| | This article does not cite any references or sources. (October 2006) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. | Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? is a science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick, written in 1966 and published in 1968. It tells of the moral crisis of Rick Deckard, a bounty hunter who stalks androids in a fallout-clouded, partially-deserted future San Francisco. Image File history File links DoAndroidsDreamOfElectricSheep(1stEd). ...
Philip Kindred Dick (December 16, 1928 â March 2, 1982) was an American writer, mostly known for his works of science fiction. ...
The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
Some notable science fiction novels, in alphabetical order by title: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne 2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C. Clarke 334 by Thomas M. Disch An Age by Brian Aldiss The Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton The Atrocity Exhibition by J.G. Ballard...
A publisher is a person or entity which engages in the act of publishing. ...
It has been suggested that The Crime Club be merged into this article or section. ...
Hardcover books A hardcover (or hardback or hardbound) is a book bound with rigid protective covers (typically of cardboard covered with cloth, heavy paper, or sometimes leather). ...
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ISBN redirects here. ...
Blade Runner 2: The Edge of Human (1995) is a novel by K. W. Jeter, and a continuation of both the film Blade Runner and the novel upon which it was based, Philip K. Dicks Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? The book continues the story of Rick Deckard. ...
Science fiction is a form of speculative fiction principally dealing with the impact of imagined science and technology, or both, upon society and persons as individuals. ...
For other uses, see Novel (disambiguation). ...
Philip Kindred Dick (December 16, 1928 â March 2, 1982) was an American writer, mostly known for his works of science fiction. ...
Rick Deckard is the central protaganist and main character in Ridley Scotts 1982 science-fiction film, Blade Runner. ...
For other uses, see Bounty hunter (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see Android (disambiguation). ...
Fallout is the residual radiation hazard from a nuclear explosion, so named because it falls out of the atmosphere into which it is spread during the explosion. ...
This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
Along with The Man in the High Castle, this novel is Dick’s most famous. It is one of the defining science fiction works exploring the ethical dimensions of the "android" concept, as a literary device understanding concepts of persecution based on narrow distinctions, such as ethnicity. The Man in the High Castle is a 1962 alternate history novel by science fiction writer Philip K. Dick. ...
For other uses, see Ethics (disambiguation). ...
Novels and short stories do not simply come from nowhere. ...
Look up Persecution in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
This article or section should be merged with ethnic group Ethnicity is the cultural characteristics that connect a particular group or groups of people to each other. ...
Hampton Fancher and David Webb Peoples loosely adapted the novel into the 1982 film Blade Runner, directed by Ridley Scott and starring Harrison Ford and Rutger Hauer. For this reason some post-1982 editions of the book have been published as Blade Runner. The computer game Blade Runner is set in the same universe as the movie but incorporates many more elements from the book. Hampton Fancher (born July 18, 1938 in Los Angeles, California, USA) was an actor who transitioned into being a producer and screenwriter in the late 1970s. ...
David Webb Peoples (born c. ...
This article is about the 1982 film. ...
Sir Ridley Scott (born November 30, 1937 in South Shields, South Tyneside) is a British film director and producer. ...
For the silent film actor, see Harrison Ford (silent film actor). ...
Rutger Oelsen Hauer (IPA: [rÊtxÉr ulsÉn hÊuÉr]) (born in Breukelen, January 23, 1944) is a Dutch film actor. ...
Blade Runner is a Westwood Studios PC game loosely based on the 1982 movie of the same name. ...
Plot summary
Concepts and back story "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" takes place in 1992 (in later publications, it takes place in 2021) several years after the fallout resulting from "World War Terminus" destroyed much of Earth. In the aftermath, the United Nations encourages people to emigrate to off-world colonies to preserve the human race from the effects of the radioactive dust. One incentive is that each emigrant will receive a custom-built android servant (colloquially referred to as an "andy"). A nuclear holocaust is often associated with World War III For other uses, see World War III (disambiguation). ...
This article is about Earth as a planet. ...
UN redirects here. ...
Artists conception of a space habitat called the Stanford torus, by Don Davis Space colonization (also called space settlement, space humanization, space habitation, etc. ...
It has been suggested that servant (domestic) be merged into this article or section. ...
The people who remain on Earth live in cluttered cities where radiation poisoning causes significant illness and gene damage. All animals are endangered. Owning and caring for an animal is considered a civic virtue and a status symbol, depending on the rarity of the species. Animals are bought and sold according to the price of the latest Sidney's Catalog, including extinct animals (listed as 'E') and animals currently unavailable on the market (listed in italics at the last going price). Some people who cannot afford an animal choose to buy an artificial, robotic animal to maintain social standing. The protagonist Rick Deckard owned a sheep, which died of tetanus and was replaced by an electric replica to maintain the illusion of animal ownership. Radiation poisoning, also called radiation sickness or a creeping dose, is a form of damage to organ tissue due to excessive exposure to ionizing radiation. ...
The Siberian Tiger is a subspecies of tiger that are critically endangered. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Species See text. ...
Tetanus is a medical condition that is characterized by a prolonged contraction of skeletal muscle fibers. ...
Androids are only used on the colony planet of Mars, but many flee to Earth to escape the isolation and to be free of slavery to humans. They are made entirely of organic components and are physically indistinguishable from humans. Bounty hunters, such as Deckard, track down and "retire" fugitive androids posing as humans. A bone marrow test is performed on the body of each retired android to confirm that it is not a human who has been killed. Due to differences in the vagus nerve, an android can commit suicide by holding its breath. An android can only live to about 4 years, since they cannot reproduce many of the cells needed for life function. The vagus nerve (also called pneumogastric nerve or cranial nerve X) is the tenth of twelve paired cranial nerves, and is the only nerve that starts in the brainstem (within the medulla oblongata) and extends, through the jugular foramen, down below the head, to the abdomen. ...
Earlier models of android were easily detectable by their lack of intelligence. With successive improvements, bounty hunters are required to apply tests such as the Voight-Kampff empathy test to differentiate humans from androids. The test measures facial reaction ("blushing") and involuntary tension of the eye muscles in response to emotional triggering questions, most of which involve mention of animal harm. Because androids cannot feel empathy, their responses are either missing or, when faked, measurably slower than those of human beings. The simpler Boneli test measures the speed of the reflex-arc response which takes place in the upper ganglia of the spinal column. Voight-Kampff Originating as a fictional tool in Philip K Dicks novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, the Voight-Kampff machine or device (spelled Voigt-Kampff in the book) also appeared in the books screen adaptation, the 1982 science fiction film Blade Runner. ...
This article is about emotional capacity. ...
The Spinal cord nested in the vertebral column. ...
Another device from the novel is the "Penfield Mood Organ," named for neurologist Wilder Penfield, which induces emotions in its users. The user can dial a setting to obtain a mood. Examples include "awareness of the manifold possibilities of the future," "desire to watch television, no matter what's on it," "pleased acknowledgement of husband's superior wisdom in all matters," and "desire to dial." Many users have a daily schedule of moods. The Mood Organ also has a setting for depression states, which contradict its original purpose to cheer up its user. Dr Wilder Graves Penfield, CC, OM, CMG, MD, FRS (January 25/26, 1891 â April 5, 1976) was a American-born Canadian neurosurgeon. ...
For the apocryphal book of the Bible, see Book of Wisdom. ...
