his Blade Runner monologue the night before the shoot and how Ridley Scott liked it so much he kept it in. At the time I didn't know the film well enough to remember the scene exactly and put his words in perspective, and although I did realize what he was telling me was probably important I felt quite stupid because I was unable to respond properly. The course was in english but at that moment he was speaking to me in dutch and I probably said something like "wow cool", which is the same mediocre reply in both languages.
Mooi verhaal! Blade Runner is of course based on the work of Philip K. Dick, whose 2 main themes in his science fiction were "what is real" and "what is human." Philip K. Dick toiled in near poverty until right before his death, when he finally made some real money selling the movie rights to "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" He died right before he could see Blade Runner. Movies & TV shows based on his work have subsequently made billions of dollars. His estate sued the makers of "Adjustment Bureau" when it was discovered (allegedly) that the source material was actually in the public domain.
When I saw this movie I was moved by these words and am reminded of the ephemeral nature of life and that for most of us in a generation or two the memory of our lives will disappear
Blade Runner is my favourite film of all time, and for very good reason: it's sheer perfection and never ceases to amaze, no matter how many times I've watched it over the decades. Furthermore, it's all topped off by an outstanding musical score that only the talents of Vangelis could envision. This film easily surpasses greatness - it's pure art in motion, and a philosophical lesson to us all. It's a masterpiece on every level.
Profound. Genuinely profound. There’s no other way to describe it. To encapsulate the fear of death and the unknown, to explain our fleeting existence so simply and beautifully. Just a wonderful piece of film.
The cinematography in this scene is brilliant as well. Roy, against the warm illumination of the neon lights, the life bustling about below, but his face is lit in shadow with a cold blue highlight, perhaps alluding to his synthetic existence. Rick, against the darkness of the brick and metal, but his face lit in such a way as to accent his humanity.
If you forget me I want you to know one thing. You know how this is: if I look at the crystal moon, at the red branch of the slow autumn at my window, if I touch near the fire the impalpable ash or the wrinkled body of the log, everything carries me to you, as if everything that exists, aromas, light, metals, were little boats that sail toward those isles of yours that wait for me. Well, now, if little by little you stop loving me I shall stop loving you little by little. If suddenly you forget me do not look for me, for I shall already have forgotten you. If you think it long and mad, the wind of banners that passes through my life, and you decide to leave me at the shore of the heart where I have roots, remember that on that day, at that hour, I shall lift my arms and my roots will set off to seek another land. But if each day, each hour, you feel that you are destined for me with implacable sweetness, if each day a flower climbs up to your lips to seek me, ah my love, ah my own, in me all that fire is repeated, in me nothing is extinguished or forgotten, my love feeds on your love, beloved, and as long as you live it will be in your arms without leaving mine. RIP Rutger Hauer
This movie was so great and will be always one of the best movies ever just as I hold princess bride at the same level and I cant say for sure others then thees two movies that are just so great this one far more serious. But as far as movies go this and princesss bride for me are in my top spots.
I've always remember this scene in this movie it makes you think about your life and you want it to have meaning you want to make memories and not waste time
Grateful for this being something we can all identify. I was always drawn to the mechanics comment about "the candle that burns twice as bright burns half as long ". It shows the replicant has a constructed purpose and the evident and uncompromising expiration. To put it in our terms is an unthinkable crisis. If life means so much why do we make such horrible choices, cause so much grief, try to get away from our deepest fears? Thanks for this evidence, that is Ridley Scott and Rutger Hauer gave us something more than science fiction.
Watched film when it came out first, I was mesmerized, 40 odd years later I still am. Life is a collection of memory’s, a lot being the people you were with and knew, but passed on, termination is real for us too..
Equating Roy to a 4 year old child hit me in a way that I can not put into words. I've always loved this monologue but imagining a young child say something so profound and tragic just hurts in such a unique and interesting way.
In his last moments, he loves life and freedom so much that he lets Deckard live, and the dove, which is of course highly symbolic but so subtly so in this masterful scene.
The fact the Rutger wrote it himself late one night before shooting it, is incredible.
Yeah, it seems he understood the character so well, they're still looking at it analytically to this day.
That's not entirely correct. Rutger adapted the existing set of lines.
Incorrect, the author wrote the script and it was adapted by the screenwriter. Hauer added trhe C-beams line.
It always reminds me of Joey in Friends when he says 'yeah sometimes wee write our own script'. Cut to a guy in an armchair (the screenwriter) who says..Oh Yeah...really...
I like it when people get confused with fiction. The actor only presents the script and somehow people actually attribute the scene to the actor and its their true personality as if its is their words.
Then type a monologue of the undercurrent, various themes and statements as if its real. They are the people that were kidnapped by aliens I suppose....same mindset.
