1982 Box Office Bomb Became a Masterpiece ‘That Changed Cinema Forever'
In 1982, Ridley Scott's Blade Runner flopped at the box office. More than four decades later, it's a sci-fi masterpiece all others are measured against.
Starring Harrison Ford as Rick Deckard, the film follows a "blade runner" cop who's hunting humanoids (called replicants) in a dystopian Los Angeles where the lines between humans and machines are blurred. Pulling in $6 million on opening weekend against a $28 million budget, the director's vision of the future didn't quite connect with audiences. But, oh, the beauty of hindsight.
"Blade Runner initially suffered from a compromised cut featuring a studio-mandated happy ending and voice-over narration by a bored-sounding Ford," Looper writes in an April story about genre-defining sci-fi films. "The film underperformed theatrically, but its reputation rapidly grew among cinephiles for its uniquely stylish, synthesizer-scored world of flying cars, punk cyborgs, and forbidden love."
Adapted from Philip K. Dick's 1968 novel, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, Blade Runner was re-released in 1992 as the Director's Cut and in 2007 as Scott's Final Cut, both of which elevated the film to "greatest" status and "the ultimate cyberpunk film."
In an interview with Total Filmmagazine, per Slash Film, Scott calls his film "a monumental, five-month, day-by-day evolution," adding, "I knew I was making something very, very special."
Widely regarded as the foundation of science fiction and neo-noir cinema, the film is celebrated for its philosophical themes, groundbreaking visuals, and enduring influence. According to Looper, no sci-fi picture that has come after Blade Runner hasn't been influenced by it. Esquire considers it the greatest sci-fi masterpiece of all time. No Film Schoolranks it the No. 1 sci-fi flop that changed the genre forever. And Rolling Stone ranks it the seventh-greatest movie of the 1980s.
"I hadn't seen Blade Runner for 20 years. Really," Scott says. "But I just watched it. And it's not slow. The information coming at you is so original and interesting, talking about biological creations, and mining off-world, which, in those days, they said was silly. I say, 'Go f- yourself."
The sequel,Blade Runner 2049, directed by Denis Villeneuve and starring Ryan Gosling, premiered in October 2017. Again, it underperformed at the box office. But maybe it's just another case of being ahead of its time. We'll check back in 2050.
Related: Box Office Smash Ranked No. 2 ‘Greatest Film of the Century' Took 36 Years to Launch
Copyright 2026 The Arena Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved
This story was originally published April 16, 2026 at 5:31 PM.