The most significant cultural icon on Earth is Buster Friendly, a jovial talk show host whose simultaneous radio and television programs air 23 hours a day. The character Roy Baty explicitly references him as an android. Buster is seen as competing ideologically with Mercerism, openly attacking it in his programs. A talk show (U.S.) or chat show (Brit. ...
Mercerism Mercerism is a prominent religious/philosophical movement on Earth. The movement is based on the legend of Wilbur Mercer, a man who lived before the war. Adherents of Mercerism grip the handles of an electrically powered empathy box, while viewing a monitor which displays patterns that are meaningless until the handles are gripped. After a short interval the user's senses are transported to the world of Wilbur Mercer, where they inhabit his mind in an experience shared with any other people using an empathy box at that moment. For other uses, see Legend (disambiguation). ...
Mercerism blends the concept of a life-death-rebirth deity with the values of unity and empathy. According to legend, Mercer had the power to revive dead animals, but local officials used radioactive cobalt to nullify the part of his brain where the ability originated. This forced Mercer into the "tomb world." He strives to reverse the decay of the tomb world and ascend back to Earth by climbing an enormous hill. His adversaries throw rocks at him along the way (inflicting actual physical injuries on the adherents "fused" with Mercer), until he reaches the top, when the cycle starts again, much like the plight of Sisyphus. The category life-death-rebirth deity also known as a dying-and-rising god is a convenient means of classifying the many divinities in world mythology who are born, suffer death or an eclipse or other death-like experience, pass a phase in the underworld among the dead, and are...
For other uses, see Cobalt (disambiguation). ...
For the genus of dung beetle, see Sisyphus (beetle). ...
Storyline Deckard, an active bounty hunter for the San Francisco Police Department, prepares for a typical work day. He feeds his electric sheep as usual to prevent his neighbor from suspecting its true nature. Meanwhile, his wife spends her days at home under the influence of the empathy box and mood organ. At the police station Deckard learns that the active senior hunter Dave Holden has been incapacitated by a Nexus-6, the most advanced and humanistic type of android created to date. Deckard is chosen to find the six remaining Nexus-6 models in the San Francisco area. His superior asks him to travel to the Seattle headquarters of the Rosen Association, the makers of the Nexus-6, to confirm that the Voigt-Kampff test will work on the new model. There he meets Rachael Rosen, a sharp-tongued, dark-haired woman who claims to be the company heiress. Seattle redirects here. ...
Rosen is selected as the first test subject, which reveals she is an android. The Rosens inform Deckard that Rachael is in fact a schizoid human which would invalidate the Voigt-Kampff test, requiring a new test to be developed. He administers a last question, testing Rosen’s reaction to a fabric supposedly made from baby hide. Her reaction proves conclusively that she is an android (partly because of a delay in the reaction, but mainly because an ordinary human would not react at all due to the absurdity of such a claim). Schizoid redirects here. ...
Deckard returns to San Francisco to begin his work. After searching the apartment of the first Nexus-6 on his list, Max Polokov, Rachael phones Deckard offering to help with the Nexus-6s, but he dismisses the offer. Deckard meets with W.P.O. agent Sandor Kadalyi from Russia, who turns out to be Polokov. Deckard struggles with Polokov in the cabin of his car, but manages to shoot Polokov in the head with his .38 Magnum while still in its shoulder holster. Deckard moves on to the android opera singer Luba Luft. After an attempt to administer the Voigt-Kampff test, she calls a police department claiming Deckard is a "sexual deviant", and an officer escorts him to a police headquarters he had never known existed. For other uses, see Opera (disambiguation). ...
At the headquarters, Deckard is passed along to officer Garland, who is discovered to be Deckard's next target. He is introduced to the department's own bounty hunter, Phil Resch, who, in light of Polokov's confirmation as an android, comes into conflict with Garland about administering the Boneli Reflex-Arc test (a variant test, a similar but simpler version of the Voigt-Kampff test) to station personnel. Resch leaves the office to retrieve the testing gear, and Garland produces a laser tube, hesitating to fire until Resch re-enters. Resch shoots Garland in anticipation of his reaction and the pair escape the station to retire Luba Luft. After Luft is retired at an art gallery, Deckard administers the Voigt-Kampff to Resch, who fearfully suspects himself to be an android after unwittingly working under them for two years. Given the apparent eagerness by which Resch retires androids, Deckard is convinced he is not a human, but to Resch's relief he passes the test. Deckard becomes concerned to the degree with which he empathises with androids. He uses his bounty money to buy a genuine goat in an attempt to reassure himself of his ethics. This article is about the domestic species. ...
The final three Nexus-6 models are holed up in an abandoned suburban apartment building with John R. Isidore, a "chickenhead" (a person, officially termed a "Special", whose intelligence is too far deteriorated from radiation to emigrate from Earth). Isidore is kind towards the three, although they are indifferent towards him, and exemplify androids’ lack of empathy. After discovering a live spider, they clip off its legs one by one to see how many legs it requires to move. At his apartment, Deckard uses an empathy box; when he does, Mercer converses with him directly, telling him that doing the wrong thing is sometimes necessary. For other uses, see Spider (disambiguation). ...
Deckard's superior phones to insist that he retire the remaining three androids in the same day in order to catch them by surprise. Deckard decides that he will need Rachael Rosen's help and accepts her offer, arranging to meet at a San Francisco hotel room. At the hotel room they drink antique bourbon, and after going over the remaining assignments, end up having sex. Afterward, while travelling in the hovercar, Rosen reveals that she had done the same with nine other bounty hunters in order to stop them from bounty hunting, and that the only one to maintain his profession after a liaison with her was Phil Resch. Deckard threatens to retire her but wavers. Rosen has scored a minor victory, but Deckard continues with the assignment. A hovercar is a transport vehicle appearing in works of science fiction. ...
Deckard shows up at Isidore's apartment building to retire the last three androids. Mercer appears and saves him from being shot in the back by Pris Stratton, an identical model to Rachael. Deckard efficiently retires the remaining two androids. Back at the apartment Deckard learns that Rachael has pushed the goat off the roof of his building. To clear his mind, he heads out for "one last trip", flying north in his hovercar to the highly radioactive Oregon desert. He walks up a hill in the manner of Mercer and is struck by a rock, whereupon he quickly returns to his car and finds a live toad (presumed extinct) buried in the sand. Back at the apartment his wife Iran finds a control panel on the toad's underside, revealing that it is artificial. Deckard is too exhausted at that point to mind. After he has gone to sleep, Iran orders a batch of artificial flies for the artificial toad. This article is about the U.S. state. ...
Major issues | | This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (September 2007) | False hierarchies and divisions of life On post-war Earth, life forms real and artificial are classified in hierarchies. Animals are considered endlessly precious, humans are considered less so and androids are considered meaningless. After their sexual encounter, Rosen explains this to Deckard, “That goat. You love that goat more than you love me, more than you love your wife probably” (page 202). The three groups are sub-classified. Humans organize animals (both real and artificial) into a system of compulsory commodity fetishism, whereby the authoritative Sidney's Catalog gives the exact worth of every type of animal, and thus defines each human by what type of animal they can afford. Humans are further divided between those who are allowed to emigrate off-world (genetically intact "regulars") and those who can't ("chickenheads" and "antheads"). In Marxist theory, commodity fetishism is a state of social relations, said to arise in capitalist market based societies, in which social relationships are transformed into apparently objective relationships between commodities or money. ...