But Hauer and Ford lifted the film into extra ordinary territory. Ridley Scott was exceptional as was the cinematographer.
The 80's had some of the best films ...EVER.
some peeps here saying not entirely true, but there is ridley saying he did write it. ua-cam.com/video/uPUIDHQv8rM/v-deo.html
so...???
I didn't realize that RH wrote this speech and I just how talented he was.... this role matches his other great movie salute to the Jugger.
Iconic is the word that springs to mind 🤔
Rutger Hauer was a highly underrated and under utilized actor, the fact he personally came up with the "tears in the rain" monologue speaks volumes of his skill as an actor. His death was an extremely sad loss.
Every one is going to die
He is a son of acting teachers. So even if he was in a lot of bad movies him being a bad actor that is unlikely.
He's hardly an "underrated" actor. Rutger Hauer has secured himself immortality (rather ironically, given the plot of Blade Runner), both through his magnificent performance in this iconic film, plus the fact that he alone wrote those timeless, incredibly emotive words. It's as good as it gets. Rest peacfeully, Rutger.
he was under utilized because he wanted to be. he was the one who chose b roles for himself because he didn't want to be big on the screen. he wanted to still have a semi normal life and i think that's very admirable of him; fame wasn't something he was going to let change him.
i miss him dearly.
Well he's not a jew so what do you expect.
Every time I watch this movie, this ending reminds me of how fleeting and fragile life truly is for us humans. As I grow older (I'm 58 now), I realize that everything that I am: my memories, my experiences, my emotions...are all unique to me, and only me. No one else can ever live them or understand them; even if I were somehow able to upload them to a computer for future playback, no one else could possibly understand why I am who I am today. Treasure the life that you have - truly live it - and don't try to record it on a stupid phone because without context, or an explanation, no one else will understand your collection of clips that you thought were important enough to save.
Write them down. That's what I'm doing for my son. You can rediscover your past and appreciate what really happened using your superpower of accrued wisdom. Hopefully someone will learn from it, both the good and the bad.
that's deep
Very insightful. Thank you
Excellent comment; most insightful and well written.
Beautifully said!
"All those moments will be lost in time, like tears... in rain."
Beautiful.
I would imagine we all will feel that way when our time comes, especially as the moment of death comes.
@@charlesleggjr.5928 As sad as that seems, having ALL THOSE MEMORIES lost would be sadder. AI is still in its infancy & we should give it a BETTER role model.
Roy saved him to have an audience, to be *seen* himself, and to avoid dying alone. It’s incredibly human.
Wow. This gave me chills, never thought about it that way
He saved Deckard because it would mean he would be remembered by at least one person. It was his only way to keep on existing. Had Deckard died no one would remain to remember him. He might as well not have existed at all. The memory carries on for as long as Deckard does. But it is also at this moment that he sees they're both not so different. Roy had lived in fear of his unavoidable death, and in Deckard he sees that same fear in those final moments. He realizes if anyone were to understand him, it would be Deckard.
That is something I’ve never considered before. It makes perfect sense, it’s so human to not want to be alone at the end.
Oh god. Yes! ❤😢
Do you think Roy knew decard was a replicant?
I always loved that he was created to be a soldier, a killer, and as a last moment of defiance he chose to spare a life instead of taking it. He also in some way will live on in Deckard's memory. Such an amazing movie.
As a soldier, in all that has entailed, while you never feel like you are a REAL soldier until you do the job you were trained for… I have always known and valued so much more. I’m a Christian, I love good prose and poetry, philosophy and history. Kindness as much and as often as possible (I and several of my fellow service members volunteer a lot). I desire a farm so much that it hurts and study animal husbandry at ridiculous amounts. I do love animals, even as I love to eat them, I enjoy caring for them, getting to know their personalities and caring for them (Ferdinand’s farm in San Diego is where I spend at least three days a month). But I can kill that which I see as having intrinsic value, for some reason this doesn’t make sense to some of my fellow soldiers and nearly all those who have never served.
Damn zombies, stop being televised products and became humans .
@@nexussymbiosis9270 ZOMBIES ?Try golems - from a 16th century Czech folktale.
Well Deckard himself is an android, as the dream sequence reveals in the Director's Cut.
This! This is what I've been saying for thirty years! It's my fave scene in movies too. Very poignant and meaningful. RIP Rutger Hauer.
Yea - it is the greatest if you are 30. It is not 'the greatest'. Certainly up there.
His masterpiece
@@ziraprod6090 Most of us who saw this when it came out are in our late 40s, 50s and 60s. If you are 30, you didn't see it until much later.
So what is it that you are trying to point out here?
“Brother Cavil:
In all your travels, have you ever seen a star go supernova? ...
