He also didn't want Rick Deckard in Blade Runner to be a replicant, which has been confirmed by Ridley Scott.
I've heard the behind the scenes stuff on ROTJ since 1983. I think it serves the vision of the films just fine that Han lives, loses his cynical lone wolf act and joins something for the greater good. The character goes on a journey, just like Luke & Leia do.
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"I'm not smart so much as I am not dumb." - Harlan Ellison
No one ever wanted Deckard to be a replicant. Not the original author of the book, not the script writers. Only Scott had that idea based on his interpretation of a piece of voice over in an epilogue that was never shot or used. He kinda superimposed it over the entire movie.
I seem to remember that Ford's glowing eyes moment was accidental (he stepped in the light to make Sean Young's eyes glow). But then unicorn shot makes Deckard a replicant. And Scott got that from his film legend. It's an extremely thin line, it's the director's cut that makes Deckard a replicant, just that one shot of the unicorn. So sure, Ford never knew or played him as such. Which prolly was the whole point.
Hold on. How is Deckard shown he is a replicant in the movie? I have the directors cut, and also watched the theoretical. The ending didn't make sense or seemed ambiguous
It's very simple: he dreams of unicorns. That's impossible from experience because they don't exist. So he has a (prolly implanted) memory of a unicorn. At the end Gaff leaves one of his signature tin foil animals outside Deckard's apartment.... and the animal is: tadaaaa... a unicorn. Gaff must have seen Deckard's file and knows what memories he has. Well, that and the glowing eyes moment in the kitchen with Rachel.
1+1=2 - the Director's Cut (and Final Cut) makes Deckard into a replicant, just as Scott always wanted it.
That's rather amazing because that is the most controversial shot ever since the 1991 Dirsctor's Cut came out. It is THE shot that makes Deckard a replicant.
The studio poured cold water over things in 1982, forcing in that narration by Harrison Ford and the 'happy' ending, flying through the green scenery (why do people live in these cities with green spaces like this?), which actually were outtakes from The Shining! Scott wanted it to end more ambiguously.
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"I'm not smart so much as I am not dumb." - Harlan Ellison
Correct. The interesting thing is that no regular on the movie was present during narration., Ford didn't want to do it and did it badly, hoping they wouldn't use it.... They did... hehehehe