Yet these classifications have many flaws, especially between humans and androids. New androids, superior to previous models, are constantly produced. The latest androids are more intelligent than some classes of humans. Isidore even calls the three androids living with him "superior beings." Empathy is the trait that definitively separates human psyches from those of androids. Yet Deckard notes that, to perform their job, bounty hunters must not be empathetic towards androids, thus their superiority to the androids they hunt is questionable. Two of the most respected “persons” on Earth may be artificial creations: Buster Friendly and Wilbur Mercer. Friendly, who often mocks Mercerism, reveals in an exposé that the stimuli humans encounter in an empathy box is based on old Hollywood films starring an alcoholic actor. Thus, Mercer may be nothing more than a repeating computer program. ...
Alcoholism is the consumption of, or preoccupation with, alcoholic beverages to the extent that this behavior interferes with the drinkers normal personal, family, social, or work life, and may lead to physical or mental harm. ...
Plus, androids’ flights to Earth reveal that they have the capacity to imagine a better life for themselves. This is epitomized by Luba Luft, the android opera singer, who likely performed menial work on an off-world colony. While androids struggle for true contentment, many human beings are relying on artificial means of happiness, such as the mood organ. “Most androids have more vitality and desire to live than my wife,” Deckard notes (page 94). At the novel’s end, Deckard comments on the way that his conflict with his profession has turned him into an “unnatural self,” which would make him android-like (page 230). This article is about psychological theories of psychopathy. ...
Decay and renewal The twin forces of decay and renewal play an important role in the book. This can be seen in the allegory of Mercer, who possessed the ability to resurrect life and who now is dead and in a continual quest to rise back to life. It also can be seen in the slowly dying Earth that is the novel’s backdrop. “Kipple” is a term given to "unwanted or useless objects." Kipple is self-reproducing, and it's invasive: the first law of Kipple, J.R. Isidore tells Pris Stratton, is, "Kipple drives out nonkipple." People can turn into "living kipple," and an apartment can become "kipple-infested." Buster Friendly asserts that Earth will die "under a layer—not of radioactive dust—but of kipple." And Isidore, as he secures his apartment, notes that he is in a continual battle between “kipple” and “anti-kipple.” These and other descriptions of kipple suggest an analogy to entropy. Kipple is a term coined by science fiction author Philip K. Dick in the book Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?. It refers to unwanted or useless junk that tends to reproduce itself. ...
For other uses, see: information entropy (in information theory) and entropy (disambiguation). ...
Deckard sees the larger picture of decay and renewal and his own part in a microcosm of the process while watching Luft rehearse for a production of The Magic Flute (which also supplies German quotes for Dick's novel A Scanner Darkly): Die Zauberflöte (en: The Magic Flute) is an opera in two acts composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to a German libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder. ...
For the 2006 film adaptation, see A Scanner Darkly (film). ...
- This rehearsal will end, the performance will end, the singers will die, eventually the last score of the music will be destroyed in one way or another; finally the name Mozart will vanish and the dust will have won. If not on this planet then another. We can evade it awhile. As the andys can evade me and exist a finite stretch longer. But I get them or some other bounty hunter gets them. In a way, he realized, I’m part of the form destroying process of entropy. The Rosen Association creates and I unmake. Or anyhow so it must seem to them. (page 86)
âMozartâ redirects here. ...
For other uses, see: information entropy (in information theory) and entropy (disambiguation). ...
Humanity versus non-humanity Dick's inspiration for the central plot point involving androids which are indistinguishable from humans came from specific factors in his own life experience. First and foremost, he could not accept that the people who committed atrocities such as the Holocaust during World War II were truly human. He felt that they must be inhuman monsters who merely appeared to be human. While this was initially a figurative philosophical concept, Dick was a user of amphetamine, which he used to fuel his writing. As a result, he developed a high level of paranoia, and his notion about people appearing to be human when they were not became more literal.[citation needed] âShoahâ redirects here. ...
Combatants Allied powers: China France Great Britain Soviet Union United States and others Axis powers: Germany Italy Japan and others Commanders Chiang Kai-shek Charles de Gaulle Winston Churchill Joseph Stalin Franklin Roosevelt Adolf Hitler Benito Mussolini Hideki TÅjÅ Casualties Military dead: 17,000,000 Civilian dead: 33,000...
Amphetamine is a prescription CNS stimulant commonly used to treat attention-deficit disorder (ADD) and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults and children. ...
For other senses of this word, see paranoia (disambiguation). ...
Differences between the novel and film The plot and characterizations of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? are different from that of its movie adaptation, Blade Runner, in a number of ways. The key few differences are: This article is about the 1982 film. ...
- The film takes place in the year 2019, replacing the novel's 1992 (2021 in a later edition).
- The film takes place in Los Angeles, replacing the novel's San Francisco.
- The Penfield Mood Organ, Empathy box, Buster Friendly, and Mercerism are all important aspects of the novel not mentioned in the film.
- In the original theatrical version of the film, Deckard is divorced, not married. His relationship with Rachael is more intensely romantic, and the two enjoy a “happily ever after” ending in some releases of the film. In the Director's Cut, he and Rachael also share a romance, but no mention is made of a divorce or wife for Deckard.
- In the novel, the Earth is covered in dust from nuclear fallout. The dust is radioactive, and male characters in the novel wear lead codpieces to avoid becoming sterile. This does not appear in the film.
- Deckard is retired from bounty hunting in the film. He is active in the novel.
- Bounty hunters are called “Blade Runners” in the film. This phrase does not appear in the novel; it is taken from a very different novel The Bladerunner by Alan Nourse. Likewise, an android is called a replicant or rep in the movie, but an android or andy in the novel. However, the terms "Voight-Kampff test", "Nexus 6", and "retirement" are identical in both novel and film, although the novel occasionally also refers to "killing" an android.
- In the novel, androids are made by the Rosen Association, run by the Rosen family. In the movie, replicants are made by the Tyrell Corporation, run by the Tyrell family.
- In the film, six replicants escape; one is killed by a containment fence and one is never mentioned again in the film (considered by fans to be either an error in the script, "Mary", or Deckard himself - see below), thus leaving four androids for Deckard to retire (Roy Baty, Zhora, Leon and Pris). In the novel, eight androids escaped, and two are retired by another bounty hunter, leaving six androids for Deckard to retire (Roy Baty, Irmgard Baty, Pris Stratton, Luba Luft, Max Polokov and Inspector Garland). In the final cut Bryiant reports two replicants have been killed or died.
- In the film, androids are limited to a four-year lifespan as a safety feature, deliberately included so that the android beings could not grow into fuller humanity; the androids have come to earth expressly to find a "cure" for this limitation. In the book, androids can still only live four years, but this is only mentioned in passing and described as a natural consequence of the fact that their cells cannot be replaced as they deteriorate. There is no suggestion that this could be curable, and the androids have come to earth only to escape a life of isolation and servitude on Mars.
- In the novel, the androids seem to "give up" when certain of their imminent death, and it is suggested that the self-preservation instinct in androids is different from that in humans. There is no statement on their physical capacity compared to humans. In the film, the androids are much more retaliatory, far more highly skilled in combat, and obviously physically superior to humans (the androids, Baty especially, demolish walls like crackers), creating climactic fight scenes. The novel's Roy Baty, however, does "give up" when he realises he is due to die when his four-year lifespan runs out.
