Allison LeBel
March 19, 2012
Blade Runner
Philip H. Dick
Pages read: from pg. 200 to End
Chapter 18 opens when Pris wakes up in
Sebastian's apartment. She talks to him about his
strange skin condition,
"Methuselah Syndrome" which makes him age quickly, even though is
only
25. Suddenly, Roy appears. He shares the news
that Zhora and Leon are both retired. Roy
and Pris both reveal to Sebastian
that they are Nexus-6s and they need to get "help" for Pris or
she'll
die. Pris proves to Sebastian that she's artificial by grabbing an egg from
boiling water
and tossing it to Sebastian, who finds it too hot to handle. Roy
notices that Sebastian plays
chess and asks him about his opponent, who is
Tyrell himself. Roy convinces Sebastian to use
his connection to Tyrell to
arrange a personal meeting. Sebastian reluctantly agrees.
Roy and Sebastian go to Tyrell's pyramidal home
and take an elevator to his penthouse.
They are stopped as a security measure
but are allowed to proceed when Sebastian voices
two moves to Tyrell himself
that win the chess match they'd been playing; the move is given to
him by Roy.
In Tyrell's bedchamber, Roy confronts his master, saying specifically he wants
an
extension of his short lifespan and calls Tyrell "father". (In the
1982 Theatrical and 1992
Director's editions, Roy says "fucker" in
place of father.) Tyrell explains that artificial beings like
Roy have been
permanently designed not to live longer than their lifespan and that no known
biological process has yet been able to change that. Roy becomes more
despondent, telling
Tyrell he's done "questionable things". Tyrell
patronizes him, saying he's also accomplished
great things. Roy, still
despondent, first kisses Tyrell, then begins to crush his skull, poking his
thumbs through his master's eyes. Tyrell falls dead and a horrified Sebastian,
unable to
escape, is killed by Roy.
Deckard is seen in his car in the sector where
JF Sebastian lives. He receives a report from
Bryant who tells him that Tyrell
is dead and Sebastian has also been found dead at the same
scene. Deckard
places a call to Sebastian's apartment claiming to be a friend. Pris answers
the call but hangs up. Deckard enters Sebastian's apartment and searches for
evidence or
leads. While doing so, he is surprised by a disguised Pris, who
assaults him using acrobatics.
As she performs a series of back flips to finish
Deckard off, he shoots her through the
abdomen. She twitches violently for a
few moments before Deckard shoots her twice more and
finally kills her.
Deckard is next surprised by Roy, who moves too
fast for Deckard to shoot. Roy stalks
Deckard after discovering that Pris is
dead, seizing Deckard's hand through a wall and
deliberately dislocating and
breaking two of his fingers. Deckard escapes to an upper floor in
the building
but is easily found by Roy, who is already showing signs of his own impending
death - he stabs himself through the hand with a large nail to temporarily
stabilize his condition.
Deckard seizes an opportunity to beat Roy with a large
pipe but cannot incapacitate Roy,
who's superhuman strength is too much for
Deckard. Deckard eventually escapes to the roof
and tries to jump to another
roof across the street. He nearly plummets, hanging on by one
hand. Roy makes
the jump quite easily and peers over the ledge at Deckard, asking him
"Quite
an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a
slave." Deckard slips and Roy
catches him, dragging him to safety. Roy
sits down near him, holding a dove he'd found on the
other roof and tells
Deckard that he's seen more in his short life than most humans would see in
a
full lifetime. Roy is saddened by the idea that all the memories he's acquired
will lost "like
tears in rain." As he finally dies, the dove in his
hand flies off. In the original theatrical version
(1982) the rain has stopped
and the dove flies toward a sunny sky. In the Final Cut (2007) the
rain
continues and the dove flies toward an overcast sky.
Gaff meets Deckard on the roof and throws his
pistol back to him. He congratulates Deckard
on completing his investigation;
Deckard tells him he's officially finished with hunting replicants.
As Gaff
walks away, he yells back "It's too bad she won't live, but then again who
does?",
referring to Rachel.
Deckard returns to his apartment and finds
Rachel, not knowing immediately if she's alive or
dead. Much to his relief, she
wakes up. A few minutes later, she is dressed and Deckard, after
checking the
lobby outside his apartment, motions for her to join him in the elevator. On the
floor of the lobby is a small origami unicorn, left there by Gaff. Deckard
studies it for a moment,
then crushes it in his hand. In the Final Cut and
Director's (1992) editions, the film ends when
the elevator doors close. In the
Theatrical edition, Deckard and Rachel are shown driving into a
mountainous
area and Deckard explains in voiceover that Rachel may have a longer lifespan
than any other Nexus-6.