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This actually happened twice that year. While fans were making E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial a massive hit in theaters as a family-friendly sci-fi movie, both The Thing and Blade Runner ended up as box office bombs. Despite this, all three movies are now beloved classics.
Blade Runner Became a Masterpiece After Flopping at the Box Office

In 1979, Ridley Scott proved to be a fantastic director of sci-fi when he released Alien. That sci-fi horror movie ended up as a great success and spawned a successful franchise. Three years later, Scott followed it up with a more cerebral sci-fi movie called Blade Runner, and it ended up as a box office bomb. Blade Runner was a film noir sci-fi movie about a law enforcement officer known as a Blade Runner, who hunted down clones called Replicants when they escaped into society and tried to live an actual life of their own.
Harrison Ford starred as Rick Deckard, the Blade Runner, and he was sent to terminate several Replicants that had returned to Earth illegally, with the final one being a Replicant named Roy Batty (Rutger Hauer). The film had some deep questions about what it means to be human, and what makes a Replicant’s desire to experience life and love so wrong in society. The final moments when Roy Batty explains everything he had seen in his short life were tremendous and made Rick rethink everything he knew about humanity.
However, even with a low $30 million budget, Blade Runner was a disappointment at the box office. With the director of Alien and one of the stars of Star Wars involved, it was expected to be a hit, but thanks to competition from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, it was buried at the box office.
That said, time was kind to Blade Runner, and it earned a reputation as one of the greatest sci-fi movies ever made. It also remained in the news because the studio kept releasing different versions of the movie on home video, including the Workprint, the International Cut, the Director’s Cut, and finally, the Final Cut. With an 89% Rotten Tomatoes critics score and an even higher 91% from the audience, it clearly deserves its prestigious reputation.