- Combat in the novel is almost exclusively with "laser tubes", a device apparently resembling a laser gun or lightsaber, which are used by both hunters and androids (although Deckard retires one android with a bullet-firing pistol). In the movie, Deckard attacks the replicants with a relatively ordinary chemical slugthrower (albeit a high-caliber revolver based on a Steyr Mannlicher rifle), while the replicants tend to attack hand-to-hand using martial arts or simple brawling.
- Roy Baty is called "Roy Batty" in the film. In both, he is the leader of the group of rogue androids, but in the movie he visits the leader of the Tyrell corporation to demand an increase to his lifespan, then murders Tyrell when he refuses. In the book, he makes no attempt to contact or murder Victor Rosen - he remains in Isidore's apartment until Rick hunts him down - although it is suggested that prior to the androids' escape, he was attempting to make it possible for an android to use an Empathy Box, thus trying to remove what was seen as the key difference between humans and androids. In the book, Roy is retired unceremoniously; in the movie, Deckard does not retire Roy at all. Instead, while Deckard and Roy are playing cat-and-mouse on the rooftops of the city, the moment of Roy's four-year timeout arrives. Knowing he is doomed to die anyway, he rescues Deckard (whom he had previously been fighting against) from falling off a building, and delivers a speech which has become famous among film fans (the "time to die" or "tears in rain" speech) before apparently dying (when his time runs out, Roy simply freezes permanently). There is no equivalent of this scene in the book.
- Pris's name is also identical in novel and film, although the book gives her a full name (Pris Stratton). In the movie (unlike the book), she wears gothic clothing and distinctive make-up, which has no precedent in Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep? but does resemble the outfit worn by another character named Pris in Dick's novel We Can Build You. In the novel, Rachael and Pris are identical android models. In the film they are not; they are played by two distinctly different actresses, Sean Young and Daryl Hannah. In both movie and book, Pris meets up with Roy Baty in an abandoned apartment block, and then sets a trap there to kill Deckard. In the book, Pris sneaks up on Deckard in the dark with a laser tube, counting on her resemblance to Rachael to confuse Deckard. In the movie, Pris disguises herself as a mannequin to surprise Deckard, then attacks him with gymnastics and martial arts. The film also lists Pris's role on the colony she was sent to as a "pleasure model", suggesting that sex with androids is commonplace. Although the jobs that the androids did before coming to Earth are never stated in the novel, the novel does state that sexual intercourse with androids is strictly illegal on Earth and all colony planets. In the novel, no mention is made of a “pleasure model” although Phil Resch does say that "in the colonies they have android mistresses ... sure it's illegal ... but people do it anyhow" (page 125).
- Leon from the movie loosely corresponds to Max Polokov, since both seriously injured the senior bounty hunter, Dave Holden, and Leon tries to kill Deckard, similarly to Polokov. However, Polokov tries to trick Deckard by disguising himself as a Russian police officer, pretending to partner with Deckard to hunt down the escaped androids, and handing him a booby-trapped gun; Leon directly attacks Deckard in hand-to-hand combat. Also, in the movie, Leon is not retired by Deckard, but by Rachael. Combined with the change above to Roy Baty, this means that the movie's Deckard retires only the two female androids, which has been taken to imply a theme of misogyny which is entirely absent from the novel.
- The showgirl named Zhora in the movie loosely corresponds to Luba Luft the opera singer. Zhora, however, directly attacks Deckard once she realises he is hunting her; Luba Luft makes no such direct attack in the novel. Luba Luft is also an opera singer by profession, while Zhora was constructed as an assassin and only worked as a showgirl on Earth; aspects of the setting in the novel make it unlikely that an android would have been built as an assassin.
- Irmgard Baty and Inspector Garland are completely missing from the film, although Irmgard's role - Roy Baty's wife - may have been taken by "Mary", the "missing" replicant in the film, who was written out of the script before any production.
- Rachael has a significantly different character in the two stories. In the novel, she is a devious figure in the service of the Rosen Association (the manufacturing company). She aims to identify the flaws which make Nexus-6's susceptible to the Voight-Kampff test, to report back to Rosen for rectification in the next android model; and later, to manipulate Deckard into not hunting and killing the company's precious products. Rachael pretends to be in love with Deckard, and sleeps with him, claiming that no hunter has been emotionally able to continue hunting androids after that. In the movie, Rachael believes herself to be human until Deckard reveals she is not, using the Voight-Kampff test; she undergoes a serious personality crisis and disappears from the company's headquarters, ultimately finding refuge and genuine love with Deckard. In some versions of the film, Rachael is revealed to have no four-year expiry mechanism; this ending was attacked by fans as tritely romantic, and the Director's Cut and later versions feature an alternate ending in which Deckard accepts her in spite of knowing they may have only a few years together.
- In the novel, Deckard discovers an elaborate cover-up scheme run by androids, consisting of a fake police station and fake police officers. This alternative police HQ, on the other hand, employs a human bounty hunter called Phil Resch. Resch saves Deckard's life by killing Garland and he also retires Luba Luft, but then he mysteriously disappears from the novel, and Deckard collects the bounty money for the two androids. It remains unexplained how two parallel police HQs could operate in the same city, complete with human employees and bounty hunters, without noticing each other. This subplot is entirely missing from the movie, where Deckard receives no help from the police officer, who seems merely to follow and monitor him.
- In the novel, J.R. Isidore is a "chickenhead," a person who has suffered genetic damage from the radioactive dust covering the earth that has left him with only borderline intelligence, who is thus not allowed to emigrate. In the film, he is renamed J.F. Sebastian, and is a brilliant young android designer who cannot emigrate due to a hormone disorder ("Methuselah syndrome") that causes him to age at an accelerated rate. (Isidore does not himself design androids, but he does work for a company that repairs robotic animals.)
- In the film, another Blade Runner, Gaff, continuously shadowed Deckard. The director's cut ending suggested that Gaff knew that Deckard was an android, due to Gaff's leaving an origami unicorn (a distinct connection to Deckard's dream of a unicorn) at Deckard's apartment. The unicorn origami appeared in the original theatrical version but not Deckard's dream. This interpretation suggested Gaff might continue to hunt Rachel even if Deckard takes her away. Gaff does not have an analog in the novel.
- The film leaves lingering the question of whether or not Deckard is an android. In the novel, Deckard appears more certain not to be an android. Reference is made to him having passed the Voight-Kampff test before the events of the novel, although the test is not assuredly accurate; partway through the novel, Deckard partially applies the Voight-Kampff test to himself, confirming that he is feeling empathy for androids. Also Deckard appears to have human empathic reactions, and is able to use an empathy box (an ability which androids lack). However, some of the aspects of the setting that are missing from the film (the Penfield mood organ, Mercerism, and similar) create the impression that, even if Deckard is physically a human, what constitutes "being a human" in the book's imagined future is very different from the reader's likely opinion.
Los Angeles and L.A. redirect here. ...
Fallout is the residual radiation hazard from a nuclear explosion, so named because it falls out of the atmosphere into which it is spread during the explosion. ...
Henry VIII wearing a codpiece A codpiece (Middle English codpece = cod bag, scrotum + pece piece) is a flap or pouch that attaches to the front of the crotch of mens trousers to provide a covering for the genitals. ...
Infertility primarily refers to the biological inability of a man or a woman to contribute to conception. ...