I have. I saw a star explode and send out the building blocks of the Universe. Other stars, other planets and eventually other life. A supernova! Creation itself! I was there. I wanted to see it and be part of the moment. And you know how I perceived one of the most glorious events in the universe? With these ridiculous gelatinous orbs in my skull! With eyes designed to perceive only a tiny fraction of the EM spectrum. With ears designed only to hear vibrations in the air. ...
I don't want to be human! I want to see gamma rays! I want to hear X-rays! And I want to - I want to smell dark matter! Do you see the absurdity of what I am? I can't even express these things properly because I have to - I have to conceptualize complex ideas in this stupid limiting spoken language! But I know I want to reach out with something other than these prehensile paws! And feel the wind of a supernova flowing over me! I'm a machine! And I can know much more! I can experience so much more. But I'm trapped in this absurd body! And why? Because my five creators thought that God wanted it that way!”
― Ronald D. Moore
I feel like I could have this same conversation with the Creator.
@@ziraprod6090 homie. this is stupid. The film itself if 41 years old. If you're 30 having seen this its because your 60 year old parents showed this to you
One of the greatest films ever made. And the fact that the sequel didn’t suck and was also a great film is very pleasing!
It starts earlier. As deckard is hanging on, his grip slowly slipping. Roy looks at him and sees the fear on his face. And he says with apparent detachment, “a terrible thing, to live in fear, isn’t it? “. It looks to the first time viewer like Roy is relishing Deckard’s distress and imminent fall. But this is the moment that Roy realizes that everyone who lives, lives in fear of death. This is the moment Roy sees Deckard with empathy, and chooses to save him, because he Can, just as he chose to kill his creator, because his creator couldn’t. All Roy wanted was for someone to do for him what he had the power to do for Deckard in his last moments. Give him just a little more time to live.
I have always preferred the theatrical version of this movie, because it did not make Deckard a replicant. Roy’s message is far more meaningful if he is saying it to a human. To us. The central question of what makes humanity human evaporates when the the dialog is between two androids. Roy’s journey needs to be witnessed by those who consider themselves human, to enlighten them that humanity may entail more than they imagine. And I prefer the original ending, where deckard runs off with Sean Young, despite the knowledge that she’s a replicant, because he now sees her as just as human as anyone. Making him a replicant turned a story about redemption from prejudice into a runaway slave story.
For me, the difference is that even if Deckard is a replicant, he believes he is human. He acts human, he has empathy--Rachel: "would you hunt me?' Deckard: 'I wouldn't. But someone would.'. Among the points the movie makes is that the replicants are the ones who are the most human. Bryant? Please. Gaff? Nope. JF and the eye guy? Just worker bees. JF even "makes" his own friends. All the human interactions in the movie happen between replicants.
By Theatrical version do you mean the one with the Sam Spade voice over that infantalises the audience, robbing them of the opportunity to enjoy the nuances of many of the scenes? That ending was horrendous, completely incongruous with the rest of the film. Why do we have to have a happy ending? In the Director's Cut, we have the dream sequence that, along with the unicorn left at his door, leads us to believe that Deckerd may be a Replicant but the key thing is that Deckerd is completely unaware; he thinks he's human so he acts as one. I loved the original film but had some small criticisms, all of which were changed in the Director's Cut. The ending is far more open to interpretation; we each get to choose our own ending.
@@markanthony693 Not about the happy ending. I wasn’t a fan of the voice-over. But making Deckard a replicant, too, essentially turns this into a conversation between two replicants, rather than a revelation to a human being about the humanity of the replicants. Sorry. That’s just a weaker storyline with far less impact. It undermines the entire arc of the story where deckard has to kill people he’s been raised to believe aren’t people. Deckard represents the prejudices of humanity in his interaction with synthetic persons. Essentially, making him a replicant converts this from deckard having an epiphany over prejudice, into a story about a runaway slave sharing with an Uncle Tom how much slavery sucks for both of them.
Well said.
Clearly you have thought about this and I am inclined to agree about Deckers choice of partner... beyond human is human enough for him.
I love that in his last moment Roy became what he always desired, the moment he choose compassion he became human and in that act his profound action he achieved a little immortality and lived on in Deckard.
Seeing this first at age 11, it went right over my head. But it came on TV one evening. This is back in '85, the early days of basic cable, and I wasn't much of a talk shows kid, so I left it on. My dad came into the room, and asked what it was. "Kind of a long, slow sci-fi film. There's nothing else on." He sat and watched it with me. By the end, we just turned to one another, utterly dumbfounded.
I think it was the first film I really bonded with my dad over. We would go see it every time it came to repertory theaters. There's nothing in this world like Blade Runner on the big screen.
These days, the slow pace feels like such a treat. I love films that transport me to fictional worlds, but Blade Runner feels like a proper visit. You can really settle into its world. While most of these modern films, with their frantic pace, seem more like a layover at best.
