Blade Runner director Ridley Scott wants to continue the seminal sci-fi series after 2017's Blade Runner 2049 with a Blade Runner 3. If “Blade Runner 2049” fares well at the box office, and really connects with a modern audience, that would undoubtedly mean sequels.But what are the chances that a “Blade Runner 3” will actually happen? I had an old idea that I liked, and I might play with that and see what everybody thinks. Ridley Scott Has Plans for Blade Runner 3 Kevin Burwick Jan 8, 2018. It was a really big challenge, and I understood that everybody was thinking the same: ‘Just to do a follow-up to the first one was such a huge challenge.”That’s when he added, “Of course if the movie is well received, then I would easily bet that they would do another one. I’ve got another one ready to evolve and be developed, so there is certainly one to be done for sure.”It’s no secret that Scott had some separation anxiety with “I sit with writers for an inordinate amount of time and I will not take credit, because it means I’ve got to sit there with a tape recorder while we talk. But I have a notion about Deckard going on. There was never any intention, or I never had pressure to think what is coming next. It would take him to another country.”Meanwhile, Harrison Ford, the man who has played Rick Deckard in both “Blade Runner” films, teased that if the story was right he’d return for a third installment. • Rick Deckard, a former bounty hunter, now working as a film consultant If “Blade Runner 2049” fares well at the box office, and really connects with a modern audience, that would undoubtedly mean sequels. I think there is another story. While out promoting Blade Runner 2049 director Denis Villeneuve has repeatedly made it clear just how much of an influence Ridley Scott’s 1982 original was on his follow-up. A third Blade Runner movie is as inevitable as the robot revolution If Ridley Scott’s film can get a triumphant sequel after more than three decades, a box-office fizzle won’t stop the series. I’m not in that end of the business. For this time it is a one off movie.”Hampton Fancher, who wrote the original film and “Blade Runner 2049”, then went on to admit to me that he already has the perfect idea for another sequel set aside, teasing that, rather than taking Rick Deckard off the planet, he’d want to see the character in a different country.“I don’t have an impulse to take the story off-world.

Behind the Scenes of 'Blade Runner' (1982) (30) 'Blade Runner' (1982) Still Photos (26) 'Blade Runner' (1982) Still Photos (25) The Movies of Ridley Scott (3) Harrison Ford Through the Years (3) The 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Cast Through the Years (2) Kick-Ass Women of Sci-Fi (2) Sci-Fi Movies and TV Shows Based on Books (1) During my recent interviews with the sequel’s cast and crew I quizzed them about the possibilities of a follow-up, and director Denis Villeneuve was the first to admit that he fully expects another film if “Blade Runner 2049” is a triumph.Villeneuve started off by explaining, “When I jumped on board what really struck me was that it was such a singular movie that had been written as a whole. Just don’t expect him to come up with any ideas or suggestions for it.“That depends on the imagined story. It would involve Deckard in another world, culturally so to speak, other than the USA. But if they came up with something equally as good as this I would be involved.” Directed by Denis Villeneuve.
With Harrison Ford, Ryan Gosling, Ana de Armas, Dave Bautista. The 1982 original was a cult hit that often enters Top 10 lists for the greatest movies ever made.

Young Blade Runner K's discovery of a long-buried secret leads him to track down former Blade Runner Rick Deckard, who's been missing for thirty years. But I have to, because to prove I’m part of the actual process, I have to then have an endless amount [of proof], and I can’t be bothered.”All names, trademarks and images are copyright their respective owners. That’s for people with different talents and responsibilities that I have. Affiliate links used when available. I can’t do that to a good writer. The 80-year-old director keeps piling up potential projects, with news that he’s in talks with Disney to “I hope so. ... and could feasibly be the premise for a whole other movie.
But much has changed in the intervening 35 years between the films, and now the cinematic landscape is dominated by the franchise.So while, like the original, “Blade Runner 2049” still feels like a very singular film, the fact that a studio spent somewhere between $150–185 million on the blockbuster probably means that they want to squeeze as much money as possible out of the potential franchise as they can.