Blade Runner movie posters from Ridley Scott's 1982 neo-noir masterpiece document one of science fiction's most visually distinctive achievements, with original theatrical material reflecting the film's cyberpunk aesthetic. Ridley Scott's 1982 adaptation of Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? struggled commercially on first release but was reappraised so thoroughly that it now anchors discussions of practically every subsequent science-fiction film. The theatrical campaign produced a range of international formats, many of which capture John Alvin's iconic imagery — the rain-slicked streets, the neon glow, the ambiguous humanity of Harrison Ford's Deckard.
US one-sheets from the 1982 release feature Alvin's futuristic cityscape in cool blues and oranges; the advance version is particularly prized for its minimal, atmospheric design. British quads use a different compositional approach — wider, more panoramic, emphasizing the urban dystopian landscape. Japanese B2 prints deploy yet another interpretation, with a graphic sensibility influenced by anime and manga aesthetics that gives the film a distinctly different visual identity for that market. The 1992 Director's Cut and 2007 Final Cut each generated their own re-release materials, adding further variants for specialist collectors.
Harrison Ford's physical presence anchors every version of the campaign, but the best prints give equal weight to the film's world-building — the Tyrell Corporation towers, the flying cars, the perpetual rain of a future Los Angeles.
Find original theatrical paper alongside Alien posters, The Matrix posters, and Harrison Ford posters. All Film/Art Gallery movie posters and items are authenticated originals.