Someone on a UA-cam channel I can no longer find said something really profound about this speech. He pointed out that the speech eluded to the lore of the greater Blade Runner world, wars being fought by replicants in space in the service of, in all likelihood, rival corporations. And yet, he found that, unlike Star Wars or Star Trek or Alien, and dozens of other fan-favorite sci-fi and fantasy worlds, Blade Runner's lore is particularly sparse. What the hell is a C-beam? What even is Tannhauser Gate? This speech is the first we've heard of it. But we can infer that thousands and thousands of replicants died in space, fighting wars that no one knows about, as slaves. Died, and were forgotten, like Roy.
So this is a film about erasure, about what it is to have one's humanness denied, one's history scrubbed from memory. Roy chooses to spare Deckard because he wants a witness; someone, anyone, even an enemy. He could have killed Deckard, and then died alone, with no one to see that he was more than just a malfunctioning machine. It occurs to me that, until Roy saved Deckard's life, he maybe didn't even know he was going to do that. It was a very human impulse.
All over the world, I see people denying one another's humanity, dismissing people of other religions, races, skin colors, sexual or gender identities, even taste in movies (looking at you, Snyder-cut people, and people who crap on Snyder stans too). And not just dismissing their choices or their cultures or whatever. It seems like such a short leap to denying people's humanity, as though one difference, one disagreement, disqualifies them from the human race. I don't think Blade Runner was ever about A.I.. It's about us, about how eager we are to deny people's humanity, so we can feel guiltless in exploiting them, or just ignoring their suffering. It's about how easily we assume that the oppressed people are the problem, and not the victim of the problem. And how hard it is to turn the situation around and see it from the point of the view of the person being vilified.
Blade Runner's greatest accomplishment as a story is how well it does that, how it uses our tendency to assume that antagonists are always in the wrong, and that the protagonist's "win" is their defeat. Blade Runner smashes us against that assumption, showing us how our assumptions make us complicit. It happens right here, in this simple, heartbreakingly beautiful speech.
That, to me, is why this is the greatest monologue in film history. It's a reminder that there are no enemies, no replicants, no "them." There's only us humans, and the cruelty we commit against one another.
Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts here.
Beautifully put, fella. :)
hell, yeah, friend. good perspective.
Very deep and loving point of view. Thanks for sharing
If these are your own thoughts then that was very profound, thank you.
Every time I hear this, it breaks my heart 💔
I was 14 years old on June 26th 1982 when I got dropped off at the theatre with some friends to see this movie. When it ended I felt like a different person. It has been my favorite movie and this speech has been my fave moment in entertainment ever since. Then we went and watched the Thing 1982. It was a good movie day.
Man, I'm so jealous of you for having the chance of living a day like that.
@@gabrielbarrera6112 it was glorious:)
Likewise.....21 when I saw BR.
Moved me and I have never forgotten Roy's words.
1982…une année extraordinaire pour le cinéma et la SF
The same happened for me! I was 12 when I saw this mind expanding film. It was so different and interesting for its time. Dark and moody
This one scene has stayed in my head my entire life.
That would be the definition of a good story - to stay with, or even become, you. Or part of you.
One of the greatest movies ever made. Tears in Rain is one of the most poignantly deep pieces of work I've ever heard. It speaks to all of us on so many levels. Thank you, Rutger, for your words.
They weren’t his words. They were the words of the scriptwriter.
Its a crap movie... and this comes from a SF fan. Too many mistakes in the movie. The plot was good and some acting.
A great monologue does not make the film great, sorry.
@@MrCostaC Wrong you are.
The original monologue as written was at least four times longer.
Rutger Hauer saw it as ungainly and overly long, so he "put a knife in it," as he said, rewriting it himself the night before they shot the final rooftop scene,not telling Ridley Scott of his unplanned edit.
When they completed the shoot, the entire film crew themselves cried a little, so moved they were by the shorter and much more eloquent version that Rutger Hauer had delivered.
@@pehash What do you see as the mistakes?
@@stuartb6827 i can't remember all, but one of them that comes to mind is towards the end, the scene with the last replicant its on top of the building, but after he dies and the police comes, they show it at street level.
I'm getting those final words on my tombstone. The whole movie is beautiful.
All those moments will be lost, in time, like... tears...in the rain.
The comparision and the Vangelis music makes the scene unique and immortal.
Wonderful. 😢
Blade Runner is true work of art. One of my favourite movies ever.
So proud of Rutger Hauer. Great talent from our small country.
I met Rutger shortly after this film and he was such a kind guy.
