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Of the design philosophies behind Blade Runner's indelible visuals, retrofitting was the one
that remained in my mind's eye. Blade Runner's visual futurist, Syd Mead explains, "Things
are "retrofitted" after the fact of the original manufacture because the old, consumer-based
technology wasn't keeping up the demand. Things have to work on a day-to-day basis and
you do whatever necessary to make it work. So you let go of the style and it becomes pure
function. The whole visual philosophy of the film is based on this social idea.
The city was getting very dense. Buildings 3,000-3,500 feet high would have old, ten and
twenty story buildings underneath, functioning as service accesses to the huge
megastructures. Cables and generator tubes, delivering air and waste, would go up outside of
the old buildings because they were still there. The street level becomes a service alley to the
megastructures towering above."
It was as if the city's underground infrastructure had risen out of the bowels of the Earth to
adorn buildings. Like the roots that sometimes swallow the architecture of ancient civilizations.
It's a seemingly antithetical philosophy for a film of such visual splendor. Yet these purely
functional elements create a convincing reality and atmosphere amidst neon signs, lit
umbrella handles and other alluring lights. At its essence, Blade Runner captures the
photogenic nightlife of dense modern cities and pushes it to new extremes.
"The idea [in Blade Runner] was that basically it was going to be unpleasant to be at street
level in the cities." These unpleasant and retrofitting themes have historical precedent.
Centuries ago, narrow streets in Edinburgh featured tenements seven stories high, the ground
level piled with waste from above. Known as Mary King's Close, the street level was changed
in the 18th century, leaving several stories and residents underground while the City
Chambers building was built above. Even in modern times, new buildings are built atop the
old; recently highlighted by the Hearst Headquarters in New York, designed by Foster +
Partners and Adamson Associates.
The retrofitting philosophy also reflects consumerism, a societal attribute particularly
connected with the excess of the '80's when Blade Runner was made. As Mead stated,
consumer based technology couldn't keep up with demand resulting in jury rigged solutions,
mirroring a problem we will face in the decades to come, as natural resources dwindle and
new products are released at an ever increasing rate. Even now massive aircraft graveyards
litter deserts, waiting to be cannibalized for irreplaceable parts. In the Blade Runner universe
this was precipitated by the massive Off-World exodus as signified by the advertising blimp.
According to Mead, "The social theory was that the consumer delivery system had become
interrupted, and the larger energies in the system were being collected at the top by big
corporate conglomerates and were being syphoned off into off-world explorations. As a result,
the capital delivery system to the populace was short circuited. So if you had a car, you'd just
have to keep it working."
This retrofitted approach was first applied to the most universally remembered design of Blade
Runner, its flying cars or Spinners, a term coined by writer Hampton Fancher. The retrofitting
philosophy even carried over into production as Spinner designer Syd Mead notes, "I set up
the design format for each vehicle type and then let the draftsmen and builders make changes
as they went along... ...we ended up with a curious accumulation of detail, a heuristic growth
of odds and ends that the original concepts didn't include."
In Cinefex 9, July 1982, Director Ridley Scott delved into his thoughts behind the Spinner.
"Anyway, it seemed to me that in such a proscenium there would be a lot of air traffic. I picked
that up from the fact that I used to fly in and out of New York a lot over a period of about five
years, back before they stopped the helicopters landing on top of the Pan American Building.
It was seven minutes from the airport to the roof, and I could remember coming in in January
or February - in blizzards and high winds - and landing on the Pan Am Building. We used to
drift in over the city, very close to the buildings and it felt like the way of the future." "But when
we started working on this film, it seemed logical to me that there'd be a lot of air traffic probably with a hands-off fail-safe system of some sort - and every building would have a
landing platform on its roof. Forty years may be a bit soon for that, but if some had projected
in 1910 - or whenever it was the first Model T was built - that you'd come into the office every
morning with ten thousand other cars driving fifty-five miles an hour, fifteen feet apart, you'd
probably have said, 'You're fuckin' crazy!' So, from there to some future city where the World
Trade Center might be half the size of some other buildings, and where rotorless jump-jet
platforms are on every rooftop, is not terribly far fetched. In fact, it's a totally logical process
the way the world's going now."
Flying cars, the perennial subject of science fiction visions, ironically have yet to be realized
despite a modicum of concerted effort in the area. NASA has committed research into
automated air traffic systems for this purpose and Moller has spent decades developing the
Skycar.
Safety concerns are a primary obstacle, a notion not lost on the Blade Runner design team as
indicated in the Tom Southwell designed faux magazine cover for KILL. One feature story
declares, "98 Dead in Spinner Dive." KILL was among numerous magazines designed to fill a
newsstand set that included MONI and KROTCH.
In Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, author Paul M. Sammon elaborates on the
Spinner design. "Scott had originally conceived of the Spinner as a fairly compact coupe.
However, Mead himself subsequently designed a larger "Chevrolet scale" model, which would
lend itself to visually impressive full-scale takeoffs... ..."Instead of unwieldy folding propellers
or H.G. Wells-like appendages," Mead said, "I suggested designing the Spinner as an
aerodyne, which is a heavier-than-air craft with an internal enclosed lifting system built into it,
like the British Harrier jumpjet."
"In addition to incorporating hydraulic sections which allowed the police Spinner's front wheels
to fold up inside the craft... ...Mead's most unusual Spinner detail was a hydraulic, "twist-wrist"
steering device. The traditional automotive steering wheel was replaced with two in-dash
The 25th anniversary Blade Runner: The Final Cut, is now playing in theaters with continued
rollout into the new year. This restored and enhanced cut is being shown exclusively via 4K
digital projection at the Landmark in LA.
This final cut along with previous versions of the film (theatrical release, director's cut and
workprint), plus extensive extras arrives on DVD, HD-DVD and Blu-Ray in North America,
December 18th.
Excerpts from:
Cinefex #9: Blade Runner - 2020 Foresight. By Don Shay.
Reprinted in 2000 by Titan Books as Blade Runner: The Inside Story.
Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner By Paul M. Sammon.
Blade Runner Souvenir Magazine: Official Collectors Magazine by Ira Friedman, Inc.
Reprinted online at Brmovie.com.
Published at Artect.net