The novel The Bladerunner (also published as The Blade Runner) is a 1974 science fiction novel by Alan E. Nourse. ...
Alan E. Nourse (August 11, 1928 - July 19, 1992) was an American science fiction author and physician. ...
Safety engineering is an applied science strongly related to systems engineering and the subset System Safety Engineering. ...
For other uses, see Human nature (disambiguation). ...
âFightsâ redirects here. ...
The Austrian firm Steyr-Mannlicher is a firearms manufacturer based in the city of Steyr. ...
For other uses, see Rifle (disambiguation). ...
We Can Build You is a 1972 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Mary Sean Young (born in Louisville, Kentucky on November 20, 1959) is an American actress. ...
Daryl Christine Hannah (born December 3, 1960) is an American film actress. ...
A Las Vegas showgirl, from the Folies Bergere. ...
For other uses, see Hormone (disambiguation). ...
Methuselah or Metushélach (Hebrew: / Standard / Tiberian / ; Man of the dart, or alternatively when he dies/died, it will be sent/has been sent) is the oldest person whose age is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. ...
Despite the initial appearance of an action film, Blade Runner operates on an unusually rich number of dramatic levels. ...
Sequels Three novels intended to serve as sequels to both Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? and Blade Runner have been published: Blade Runner 2: The Edge of Human (1995), Blade Runner 3: Replicant Night (1996), Blade Runner 4: Eye and Talon (2000). The official and authorized novels were written by Philip K. Dick's friend K. W. Jeter. They continue the story of Rick Deckard and attempt to resolve many of the differences between the novel and the film. Blade Runner 2: The Edge of Human (1995) is a novel by K. W. Jeter, and a continuation of both the film Blade Runner and the novel upon which it was based, Philip K. Dicks Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? The book continues the story of Rick Deckard. ...
Blade Runner 3: Replicant Night (1996) by K. W. Jeter, continues the story of Rick Deckard. ...
Kevin Wayne Jeter (born 1950) is an American science fiction and horror author known for his literary writing style, dark themes, and paranoid, unsympathetic characters. ...
The television series Total Recall 2070 was based on Dick's "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale" (the basis for the film Total Recall), and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?. Thus, it's considered by some to be a sequel to or spin-off of Electric Sheep and/or Blade Runner. Total Recall 2070 was a science fiction TV series first broadcast in 1999 in Canada and later the same year on Showtime. ...
We Can Remember It for You Wholesale is a novelette by Philip K. Dick first published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in April 1966. ...
For other uses, see Total recall (disambiguation). ...
A spin-off (or spinoff) is a new organization or entity formed by a split from a larger one such as a new company formed from a university research group. ...
Also the movie Soldier is considered to be what's called a sidequel for the Blade Runner realm. Soldier is a 1998 science fiction film directed by Paul W.S. Anderson. ...
This page is a candidate to be copied to Wiktionary. ...
References in popular culture Music - In the song "Talk Shows On Mute" by Incubus, two verses refer to the book: "The electric sheep are dreaming of your face / enjoying from the chemical / comforts of America", and "The electric sheep are dreaming up your fate / And judge you from the card castle / comfort of America."
- Japanese guitarist Michio Kurihara recorded a song on his recent solo release, Sunset Notes, entitled "Do Deep Sea Fish Dream of Electric Moles?".
- Diesel Christ has a song called "Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep?" on its tribute to Depeche Mode (Diesel Mode: A Tribute To The Masses). It is the only song on the album that is not a Depeche Mode cover.
- Evil Nine's album You Can Be Special Too takes its title from one of the book's themes: that of being classified as "special." The third track on the album, "You Can Be Special," contains a passage from chapter 2 in which Maggie Klugman talks to a TV presenter about moving to Mars.
- The band Whale|Horse released a CD/EP entitled Count the Electric Sheep.
- The World/Inferno Friendship Society's "Zen and the Art of Breaking Everything in This Room" contains the lyric "do androids dream of electronic sheep?"
- Japanese psychedelic band Acid Mothers Temple have an album called Does the Cosmic Shepherd Dream of Electric Tapirs?.
- Indie-pop band Coparck have a song, "A Good Year for The Robots," on The 3rd album with the lyrics "do androids dream of electric sheep?"
- Indie-pop band Gatsbys American Dream, on their self-titled album, have a song entitled "My Name Is Ozymandias" which contains the lyrics "And all night while you slumber you'll dream of electric sheep."
- The Christian industrial band Under Midnight had a short track on their self-titled album named "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?".
- Heavy Metal band Iron Maiden's Somewhere In Time album cover features many references to the movie and novel, added on purpose by artist Derek Riggs to blend with the album's musical futuristic concept, like the movie theater named "Phillip K. Dick Cinema" with "Blade Runner" on display and a "Tyrell Corp." sign on one of the buildings.
An editor has expressed a concern that the subject of the article does not satisfy the notability guideline for Music. ...
This article is about the US rock band. ...
Blackmail is a German indie rock band from Koblenz, Germany which was started briefly in 1993 by singer Aydo Abay, brothers Kurt Ebelhäuser (lead guitars) and Carlos Ebelhäuser (bass) and drummer Mario Matthias. ...
See also: 1999 in music (UK) Musical groups established in 1999 Record labels established in 1999 January 7 After eight years of marriage, Rod Stewart and supermodel wife Rachel Hunter announce their separation. ...
Science Fiction is the sophomore album by the German indie rock quartet blackmail. ...
Do Robots Dream of Electric Sheep? is an album by blackmail which is a remixed version of their 1999 release, Science Fiction. ...
For the video game programmer Garry Newman, see Garrys Mod. ...
Are Friends Electric? is a 1979 song by Gary Numan, released under the name Tubeway Army as a single and on the album Replicas. ...
Replicas is an LP by Gary Numan and the Tubeway Army, released in 1979. ...
Depeche Mode (pronounced ) are an electronic music band formed in 1980, in Basildon, Essex, England. ...
Tom Beaufoy and Pat Pardy first combined skills as Evil Nine in 1998 and were quickly recognised as a quality DJ/Producer duo by Adam Freeland who signed them to his label. ...
For other uses, see Uncle. ...
An UNKLE soundscape DJ mix, originally recorded for Radio Ape in Japan, Do Androids Dream Of Electric Beats was the first in a line of a series of UNKLESounds mixes. ...
Rage Against the Machine, is an American rock band, formed in Los Angeles, California in 1991. ...
Thomas Baptist Morello (born May 30, 1964) is a Grammy Award-winning American guitarist best known for his tenure with the bands Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave, and as the acoustic artist The Nightwatchman, He was featured as one of 20 guitarists in Rolling Stone magazines The Top...
This article is about the instrument. ...
Electric Sheep is the name of a garage band formed by Adam Jones (future Tool) and Tom Morello (future Rage Against The Machine guitarist and Audioslave guitarist). ...
Whale|Horse is a rock/post-punk band from Chicago. ...
Acid Mothers Temple & the Melting Paraiso U.F.O. (and subsequent offshoots) is a Japanese psychedelic band founded in 1995 by members of the Acid Mothers Temple soul-collective. ...
Twee redirects here. ...
Gatsbys American Dream [sic] is a prolific Seattle-based Indie rock band. ...
Hardcore punk is a subgenre of punk rock that originated in North America around 1980. ...
Crime In Stereo Crime In Stereo is a Long Island-based hardcore punk band. ...