I watched this with my son a few days ago. I wept like a baby. I first watched it with my late father, he got upset watching it. It's not dying, we fear, it's being lost forever, becoming without memory to anything. Just like I will and those who I followed and who will follow me. My late father is gone, as I will be one day. From ashes to ashes, dust to dust. We have all been a lot longer dead than we have been alive. We all go the same way. Somewhat incredible, somewhat tragic.
@liamhemmings9039 I simply do not care what I leave behind, I too have seen and done things most people have never done in my life. I have suffered for this. I don't care about death and what I leave. Only my type of dying worries me.
Perhaps....but consider. I have come to believe Ridley Scott is, at the least, an agnostic and so doing fares no better the poor Roy. That is a shame.
@@mikebohannon8101Are you saying there's something wrong with being agnostic?
@@mikebohannon8101Did you not get the memo that religion is all man made or something?
@@mikebohannon8101Did you not get the memo that religion is all man made or something?
My uncle Michael told me that him and my dad used to drop LSD and go see this masterpiece in the Theater when it was out new, my dad John lost his life in a car accident a few months later. Absorb as much as you can and love as much as you can, become the main character and make it to the final scene my friends.
Saw this when it first came out in Chicago. Opening night. Up visiting family. Stoned out of my mind. Blow away then and still one of my all time favorite movies and scenes. Can’t remember the year, I’m in my 70’s now. Did it come out in the 70’s or early 80’s. No matter. Have always loved sci-fi. So much closer to reality than anything else except for maybe comedy. LOL
Main character syndrome is a very bad trait in modern ppl
@@iHaveTheDocumentsWhat are you talking about, every human is the main character from their own perspective, and even if you think your the main and everyone else is a side character what's wrong with that. Should you believe you're an NPC that just sounds sad why would you want to be a side character or see yourself that way it's insane, if you see yourself as just a part of someone else's story then fine you're an underling you are an NPC in my story, and that's what you like.
@@aleksam1504 We're all distortions of the same being, that's what I believe. God made us equally, and we all carry the same potency so yes. Everyone is the main character
My dad once crossed a road on LSD and almost got hit by a truck.
Lay off the mind foggy drugs will ya?
"Tears in Rain" always brings tears to myself. Yet, this exact moment in cinema history will forever be remembered. Thanks for the good memories, Rutger Hauer! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
It makes me cry everytime 😢
The more time passes, the greater this film becomes - a true gem, a real work of artistry and illumination - and it touches the heart in a deeply sublime way that lasts for years
This monologue is sublime, made even more so by Vangelis's poignant score.
yeah some credit has to be given for this absolutely perfect moment in the score
Yes, yes, the score by Vangelis. That makes the movie feel alive, a heartbeat. So beautiful
Rutger Hauer a great Dutch actor delivers a very powerful end scene, with very few equals in cinema
I recall watching this as a 9 year old when it was released on VHS way back in '83 and it has remained one of my most favorite films. Rutgers monologue hits me in the feels every time.
The way Roy knowingly yet apprehensively looks at Deckard when he says “like tears, in rain” is an admittance to Deckard that he is crying, but Deckard cannot see the tears. They are lost in the rain.
Roy has realized his own existence
enough, gained is own humanity enough, to not jut be angry but to be sorrowful that it is ending.
I've always seen that a bit differently. I see it as Roy being quite chuffed with himself at the metaphor. He's proud of his final words. It's a kind of wry smile - hey, look what I did there.
@@sallybell9548 I think it's actually both. He's feeling his own tears and comes up with the metaphor on the spot. He's still a big child at heart so these emotional experiences are overwhelming for him and he's living (and dying) to the fullest inside of each second.
I can never watch this and not shed those tears. Saw this at the theater. 40 years later, i measure myself with this as my yardstick. The rain never ends...
My favorite scene in a movie. I reference it often. Thanks for highlighting it!
thanks for bringing attention to this moment. remember Rutger Hauer...
Such a profound monologue! Roy's message resonates deeply with us all. RIP Rutger Hauer. 🙌
After his entire performance in Blade Runner, and this beautiful scene in particular, l could never understand why Rutger Hauer wasn't catapulted into the top ranks of movie stars. I mean, he has always had plenty of work since then but I'm not sure he ever got to participate in very many true masterpieces of film following this performance.
Being a Dutch actor (goat there ) with even the faintest of accents makes one suspect in hollywood . Arnie and even Jean claude got away with murder (pun intended) because they were action heroes
But for Rutger, a truly great actor , it was all or nothing , and he had to settle for many action films as well, despite being a triple A actor , in contrast to Arnie. European Hollywood stories are complex . Anglo saxons world tends to revolve around it's own sun
What might have saved rutger could've been being picked up by someone like David Lynch , I will never understand why this combination didn't happen in that era . Could've been special for the ages
Because he wasn't corrupted enough for Hollywood
I liked him in the roles he got. The Blood of Heroes for example.
