Sunday, 7 October 2007

Bladerunner and Middlesbrough


Steelworks
Originally uploaded by andy martin [interzone]
Ridley Scott on Bladerunner:
I don't think all directors do, but I certainly draw from personal experience — sometimes I remember things, sometimes it will come out from the back of my head and I'm thinking, I never knew where that came from. And then I can analyze afterwards and realize that's what it was. Funny enough, the beauty in industry, which is probably killing us, but actually nevertheless is beautifully like Hades, is one reason why you start to feel the beauty in the godawful condition of the red horizon and the geysers of filth going into the air. I used to go to art school in West Hartlepool College up in the north of England, which is almost right alongside the Durham steel mills and Imperial Chemical Industries, and the air would smell like toast. Toast is quite nice, but when you realize it's steel, and it's probably particles, it's not very good. But I'm still here. So, you draw back on that. And to walk across that footbridge at night, you'd be walking fundamentally above, on an elevated walk on the steel mill. So you'd be crossing through, sometimes, the smoke and dirt and crap, and you're looking down into the fire. So, things like that are remembered.

See this one too

1 comment:

  1. aww our Ridley.
    I'm from Middlesbrough. and see (what's left of) that beloved industry every day and he's right - it is beautiful, but in the same way, you know it's terrible.
    thats a great interview, thanks for posting it.
    ian

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