The Contract is a four track EP from Long Island hardcore punk band, Crime In Stereo. ...
Heavy metals, in chemistry, are chemical elements of a particular range of atomic weights. ...
Iron Maiden are an English heavy metal band from Leyton in the East End of London. ...
Somewhere in Time can refer to different things: Somewhere in Time was a 1980 movie starring Christopher Reeve and Jane Seymour. ...
Derek Riggs is a British artist best known for creating the heavy metal band Iron Maidens mascot, Eddie. ...
Computers and video games - The 6th level of the video game Viewtiful Joe 2 is titled "Do Androids Dream Of Romantic Scene?".
- Several levels of the computer game Marathon Infinity are called "Electric Sheep [number]." The player is often thought to be an android, and the level takes place in his dream.
- Koei published a hentai game titled "Do Dutchwives Dream of Electric Eel?" for the PC-88 during the 1980s.
- In the PC version of Melty Blood Act Cadenza (Version B), selecting Mech-HISUI (an android maid) and White Len (who can take the form of a white cat) as a team results in the team being named "Denshi Meido ha Shiro Neko no Yume wo Miru ka", which translates into "Do Electric Maids Dream of White Cats?"
- In the MMORPG City of Heroes, one of the missions assigned is to interrogate a Captain Rick Deckard and defeat Nemesis replicants.
- In the game Shadowrun for SNES you are able to hire a bounty hunter by the name of Deckard.
- The Electric Sheep distributed computing project was named for the title of this novel.
Viewtiful Joe 2 is a video game and sequel to Viewtiful Joe. ...
Marathon Infinity is the third and final game in the Marathon Trilogy of science fiction first-person shooter computer games from Bungie Software. ...
Koeis Current Company Logo Koei Co. ...
Hentai ) is a Japanese word that can be used to mean metamorphosis or abnormality. In Japan hentai has a negative connotation, and is commonly used to mean sexually perverted. In the West the term is used as slang for sexually explicit or pornographic comics and animation, particularly Japanese anime, manga...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Melty Blood ) is a Japanese dÅjin 2D fighting game, developed by Type-Moon and French-Bread (known as Watanabe Seisakujo prior to 2003), and is a spin-off to Type-Moons visual novel game Tsukihime. ...
A maidservant or in current usage maid is a female employed in domestic service. ...
Binomial name Felis catus Linnaeus, 1758 Synonyms Felis lybica invalid junior synonym The cat (or domestic cat, house cat) is a small carnivorous mammal. ...
City of Heroes (CoH) is a massively multiplayer online role-playing computer game based on the superhero comic book genre, developed by Cryptic Studios and published by NCsoft. ...
Sample image generated by the Electric Sheep screensaver project. ...
Anime - In Bubblegum Crisis, a Japanese animated series, there are various references to the novel. For example, the lead character's name is Priss, and she sings in a band called Priss and The Replicants, referring to the novel's film adaptation.
- In an episode of Lost Universe titled "And Then a Blade of Light Shines," the computer Canal's memory banks were being destroyed. Shortly before her hologram fades away, she asks "When I die, will I dream of electric sheep?"
- An episode of Kyle XY is titled "Does Kyle Dream of Electric Fish?". Kyle, the main character, exhibits many android-like tendencies.
Bubblegum Crisis ) is a cyberpunk-style anime set in a future, post-disaster Tokyo, called Megatokyo. The series has a manga adaptation. ...
The official Pokémon logo. ...
Magnemite , Coil in original Japanese language versions) is one of 493 fictional species from the Pokémon franchise. ...
Pikachu ) are one of the 493 fictional species of Pokémon creatures from the multi-billion-dollar[1] Pokémon media franchiseâa collection of video games, anime, manga, books, trading cards, and other media created by Satoshi Tajiri. ...
Mareep , Merriep in original Japanese language versions) are one of the 493 fictional species of Pokémon creatures from the multi-billion-dollar[1] Pokémon media franchise â a collection of video games, anime, manga, books, trading cards and other media created by Satoshi Tajiri. ...
Flaaffy Mokoko in original Japanese language versions) are one of the 493 fictional species of Pokémon creatures from the multi-billion-dollar[1] Pokémon media franchise â a collection of video games, anime, manga, books, trading cards and other media created by Satoshi Tajiri. ...
Ampharos , Denryu in original Japanese language versions) is one of the 493 fictional species of Pokémon creatures from the multi-billion-dollar Pokémon media franchise â a collection of video games, anime, manga, books, trading cards and other media created by Satoshi Tajiri. ...
Lost Universe (Japanese: ãã¹ãã»ã¦ããã¼ã¹; Rosuto YunibÄsu) is a series of science fiction light novels, running from 1992 to 2000, by Japanese author Hajime Kanzaka. ...
Kyle XY is an American drama television series filmed in the Vancouver, British Columbia area. ...
As ABC Family has renewed the U.S. television drama Kyle XY for a 23 episode second season,[1][2] episode information will go here as it becomes available. ...
In other films and animation - In the film Slipstream, android character Byron tells his friend Matt Owens that he actually fell asleep (and dreamed) the night before. Matt snorts derisively, replying, "How did you fall asleep? Counting electric sheep?"
- In an episode of The Transformers, while on a ship waiting to be saved by his friends, a boy turns to a Mini Con and asks "do mini cons dream of electric ships?"
Slipstream is a 1989 adventure/science fiction film starring Bob Peck, Mark Hamill, Bill Paxton, and Kitty Aldridge. ...
This page is about the original Transformers animated series. ...
In literature - Now I lay me down to sleep,
- Try to count electric sheep,
- Sweet dream wishes you can keep,
- How I hate the night.
- John Scalzi's novel The Android's Dream, refers to the title of this book.
- In noted Commonwealth poet Jeni Couzyn's 1983 collection of poetry, Life by Drowning, her poem "Do Androids Dream" pays homage to Dick's novel.
- In the webcomic Dieselsweeties the main character of Clango, a robot, is seen asleep in one panel. Above his head, he is clearly shown dreaming of an electric sheep.
Life, the Universe and Everything (1982, ISBN 0-345-39182-9) is the third book in the five-volume Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy science fiction series by Douglas Adams. ...
Information Species Android Gender Male Age Thirty-seven times older than the Universe itself Occupation Servant Created by Douglas Adams In the BBC TV series, the marketing division of the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation defines a robot [like Marvin] as Your plastic pal whos fun to be with. Marvins...
John Michael Scalzi II (born May 10, 1969) is an author and online writer, best known for his Hugo Award-nominated science fiction novel Old Mans War, released by Tor Books in January 2005, and for his blog Whatever, at which he has written daily on a number of...
Diesel Sweeties is a webcomic and newspaper comic strip written by Richard Stevens III (R Stevens). ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards and make it easier to understand, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
AI redirects here. ...
An operating system (OS) is a software that manages computer resources and provides programmers with an interface used to access those resources. ...
Awards The Nebula is an award given each year by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA), for the best science fiction/fantasy fiction published in the United States during the two previous years (see rolling eligibility below). ...
The Locus Awards are presented to winners of Locus Magazines annual readers poll, which was established in the early 70s specifically to provide recommendations and suggestions to Hugo Awards voters. ...