@@stupidburp: That was pretty good. He did great in "Nighthawks" (1981) with Sylvester Stallone.👍
@@stupidburp Blood of Heroes is grossly overlooked and underrated ... it should be regarded on the same level as Mad Max as far as excellent post-apocalyptic movies goes
I've been battling PTSD for over a decade now. It has robbed me of a life...of being able to see light. This scene really gets to me. It expresses exactly how I feel
Really hope you can make progress with getting your life back!
I really hope you heal. And I'm sorry you're having these battles.
@@tardis11111 thank you, but I don't think I can anymore
Thank you for your kind words
@@macbuff81I understand! I do hope you have been able to access help and support, I'm very sorry you're having to deal with this.
Great catch on the 5 stages of grief, love this movie and have seen it more than any other, and am still learning new things
When I'm struggling especially hard, I watch this scene from Blade Runner. Over and over. It brings me peace. As Tom Hanks said in The Green Mile, "time takes it all, whether you want it to or not." This speech by Rutger Hauer reminds the viewer that time comes for it all. Everything we hold dear, everything we see, whether we want it to, or not, time takes it all. The only thing we can do is recognize our moments, and understand that like us, they too, will be lost in time. Like tears.. in rain.
RIP Rutger Hauer - one of my favorite actors
One of my favorite scenes in cinema, so much to unpack.
Completely agree. First saw this as a kid andq it had a profound effect.even then.
42 words….in hitchhikers guide to the galaxy..a computer is asked ….what is the meaning of life?…the answer is..42….is this a coincidence?
Is it a coincidence that it’s a coincidence?
Ascii 42 is a * . Which means anything you want it to be
It was in his Eulogy because it was Rutger his absolute favorite role, He is dearly missed, I am fortunate to have known him, He was a true gentleman and a fantastic actor
This moves me to no end. RIP Rutger, he was a fantastic actor.
The perfect scene. This is what sci fi should be about. Too bad current films negates this substantive discovery aspect of the human condition.
I fist saw this movie as a teenager. My brother had sent me the VHS by post, telling me I had to watch it... This, for me was the crowning scene of the whole film. The teenage me was completely mesmerised. Today, as I approach my own twilight years and watch my daughters grow, this scene hits harder than ever.
When I saw this movie in the 80’s I couldn’t wait to tell my co-workers the next day I’d just seen the best movie final scene ever created. I tried to describe it and what it felt like to witness it. The power and purpose of Roy’s actions pulled me to edge of that building and the edge between life and death as surely as if I was actually there. I’m sure my feeble efforts were mostly for naught but some things are too valuable to keep to ourselves. Pass it on.
Roy's 42 words - the answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything
This monologue I'd one of the reasons I love this movie so much, I still can't stop thinking about it.
It's also one of few moments in movies that make me cry.
Well said. One of my favourite ever movies and favourite ever monologues. That said, these violent delights have violent ends..
Yeah that is truly great too!
This is my favorite scene from my favorite movie, even more so now, I recently turned 60 and 2 days later went into cardiac arrest and required 20 minutes of cpr, and woke up from an induced coma in the hospital, then less than two weeks ago I underwent open heart surgery to replace my Aortic valve, watching this again now makes it even more poignant and has me in very visible tears.
I never thought about this movie from this perspective and it's one of my favorite movies. Thank you
I loved your perspective on this beautiful scene. Forty years on, it still manages to stir the saddest yet best part of me.
One day when I was 14, my Dad took me out to the middle of nowhere and showed me how to fire a powerful hand gun. After 3 rounds all I could think of was how ethereal and fragile human life really is. A minute motion of an index finger can destroy a lifetime of experiences and emotions as well as creating crippling emotional voids in those who shared that life. Never held a gun since and i try very hard not to judge others. In the end we only get one chance at it. Great analogy from a brilliant movie.
I always tear up watching Roy give his final words.
I remember watchi g this movie when I was like 10, and even though I didnt understand a lot of the movie, I understood what he felt and what this scene meant. Incredible.
Tears in Rain inspired me to write the one part of my short story Bosun's Journal which ended up moving readers to tears.
Every tear shed over a story is a badge of honor for its author. And for me, it's thanks to this one scene. What an amazing scene. What an amazing movie.
Where can we read your story?
@@KutWrite Until I get around to properly set up my website, only on Reddit. And because UA-cam hates links, just google Bosun's Journal, the TVTropes page should be the first result, quickly followed by the posts themselves.
I suggest to start with the first entry for the full experience.
Share your story mate.
Yes, I would also love to read your short story :)
I don't want to read your story
I thought so too. From the first time I ever saw that scene, and the hundreds of times I've watched it since. You don't get that from the book. What a great movie.
