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    Movie Review

    Blade Runner 2049 honors original and opens up new territory

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 5, 2017 | 3:30 pm
    Blade Runner 2049 honors original and opens up new territory
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    Truth be told, the original Blade Runner has always been a little out of reach for me. I was too young to see it when it came out in 1982, and watching it years later, it felt too esoteric for me to fully understand its popularity. I could appreciate the beauty of Ridley Scott’s direction and the cinematography by Jordan Cronenweth, but the story itself always left me cold.

    Suffice it to say, I am not the prime audience for the sequel 35 years in the making, Blade Runner 2049. And yet, for most of its running time, I found myself intrigued by what it had to offer. Set 30 years after the events of the first film, a new Blade Runner named K (Ryan Gosling) is in charge of hunting down older model Nexus-8 replicants, aka artificial beings, and “retiring” them.

    A run-in with one particular replicant starts a chain reaction of events that leads K to questioning his entire existence. While carrying out missions for his boss, Lieutenant Joshi (Robin Wright), K also tries to solve this new personal mystery. His searching puts him in the orbit of replicant creator Niander Wallace (Jared Leto) and his relentless underling, Luv (Sylvia Hoeks), who pursue him as part of their own nefarious agenda. It also leads him to a certain former Blade Runner named Rick Deckerd (Harrison Ford), who might hold the answers for everybody involved.

    One of the fun debates that arose from the original Blade Runner was whether Deckerd himself was a replicant. No definitive answer has ever been revealed, but, without giving it fully away, director Denis Villenueve and co-writers Hampton Fancher and Michael Green dispense with any mystery regarding K’s status almost immediately. There are so many more interesting things to deal with it's unnecessary to hold that plot twist over the audience’s head.

    Instead, we’re treated to a variety of compelling ideas, most of which can’t be written about without spoiling the movie. What can be said is that the film is more straightforward than the original. It has a mostly linear plotline with only occasional tangents into abstract concepts, so it's much easier to follow.

    This may or may not please Blade Runner purists, who view its complexity as a positive. What will likely please them is the devotion by Villenueve and cinematographer Roger Deakins to the aesthetics of the original film. Their Los Angeles of 2049 is dark, moody, and full of weather (like rain and snow) foreign to the city as we know it. The architecture, layout of the city, and baffling art all help the audience feel immersed in their vision of this future.

    One of the most fun and/or heartbreaking aspects of the new film is K’s relationship with Joi (Ana de Armas), a woman who exists purely as a hologram — and yet so much more. Her existence is both a fascinating and alarming look at how romance may evolve as technology evolves. But her relationship with K is, ironically, one of the most human things in the film, which can throw your mind for a loop.

    Unfortunately, the movie is filled to the brim with plot, which leads to an unwieldy running time of 163 minutes. Some films can make that time commitment fly by, but Blade Runner 2049 only contains sporadic action, remaining contemplative in most scenes. It starts to drag about two hours in, leading to a final act that’s far less exciting than it should be.

    Still, given the number of years between the original and the sequel, Blade Runner 2049 creates a universe that both honors and expands upon the original’s intention. Whether that translates into the same enduring popularity remains to be seen.

    Ryan Gosling in Blade Runner 2049.

    Ryan Gosling in Blade Runner 2049
    Photo by Stephen Vaughan
    Ryan Gosling in Blade Runner 2049.
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    New Theater

    Premieres lead the way in Dallas Theater Center's 2026-27 season

    Alex Bentley
    Mar 27, 2026 | 2:00 pm
    Aigner Mizzelle and Okieriete Onaodowan in the off-Broadway production of The Monsters
    Photo courtesy of Manhattan Theatre Club
    The Monsters, which started off-Broadway, will make its regional premiere as part of Dallas Theater Center's 2026-27 season.

    The 2026-2027 season for Dallas Theater Center will feature six productions, including three world premieres, a regional premiere, a returning favorite, and a to-be-determined sixth production.

    The inaugural season of incoming Enloe/Rose Artistic Director, Jaime Castañeda, will be marked by a renewed commitment to new work at Dallas Theater Center.

    That starts with with the world premieres of three new shows:

    • The Cold War thriller Reykjavik86 by Gabe McKinley, which brings the 1986 nuclear summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev to life on stage. It will be the initial production of the season, running September 11-27, 2026 at Wyly Theatre.
    • The dark comedy musical Kill Local, with a book by Mat Smart and music and lyrics by Liza Anne, is about Sheila and her sister, Abigail, who work together for their mother’s small family business, which just so happens to be assassins. It features killer songs about blood ties, revenge, and how hard it is to get unstuck. It will run March 26-April 11, 2027 in the Wyly Studio Theatre
    • The Making of a Saint by KJ Sanchez is theatrical exploration of faith and family in which KJ, a documentary writer/performer, sets out to understand the story of Sister Blandina, whom KJ's brother is helping to canonize. It will be the final scheduled show of the season, running May 14-June 6, 2027 in the Wyly Studio Theatre.

    Joining them will be the regional premiere of The Monsters by Ngozi Anyanwu, about a scrappy young fighter named Lil who is ready to enter the ring. She reconnects with her brother Big, an accomplished fighter in the local MMA scene and tries to earn his respect.

    The production, which just finished a critically acclaimed Off-Broadway run on March 22, runs October 9-November 1, 2026 in the Wyly Studio Theatre.

    A yet-to-be-named fifth production, which will be announced on June 1, will run February 5-21, 2027 in the Kalita Humphreys Theater.

    All of those productions will be part of the season subscriptions. Dallas Theater Center's annual holiday production of A Christmas Carol, running November 27-December 27, 2026 at Wyly Theatre, can be added on.

    “New work is the engine of the American Theater, and Dallas Theater Center will be a laboratory for artists who have something urgent and honest to express today,” said Enloe/Rose Artistic Director Jaime Castañeda in a statement. "These plays are about the now, and they are events for the stage that are in direct conversation with the audience."

    DTC’s Diane and Hal Brierley Resident Acting Company members will be featured throughout the 2025-26 season, including Christina Austin Lopez, Tiana Kaye Blair, Blake Hackler, Bob Hess, Liz Mikel, Alex Organ, Molly Searcy, Tiffany Solano, Sally Nysteun Vahle, Esteban Vilchez, Zachary J. Willis, and Bri Woods, who is the Linda and Bill Custard SMU Meadows Actor.

    Subscriptions for the 2026-27 season are available now, and can be purchased online at DallasTheaterCenter.org or by calling the DTC Box Office at 214-522-8499.

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