Notes and References 1 The term android is sometimes used when referring to artificial beings of a biological composition, though in most modern SF the term has come to refer to non-biological machines instead (e.g. the "Droids" in the Star Wars movies). Debate on such fine details is likely to encounter deep complications; the very issues which Dick–and Isaac Asimov before him–explored along the human-artificial boundary. Luke Skywalker in Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope along side astromech droid R2-D2, and protocol droid C-3PO. This is the concept of the droid in science fiction. ...
This article is about the series. ...
Isaac Asimov (January 2?, 1920?[1] â April 6, 1992), pronounced , originally ÐÑаак Ðзимов but now transcribed into Russian as Ðйзек Ðзимов [1], was a Russian-born American author and professor of biochemistry, a highly successful writer, best known for his works of science fiction and for his popular science books. ...
- Dick, Philip K. (1968). Do androids dream of electric sheep? New York: Ballantine Books, 1996. ISBN 0-345-40447-5. First published in Phillip K. Dick: Electric Shepherd, Norstrilla Press.
Zelazny, Roger (1975). "Introduction" - Scott, Ridley (1982). Blade Runner. Warner Brothers.
This article is about the 1982 film. ...
Further reading | Works of Philip K. Dick | | | | | | Short story collections | | | A Handful of Darkness (1950) · The Variable Man (1956) · The Preserving Machine (1969) · The Golden Man (1980) · The Book of Philip K. Dick (1973) · The Best of Philip K. Dick (1977) · Robots, Androids, and Mechanical Oddities (1984) · I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon (collection) (1985) · The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick (1987) · Beyond Lies the Wub (1988) · The Dark Haired Girl (1989) · The Father-Thing (1989) · Second Variety (1989) · The Days of Perky Pat (1990) · The Little Black Box (1990) · The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford (1990) · We Can Remember It for You Wholesale (1990) · The Minority Report (1991) · Second Variety (1991) · The Eye of the Sibyl (1992) · The Philip K. Dick Reader (1997) · Minority Report (2002) · Selected Stories of Philip K. Dick (2002) · Paycheck (2004) · Vintage PKD (2006) | | | | | | | | | | The Blade Runner series | | | Novels | | | | Games/comics | | | | Characters | Rick Deckard · Eldon Tyrell · Gaff · Rachael · Roy Batty · Leon Kowalski · Pris · Zhora · J.F. Sebastian | | | Locations | | | | Cast | | | | Crew | | | | Other topics | | | | Related articles | | | For other uses, see Biomechanical. ...
The Internet Speculative Fiction Database is a database of bibliographic information on science fiction and related genres such as fantasy fiction and horror fiction. ...
// The Game-Players of Titan 1950 Gather Yourselves Together (1994) 1952 Voices From the Street (2007) 1953 Vulcans Hammer (1960+) Dr. Futurity (1960+) The Cosmic Puppets (1957*) 1954 Solar Lottery (1955*) Mary and the Giant (1987*) The World Jones Made (1956) 1955 Eye in the Sky (1957) The Man...
Philip Kindred Dick (December 16, 1928 â March 2, 1982) was an American writer, mostly known for his works of science fiction. ...
// The Game-Players of Titan 1950 Gather Yourselves Together (1994) 1952 Voices From the Street (2007) 1953 Vulcans Hammer (1960+) Dr. Futurity (1960+) The Cosmic Puppets (1957*) 1954 Solar Lottery (1955*) Mary and the Giant (1987*) The World Jones Made (1956) 1955 Eye in the Sky (1957) The Man...
Gather Yourselves Together is an early novel by the late Science Fiction author Philip K Dick, written around 1948-1950, and published by WCS Books in 1994 (ISBN: 1878914057). ...
Voices From The Street is an early, as yet unpublished novel by the late Science Fiction author Philip K Dick, written around 1952-53. ...
Vulcans Hammer is a 1960 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Dr. Futurity is a 1960 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Cosmic Puppets is perhaps Dicks first attempt at a sci-fi/fantasy novel. ...
Solar Lottery is a 1955 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Mary and the Giant is an early, non-Science Fiction novel written by Philip K. Dick in the years between 1953 and 1955, but not published until 1987. ...
The World Jones Made is a 1956 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Eye in the Sky is a science fiction novel written by Philip K. Dick and originally published in 1957. ...
The Man Who Raped Little Boys is a science-fiction novel written by Philip K. Dick, first published in 1956. ...
A Time For George Stavros is an early non-Science Fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Pilgrim on the Hill is yet another lost early non-Science Fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Broken Bubble is an early non-Science Fiction novel by noted Science Fiction Author Philip K. Dick. ...
Puttering About in a Small Land is yet another early non-Science Fiction novel by noted Science Fiction Author Philip K. Dick. ...
Nicholas and the Higs is one of several early non-Science Fiction novel by noted Science Fiction AuthorPhilip K. Dick. ...
Cover of 1977 Belmont paperback edition. ...
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It has been suggested that Crap artist be merged into this article or section. ...
The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike is a realist, non-science fiction novel authored by Philip K. Dick. ...
Humpty Dumpty in Oakland is a realist, non- science fiction novel authored by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Man in the High Castle is a 1962 alternate history novel by science fiction writer Philip K. Dick. ...
We Can Build You is a 1972 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Cover of the first edition of Martian Time Slip published by Ballantine Martian Time-Slip is a 1964 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Dr. Bloodmoney, a book by Phillip K. Dick, is a story set in a post-apocalyptic future that has been shaken to its core by nuclear attacks that killed millions and left even more sports, or mutated humans and animals, dwelling in all radioactive areas. ...
The Game Players of Titan is a 1963 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Simulacra is a 1964 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Book cover, Ace 1974 The Crack in Space is a 1966 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Book cover from U.S. edition. ...
Clans of the Alphane Moon is a 1964 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch is a typically complex novel by the science fiction writer Philip K. Dick. ...
The Zap Gun is a 1967 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Penultimate Truth is a 1964 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Cover of Deus Irae, published by Doubleday in 1976. ...
The Unteleported Man (later republished in an expanded form as Lies, Inc. ...
Phillip K Dick and Ray Nelson wrote The Ganymede Takeover in 1967. ...
Is a 1967 Science Fiction novel by author Phillip K. Dick, in which time has started to move in reverse, resulting in the dead reviving in their own graves, living their lives in reverse, eventually ending in an act of copulation between their parents. ...
Nick and the Glimmung is a childrens science fiction novel, originally written by Philip K. Dick in 1966. ...
Cover of the 1970 Dell paperback edition of Ubik Ubik is a 1969 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Galactic Pot-Healer is a science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick, first published in 1969. ...
A Maze of Death is a 1970 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Our Friends From Frolix 8 is a 1970 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said is a Philip K. Dick novel in which Jason Taverner, who is a Six (a genetically improved superhuman) as well as a singer and television star, lives in a future American police state. ...
For the 2006 film adaptation, see A Scanner Darkly (film). ...
jacket cover A posthumously published novel by Philip K. Dick, written in 1976, Radio Free Albemuth (originally titled VALISystem A) was his first attempt to deal in fiction with his experiences of early 1974. ...
VALIS is a 1981 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Divine Invasion is a 1981 science fiction book by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer is a 1982 novel by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Owl in Daylight is a novel that Philip K. Dick was working on at the time of his death in 1982. ...
