![]() because I myself kept snakes at one time in fact, I had more than six of them. “One of the aspects of the character that most fascinated me was Zhora’s snake. As she tells Deckard, “You think I’d be working in a place like this if I could afford a real snake?” The snake, incidentally, was her own pet python, named Darling. That means that when we see Zhora (Joanna Cassidy) and her snake, the snake is also artificial. So we changed Rachel’s dialogue to support these things.” Secondly, Sean’s line was changed in order to add credibility to the idea that Tyrell could manufacture perfect imitations of living things - remember, that owl’s the first animal you see in the film. “Sean’s line was relooped in post-production from ‘Of course not’ to ‘Of course it is,'” explains Michael Deeley, “because, first, the owl’s eyes glow in a later scene. Sammon’s book “Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner.” The original screenplay had Rachel answering “Of course it is,” but the line was later changed to”Of course not.” The owl was originally supposed to be real, according to Paul M. He asks her if her owl is artificial and she says, “Of course it is.” And only the rich can afford artificial animals, as we see when Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford) meets Rachael (Sean Young) at the Tyrell Corporation. In the first “Blade Runner,” which is set in 2019, animals are incredibly rare, if not extinct.
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