Saw it firstly at 17. Its a lifetime masterpiece. Even then knew it was a hidden gem
Rutger Hauer remained one of my favorite actors ever after this movie. Horridly underappreciated. That "greatest monologue" was actually written by Rutger Hauer himself!
No it wasn’t. Stop spreading this misinformation.
@@MrCostaC I see, so Rutger Hauer and Ridley Scott are both liars, and we should listen to you instead.
@@MrCostaC There's a Rotten Tomatoes interview with Ridley Scott who says Rutger wrote it, but not the last 3 words. ua-cam.com/video/uPUIDHQv8rM/v-deo.html
Agree. I had no idea that Rutger Hauer penned this. This monologue still brings tears to my eyes 41 years later, it true it sums all of it up in 42 words. Thank you for making and posting this video.
It’s the way he says “moments” that gets me every time. Like he’s realising the implication as he’s saying it. That’s all we ever really have, in the end: moments.
My all time favorite line. Glad others share the sentiment
It's hope, despair and wanting all at the same time.. and said by a replicant, humanoid, part robotics, just think about that.
Such a great memorable line. It's a moment you just savour.
The most beautiful moment in the context of this speech is when Roy protects Deckard and doesn't let Deckard vanish like a falling tear in the rain. Deckard is the remembrance of Roy that will live on. It's a beautiful scene.
This was an outstanding scene.
I cry every time I see this. In fact I tear up every time I even think about it; absolutely stunningly beautiful 🥹
All those moments... will be lost in time, like tears, in the rain
Sometimes I'll watch things, like this, intentionally to feel sad because I like to feel something good or bad. The odds of me being here are almost non existent, so to feel emotional is a blessing I can never fully understand but be forever thankfull for
When I first watched Blade Runner, this monologue sent shivers down my spine that no other film had done! To later find out that it was written by Rutger Hauer himself made it all the more impactful!
It is the greatest monologue in cinema!
I have to agree. The most meaningful monologue in film 🎥 history
It is a superb scene indeed. Momento Mori in a nutshell, embodied by the incredible Rutger Hauer in his most memorable role.
carpe diem, for shiz
Yes, strongly agree.
The video game Homeworld 2 has a scenario named Tanhauser Gate as a tribute to this movie. I would also like to point out Vangelis' score in this scene.
TRULY the best monologue - period! I can relate totally to this and probably my ending. I have loved and lost a couple of times and as i come to the end of my days I am alone, there is no one left, only me. All i was, did and achieved will be forgotten. There will be no one shedding tears over me it will all wash away - like tears in rain as I go back to the earth. So UTTERLY and uniquely powerful - I have realised I will be at peace like Roy..........I always watch this alone and it does bring tears but also a calm as to what is to come and how it will end.
Rutgers/Roy Batty's words were touching especially after saving his nemesis from a certain death you feel and see the compassion he has for life and the passion of wanting more life , these words easily apply to us we each have seen things in our lives unique only to ourselves that will mostly be lost "like tears in the rain"
The whole film is a masterpiece. And the soundtrack is the most beautiful thing.
Vangelis??
It is my mantra, this capped the off the best film ever made. It is so so deep and life affirming. As for Vangelis, just a perfect combination. I just love it beyond words.
SO BEAUTIFUL.
Rutger Hauer played the part beautifully, with subtle menace and sad tragic hope. I’ve always loved that scene like many and it is probably the scene that makes Bladerunner the film it is..
I just brought this up to my therapist the other day. Greatest lines Rutger ever spoke
One of my favorite bands from NJ, Sticks and Stones, sampled this and it has always stuck with me. Sadly, Peter (singer) passed on in 2021 but this film and this quote (as well as his life and legacy) has always resonated with me.
"Fiery the Angels rose & as they rose deep thunder roll'd Around their shores: indignant burning with the fires of Orc."
-William Blake
This movie and this scene have always been epic. Don't think any other actor could have pulled off playing Roy other than the great Rutger Hauer.
I agree, he should have gotten an Oscar for this shoot.
This scene in particular was the best hands down scene that makes the audience that pays attention question themselves. it was beautiful
Born as a replicant, died as a true Human. This scene will always be my favorite and will always remind me that one day everything we know and care about will be lost like tears in rain and all we can do is live life to the fullest and make everything worth it.
