Duration 2:39

Blade Runner 2049 Hologram love Scene. Joi and Mariette sync (Ana de Armas Best Scenes)

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Published 20 Jul 2020

Blade Runner 2049' is the Best Cyberpunk Film Since. Actress Ana De Armas sync Joi as “K’s love and only friend”. Joi who seems to ‘genuinely’ care for Kay, hires a replicant loves worker Mariette. During their encounter Joi’s image is sync on Mariette (Mackenzie Davis). Joi sync herself with Mariette's body, making it appear as if Kay was making love to Joi. As Joi’s (Ana De Armas) features merge with Mariette’s — the computer program doing its best to mimic the movements of a physical body—the effect is fascinating and creepy and intimate, merging the features of the two actresses together, with subtle but unsettling breaks in the projection. One night Joi, Kay hologram lover, paid Mariette to spend the night with Kay while Joi synchronized herself with Mariette's body, making it appear as if Kay was making love to Joi. When Joi (Ana De Armas) syncs with Mariette and is intimate with K, what is the nature of that link? Is it purely cosmetic - Joi following Mariette's movements like some kind of mocap? Or is Joi "driving?" And if so, how is that taking place? There's no direct onscreen evidence for a deeper (cybernetic?) link, but there are clues here and there that seem to point that way. An important metric, as a self-proclaimed cyberpunk, is that the film would be true to the essence of the genre. Blade Runner 2049 more than simply displaying the trappings of cyberpunk aesthetics, is cyberpunk on the nose, but more than that, it is a matured and an evolved form of the genre. Visually, the movie is brought up to date, but not at the expense of narrative. The visuals are true to modern cyberpunk visual style, but also hold meaning within the story itself. The themes are matured forms of ideas presented in the genre and in the philosophy that influenced cyberpunk itself. Even so, the film manages to not come off as heavy-handed. The high tech doesn’t gloss over the low life aspects of the world, which is still full of prejudice, uncertainty, and monotony. The highly anticipated Blade Runner 2049 has arrived. As the sequel to one of the most well-regarded science fiction movies of all time, and arguably one of the best movies period, I set my expectations high, to say the least. Blade Runner 2049 came in the wake of the live-action adaptation of Ghost in the Shell, another of the must-see cyberpunk canon, but unlike the abomination that was Rupert Sanders’ treatment of a cyberpunk classic, Denis Villeneuve actually met those expectations. If you can’t tell from the trailers, Blade Runner 2049 is visually stunning. It has a cyberpunk visual style more inspired by the modern era than by the 80s look of Ridley Scott’s vision. The philosophical themes that were chosen to be explored in Blade Runner 2049, such as identity within a manufactured reality, finding meaning within this space, the relationship of labor to freedom, isolation, and authenticity, are a perfect extension of ideas presented in Blade Runner and in cyberpunk media as a whole. In this sci fi movie the story opens in 2049, thirty years after the events of the first film. An on-screen text states that the Tyrell Corporation has collapsed decades before, in the wake of revolts involving their Nexus-6 through -8 Replicants, forcing the company into bankruptcy. World's ecosystems collapsed in the mid 2020s. With his invention of synthetic farming, a wealthy businessman named Niander Wallace (Jared Leto) ended food shortages and acquired Tyrell's remaining assets to form his own corporation. The Wallace Company has reinvigorated the Replicant industry by mass producing the Nexus-9 Replicants, a new generation of artificial humans with modified behavior to make them more obedient than the older models. These Replicants have implanted memories and open-ended lifespans, and are still used for slave labor on the off-world colonies (the Moon, Mars, and the moons of Jupiter, Saturn, etc.), but some are also used as Blade Runner units, hunting down and "retiring" the few remaining older model Replicants that are still at large. Blade Runner 2049 Joi and Mariette sync. Hologram love Scene Director: Denis Villeneuve Writers: Hampton Fancher (screenplay by), Michael Green (screenplay by) Cast: Ryan Gosling, Dave Bautista, Robin Wright, Mark Arnold, Vilma Szécsi, Ana de Armas, Wood Harris, David Dastmalchian, Tómas Lemarquis, Edward James Olmos, Jared Leto, Harrison Ford, Lennie James Production Companies Alcon Entertainment lcon Entertainment Columbia Pictures Sony Torridon Films 16:14 Entertainment Scott Free Productions Babieka (Production Service: Spain) Thunderbird Entertainment (as Thunderbird Films) #bladerunner #cyberpunk #cyberpunkscene #bladerunner2049 #2049scene #cyberpunkmoviescene #cyberpunkvisualstyle Twitter: @Recall37066525

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