Ditto, I can easily see myself alternating between interpretations each time I watch it based on my mood. Though I think the sappy part of me will always want to gravitate toward K and Luv being genuinely alive with souls and whatnot, lol.
Of course. I had a tear in my eye when Luv stands on the emanator. Till that point, it seemed like Joi had grown beyond her programming and had indeed become more than the sum of her parts. For me, the scene with the big billboard shows that although Joi *seemed* real before, they all had the base code. But i love hearing other interpretations. Just like in the original movie.
Oh yes and here's where your interpretation gets *really* interesting: What type of being is Deckard's daughter in your mind (I was going to call her Ana since that's her name in the film but didn't want to confuse her with Joi actress Ana de Armis.) Is she half-human/half-replicant to you or do you subscribe to the notion that Deckard was a replicant thus making Ana 100% artificial? K is under the impression that beings who are "born" inheritly have souls, do you agree and thus consider Ana as having a soul on that basis alone? Or does her human half (if you allow for Deckard to be one as I do) override her artificial half and automatically provide a soul to her entire being?
That is indeed quite the question. And probably is the central question of the whole movie.
My interpretation is(And has always been), that Deckard *is* a replicant. Just my opinion, based on the unicorn evidence. I have often read your posts on this subject but i am hesitant to engage on the subject, simply because it's a matter of opinion, and i don't mind having a differing opinion. It makes us all unique after all, but allows us to enjoy different perspectives. I have enjyed reading your reasoning and why you hold your opinion.
In any case, my idea has always been that Deckard is kept in cold storage till replicants get loose(Or worse. They keep sending Deckard after Deckard until all the replicants are dead. We DO hear that there were six, and one got fried, then four get retired. My thinking was always that they sent Deckard, he died killing the first one, then they uncrated another Deckard for the rest). The LAPD don't want to get their hands dirty, or are simply unable to deal with replicants on their own terms, so they send in Deckard. He wakes up in his apartment full of a bunch of old junk(And black and white photos? Seriously, lol?), goes to the sushi vendor and gets his orders. In this instance, Ana would have to be a child of two replicants.
I don't see any other explanation for Deckard, not when Gaff knows what his dreams are.
But, i am always willing to hear arguments to the contrary.
So many awesome things to wrap your head around.
Exactly!
It's brilliant.
Or were they though?
If you look at the power of choice in the film, it almost argues the opposite point, that it doesn't matter what were made of, but what we do and decide that makes us human. (Or more human than human).
One of the biggest choices Joi made in the film was to abandon her home box, so if she was lost or broke, essentially she would die. "Like a real girl." This wasn't K's choice but Joi's. Does that mean she has goals of her own? Same with when Joi decides to take his V card, that wasn't K's decision, but Joi's.
So, when K gets hit with a choice at the end, when he's looking at the billboard, and he knows he's not "special", is the billboard fueling his anger and disappointment, or his power of choice? A replicant wouldn't of made all the choices he made. "Dying for the right cause is the most human thing we can do."
I feel that the billboard makes him realise that no matter how real *his* Joi seemed, that it was all programming.
K made his choice. He choose to act on his human instincts and to save Deckard/Anna because it was the right thing to do.
Humans will run into a house on fire to save a baby that they didn't even know because "it's the right thing to do".
Of course.
It all starts with him thinking he could be the child, but ends with him realising who is, and the desire to do the right thing.
And also him realising that it falls to him because he has the means and the ability to reunite Deckard and his daughter.
The way you describe the scene is, ultimately, the way I saw the scene too. But out of all the scenes in the flick, this one is the most interesting, it's much like the Deckard being a replicant thing, it can be interpreted many different ways.
Well said. This, above all else is the reason this is the greatest sequel ever made. It perfectly takes the ideals of the original movie, and expands on them. It takes things to a new level, because far from providing answers, it only leaves you with more questions!!!
It's a work of genius, and it may be some time before we see it's like again.