I've seen people you things wouldn't believe: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{Template:Ext links: Blade Runner}} | |||
=== Social media === | |||
* [https://twitter.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1585365745361616897 Post] @ Twitter (25 October 2022) | * [https://twitter.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1585365745361616897 Post] @ Twitter (25 October 2022) | ||
* [https://twitter.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1395369774738182149 Post] @ Twitter (20 May 2021) | * [https://twitter.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1395369774738182149 Post] @ Twitter (20 May 2021) | ||
* [https://www.facebook.com/GnomonChronicles/posts/2893595597431746 Post] @ Facebook (20 May 2021) | * [https://www.facebook.com/GnomonChronicles/posts/2893595597431746 Post] @ Facebook (20 May 2021) | ||
[[Category:Fiction (nonfiction)]] | [[Category:Fiction (nonfiction)]] |
Revision as of 06:01, 4 June 2023
"I've seen people you things wouldn't believe."
—Roy Batty
In the News
The New Adventures of Delta Dawn is a 1982 American science fiction musical romance film about Delta Dawn, a woman from the twentieth century seeking love in the twenty-first.
"My Wife Left Me For My Dog (While I Was Busking in the Street)" is a song by [REDACTED].
How Uncanny Was My Valley is a 1941 film about the Morgans, a hard-working Welsh mining family on Mars, from the point of view of the youngest child Pkd, who lives with his affectionate and kind parents, and his five brothers, in the Valles Marineris during the early modern era. The story chronicles life in the Martian colonies, the widening gaps between the "Cannies" (human colonists) and the "Uncannies" (android-Martian hybrids), and its effects on the family.
Fiction cross-reference
- Did you step on a butterfly in Texas during a tornado while watching Jurassic Park in Brazil under the influence of JJ-180?
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- How Uncanny Was My Valley
- My Wife Left Me For My Dog
- The New Adventures of Delta Dawn
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- Blade Runner @ Wikipedia
- Blade Runner theatrical trailer @ YouTube
- Blade Runner Opening Scene @ YouTube
- Blade Runner blimp @ YouTube - "A new life awaits you in the Off-world colonies! A chance to begin again in a golden land of opportunity and adventure!"
- Noodle bar @ YouTube
- "I need the old Blade Runner" Scene @ YouTube
- She's a replicant @ YouTube
- Let me tell you about my mother... @ YouTube
- Voight-Kampff Test (HQ) @ YouTube
- Deckard's Unicorn Dream @ YouTube
- Enhance Scene @ YouTube
- Leon Attacks Deckard @ YouTube
- Zhora and Deckard Dressing Room @ YouTube (login required)
- "Retiring" Zhora (1982) @ YouTube
- Blade Runner: J.F. Sebastian's Toys, Kaiser and Bear @ YouTube
- The Prodigal Son @ YouTube
- Shoot straight @ YouTube
- Deckard vs. Batty @ YouTube
- That's the spirit! @ YouTube
- Final scene, "Tears in Rain" Monologue @ YouTube
- She Won't Live, But Who Does? @ YouTube
- Detective Gaff scenes @ YouTube
- Origami Symbolism in Blade Runner @ YouTube
- Let's Enhance @ YouTube - best of
Social media
- 1980s (nonfiction)
- 1982 (nonfiction)
- Blade Runner (nonfiction)
- Joanna Cassidy (nonfiction)
- Michael Deeley (nonfiction)
- Hampton Fancher (nonfiction)
- Films (nonfiction)
- Harrison Ford (nonfiction)
- Rutger Hauer (nonfiction)
- Edward James Olmos (nonfiction)
- David Peoples (nonfiction)
- Roy Batty (nonfiction)
- Science fiction (nonfiction)
- Ridley Scott (nonfiction)
- Joe Turkel (nonfiction)
- Sean Young (nonfiction)
- Vangelis (nonfiction)
- Nonfiction (nonfiction)
- 1960s (nonfiction)
- 1968 (nonfiction)
- Books (nonfiction)
- Philip K. Dick (nonfiction)
- Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (nonfiction)
- Novels (nonfiction)
- Fiction (nonfiction)
- Puppets (nonfiction)