Nearly 30 years after making the sci-fi cult classic Blade Runner, British director Ridley Scott has agreed to direct a new instalment, the producers said last Thursday.
The new Blade Runner, produced by Alcon Entertainment, will not be a remake but rather a follow-up or a prequel to the original. Scott has yet to decide between the two options, the company said in a statement.
“It would be a gross understatement to say that we are elated Ridley Scott will shepherd this iconic story into a new, exciting direction,” said producers Andrew Kosove and Broderick Johnson.
“We are huge fans of Ridley’s and of the original Blade Runner. This is once in a lifetime project for us,” they added.
No casting decisions have been made as yet, and no release date has been fixed.
Blade Runner – which starred Harrison Ford as a police officer forced out of retirement to hunt for humanoid robots in Los Angeles in 2019 – debuted in US theatres in 1982.
The film originally opened to disappointing box office sales, but over time it became a cult classic.
Three years after Alien, it solidified Scott as a major talent in the science-fiction genre.
The 73-year-old director and producer last year directed Robin Hood, and has just wrapped up work on Prometheus with Charlize Theron, which will come out in 2012.