Those who burn twice as bright - Burn half as long,,,,,,,,,
Rutger Hauer once talked to me about this monologue. It was 2007 and I was participant in the Rutger Hauer Film Factory course that he set up in Rotterdam. We were making short films in a 4 day course, one of them being some rainy night scene inside a car on a dark film set with artificial rain equipment which made the mood match this Blade Runner scene to some degree. Because I was attending the course as an editor I didn't have anything to do during shooting so I decided to film a sort of second angle with a DV camera. In between takes Rutger once suddenly came up to my camera and did some weird over the top Marlon Brando style madness which was quite funny but didn't really fit in the story of the thing we were shooting so it was left out. Later during that shoot, out of the blue he started talking to me about having created some lines of text in his Blade Runner monologue the night before the shoot and how Ridley Scott liked it so much he kept it in. At the time I didn't know the film well enough to remember the scene exactly and put his words in perspective, and although I did realize what he was telling me was probably important I felt quite stupid because I was unable to respond properly. The course was in english but at that moment he was speaking to me in dutch and I probably said something like "wow cool", which is the same mediocre reply in both languages.
Mooi verhaal! Blade Runner is of course based on the work of Philip K. Dick, whose 2 main themes in his science fiction were "what is real" and "what is human." Philip K. Dick toiled in near poverty until right before his death, when he finally made some real money selling the movie rights to "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" He died right before he could see Blade Runner. Movies & TV shows based on his work have subsequently made billions of dollars. His estate sued the makers of "Adjustment Bureau" when it was discovered (allegedly) that the source material was actually in the public domain.
When I saw this movie I was moved by these words and am reminded of the ephemeral nature of life and that for most of us in a generation or two the memory of our lives will disappear
Blade Runner is my favourite film of all time, and for very good reason: it's sheer perfection and never ceases to amaze, no matter how many times I've watched it over the decades. Furthermore, it's all topped off by an outstanding musical score that only the talents of Vangelis could envision. This film easily surpasses greatness - it's pure art in motion, and a philosophical lesson to us all. It's a masterpiece on every level.
Profound. Genuinely profound. There’s no other way to describe it. To encapsulate the fear of death and the unknown, to explain our fleeting existence so simply and beautifully. Just a wonderful piece of film.
The cinematography in this scene is brilliant as well. Roy, against the warm illumination of the neon lights, the life bustling about below, but his face is lit in shadow with a cold blue highlight, perhaps alluding to his synthetic existence.
Rick, against the darkness of the brick and metal, but his face lit in such a way as to accent his humanity.
I love to find gems like this made by relatively small UA-camrs.
Congrats, amazing video!
If you forget me
I want you to know
one thing.
You know how this is:
if I look
at the crystal moon, at the red branch
of the slow autumn at my window,
if I touch
near the fire
the impalpable ash
or the wrinkled body of the log,
everything carries me to you,
as if everything that exists,
aromas, light, metals,
were little boats
that sail
toward those isles of yours that wait for me.
Well, now,
if little by little you stop loving me
I shall stop loving you little by little.
If suddenly
you forget me
do not look for me,
for I shall already have forgotten you.
If you think it long and mad,
the wind of banners
that passes through my life,
and you decide
to leave me at the shore
of the heart where I have roots,
remember
that on that day,
at that hour,
I shall lift my arms
and my roots will set off
to seek another land.
But
if each day,
each hour,
you feel that you are destined for me
with implacable sweetness,
if each day a flower
climbs up to your lips to seek me,
ah my love, ah my own,
in me all that fire is repeated,
in me nothing is extinguished or forgotten,
my love feeds on your love, beloved,
and as long as you live it will be in your arms
without leaving mine.
RIP Rutger Hauer
This movie was so great and will be always one of the best movies ever just as I hold princess bride at the same level and I cant say for sure others then thees two movies that are just so great this one far more serious. But as far as movies go this and princesss bride for me are in my top spots.
I've always remember this scene in this movie it makes you think about your life and you want it to have meaning you want to make memories and not waste time
And with the technologies we now have in film. We have still never seen "attack ships on fire, off the shoulder of orion"
This analysis deserves a lot more views.
Grateful for this being something we can all identify. I was always drawn to the mechanics comment about "the candle that burns twice as bright burns half as long ". It shows the replicant has a constructed purpose and the evident and uncompromising expiration. To put it in our terms is an unthinkable crisis. If life means so much why do we make such horrible choices, cause so much grief, try to get away from our deepest fears? Thanks for this evidence, that is Ridley Scott and Rutger Hauer gave us something more than science fiction.
I cannot tell you how many times I’ve said this. Mr. Hauer adding his own voice and interpretation was genius.
Watched film when it came out first, I was mesmerized, 40 odd years later I still am.
Life is a collection of memory’s, a lot being the people you were with and knew, but passed on, termination is real for us too..
I don't know if it's the greatest monologue in cinema history but it's incredibly moving and always makes me cry
Equating Roy to a 4 year old child hit me in a way that I can not put into words.
I've always loved this monologue but imagining a young child say something so profound and tragic just hurts in such a unique and interesting way.
In his last moments, he loves life and freedom so much that he lets Deckard live, and the dove, which is of course highly symbolic but so subtly so in this masterful scene.