Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner

Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner

Movie |

Behind The Scenes | Making Of

  • :
  • Genre(s): Documentary
  • Language(s): English
  • Director(s): Charles de Lauzirika
  • Cast(s): Sean Young, Ridley Scott, Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, M. Emmet Walsh See all Cast & Crew
  • Duration: 3h 34min
  • Similar To: Untold: The Shooting at Hawthorne Hill, Untold: Chess Mates
  • Story:
    The definitive three-and-a-half hour documentary about the troubled creation and enduring legacy of the science fiction classic "Blade Runner," culled from 80 interviews and hours of never-before-seen outtakes and lost footage.
    Full Story
8.3/10
IMDb

Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner - Where to Stream?

Unfortunately, the movie Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner is not available to stream/stream on any of the streaming platforms in India. It is not available to buy/ rent online on any platforms right now.

Disclaimer: All content and media belong to original content streaming platforms/owners like Netflix, Disney+ Hotstar, Amazon Prime Videos, JioCinema, SonyLIV etc. 91mobiles entertainment does not claim any rights to the content and only aggregate the content along with the service providers links.

Videos: Trailers, Teasers, Featurettes

Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner - Cast

Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner - Crew

Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner - IMAGE GALLERY

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
The definitive three-and-a-half hour documentary about the troubled creation and enduring legacy of the science fiction classic "Blade Runner," culled from 80 interviews and hours of never-before-seen outtakes and lost footage.
Ratings

8.3/10

IMDb

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

This feature-length documentary is featured on the Two-Disc Special Edition, Four-Disc Collector's Edition, and Five-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition (DVD, HD DVD & Blu-Ray) of Blade Runner (1982), all released in December 2007.

For many years, Harrison Ford disliked Blade Runner (1982), and the few comments he made about the film and working with director Ridley Scott were mostly negative. However, he has since contributed to this documentary, stating that he has reconciled with Scott and made his peace with the movie. In fact, Ford says the thing he remembers most is not the grueling shoot or the arguments with Scott, but being forced by executive producers Jerry Perenchio and Bud Yorkin to record voice-overs for the theatrical version, which he hated. For years it has been speculated that Ford, consciously or not, did an uninspired reading of the voice-overs in the hopes they wouldn't be used. However, on this documentary, Ford finally put those rumors to rest, saying that he delivered the voice-overs the best he could, but they were written by "clowns". He also stated that he didn't start to enjoy the movie until those voice-overs were finally removed.

At 1m 31sec, Harrison Ford is in a car and there's no room for a clapper board. He claps his hands to camera instead. Going through this frame by frame, when his hands meet someone has hand drawn a big green cross over the exact frame to mark the point.

Popular Dialogues

"Harrison Ford: It was a bitch."

"Frank Darabont: Thank you for kicking this delicate emotional note we were achieving right in the nuts!"