// The Game-Players of Titan 1950 Gather Yourselves Together (1994) 1952 Voices From the Street (2007) 1953 Vulcans Hammer (1960+) Dr. Futurity (1960+) The Cosmic Puppets (1957*) 1954 Solar Lottery (1955*) Mary and the Giant (1987*) The World Jones Made (1956) 1955 Eye in the Sky (1957) The Man...
// The Game-Players of Titan 1950 Gather Yourselves Together (1994) 1952 Voices From the Street (2007) 1953 Vulcans Hammer (1960+) Dr. Futurity (1960+) The Cosmic Puppets (1957*) 1954 Solar Lottery (1955*) Mary and the Giant (1987*) The World Jones Made (1956) 1955 Eye in the Sky (1957) The Man...
Beyond Lies the Wub is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Defenders is a 1953 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Roog is a short story by author Philip K. Dick. ...
For the collection of Philip K. Dick stories named after this story, published in the UK in 1989, see Second Variety (1989 collection). ...
Colony is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Cookie Lady is a short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Impostor is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Paycheck is a short story by science fiction writer Philip K. Dick, written on July 31, 1952 and first published in Imagination in July 1953. ...
Expendable is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Trouble With Bubbles is a 1953 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Variable Man is a short story by Philip K. Dick that can be found in his collection of short stories named Beyond Lies The Wub. Spoiler warning: In the story, the Terran system (which is our system) is growing and expanding all the time. ...
Tony and the Beetles is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick first published in Orbit Science Fiction, No. ...
The Golden Man is a 1954 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Sales Pitch is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Breakfast at Twilight is a 1954 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Crawlers is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Exhibit Piece is a 1954 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
1954 cover of Orbit Science Fiction Adjustment Team is a science fiction short story/novella by Philip K. Dick. ...
Shell Game is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
A World of Talent is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Last of the Masters is a 1954 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Upon the Dull Earth is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Father-thing is a 1954 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Strange Eden is a 1954 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Turning Wheel is a 1954 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Foster, Youre Dead is a 1955 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Human Is is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
War Veteran is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Chromium Fence is a 1955 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick, first published in Imagination magazine. ...
Service Call is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
Autofac is a 1955 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick that features one of the earliest treatments of self-replicating machines. ...
Psi-man Heal My Child! is a short story written by Philip K. Dick in 1955. ...
Minority Report can refer to: Minority Report, a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick Minority Report, a movie very loosely adapted from the initial storyline of Dicks short story Minority Report, a video game based on the movie Minority Report, an unrelated science fiction short story by...
Pay for the Printer is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Null-O is a is a 1958 science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Explorers We is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Whatll We Do With Ragland Park? is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Days of Perky Pat is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
If There Were No Benny Cemoli is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Waterspider is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Novelty Act is a short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Oh, to be a Blobel is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The War with the Fnools is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
What the Dead Men Say is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Unteleported Man (later republished in an expanded form as Lies, Inc. ...
The 1962 Sedan plowshares shot displaced 12 million tons of earth and created a crater 320 feet deep and 1,280 feet wide. ...
We Can Remember It for You Wholesale is a novelette by Philip K. Dick first published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in April 1966. ...
Faith Of Our Fathers is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick, first published in the anthology Dangerous Visions. ...
Not by Its Cover is a sequel to Phillip K Dicks first science fiction short story, Beyond Lies the Wub. ...
The Electric Ant is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Pre-persons is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
A Little Something For Us Tempunauts is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
The Exit Door Leads In is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
Rautavaaras Case is a science fiction short story by Philip K Dick. ...
I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon is the title of an anthology of stories by Philip K. Dick, published in 1980. ...
The Eye of The Sibyl is a science fiction short story by Philip K. Dick. ...
// The Game-Players of Titan 1950 Gather Yourselves Together (1994) 1952 Voices From the Street (2007) 1953 Vulcans Hammer (1960+) Dr. Futurity (1960+) The Cosmic Puppets (1957*) 1954 Solar Lottery (1955*) Mary and the Giant (1987*) The World Jones Made (1956) 1955 Eye in the Sky (1957) The Man...
This article is about the 1982 film. ...
For other uses, see Total recall (disambiguation). ...
It has been suggested that Crap artist be merged into this article or section. ...
Screamers is a 1995 film directed by Christian Duguay based on the short story Second Variety by Philip K. Dick. ...
Impostor is based upon a short story written by Philip K. Dick in 1953. ...
Minority Report is a 2002 science fiction film directed by Steven Spielberg, loosely based on the Philip K. Dick 1956 short story The Minority Report. It is set in the year 1895, when criminals are interviewed based on foreknowledge. ...
Paycheck is a 2003 film adaptation of the short story Paycheck by science fiction writer Philip K. Dick. ...
A Scanner Darkly is a 2006 film by Richard Linklater based on the Philip K. Dick novel of the same name. ...
Next is a 2007 film the producers claim is based on the science fiction short story The Golden Man by Philip K. Dick though it bears no resemblance to it other than having a precog in. ...
Radio Free Albemuth is an upcoming American film adaptation of the 1985 science fiction novel Radio Free Albemuth by author Philip K. Dick. ...
This article is about the 1982 film. ...
Blade Runner 2: The Edge of Human (1995) is a novel by K. W. Jeter, and a continuation of both the film Blade Runner and the novel upon which it was based, Philip K. Dicks Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? The book continues the story of Rick Deckard. ...
Blade Runner 3: Replicant Night (1996) by K. W. Jeter, continues the story of Rick Deckard. ...
Blade Runner is a Westwood Studios PC game loosely based on the 1982 movie of the same name. ...
Rick Deckard is the central protaganist and main character in Ridley Scotts 1982 science-fiction film, Blade Runner. ...
This article details the minor characters in the film Blade Runner. ...
This article details the minor characters in the film Blade Runner. ...
This article details the minor characters in the film Blade Runner. ...
This article details the minor characters in the film Blade Runner. ...
This article details the minor characters in the film Blade Runner. ...
This article details the minor characters in the film Blade Runner. ...
This article details the minor characters in the film Blade Runner. ...
This article details the minor characters in the film Blade Runner. ...
The Tyrell Corporation is a fictional corporation from the 1982 Ridley Scott film Blade Runner. ...
Front entrance of Bradbury The Bradbury Building is an architectural landmark in Los Angeles, California, in the United States. ...
The Tannhauser Gate is a location originally referred to in dialogue in the 1982 film Blade Runner, and again in the 1998 film Soldier. ...
For the silent film actor, see Harrison Ford (silent film actor). ...
Rutger Oelsen Hauer (IPA: [rÊtxÉr ulsÉn hÊuÉr]) (born in Breukelen, January 23, 1944) is a Dutch film actor. ...
Mary Sean Young (born in Louisville, Kentucky on November 20, 1959) is an American actress. ...
Edward James Olmos (born February 24, 1947) is an Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated American actor and director. ...
Daryl Christine Hannah (born December 3, 1960) is an American film actress. ...
Sir Ridley Scott (born November 30, 1937 in South Shields, South Tyneside) is a British film director and producer. ...
Hampton Fancher (born July 18, 1938 in Los Angeles, California, USA) was an actor who transitioned into being a producer and screenwriter in the late 1970s. ...
Michael Deeley (born August 6, 1932) is a film producer who has helped create notable films such as The Italian Job, Blade Runner and The Deer Hunter. ...
David Webb Peoples (born c. ...
Philip Kindred Dick (December 16, 1928 â March 2, 1982) was an American writer, mostly known for his works of science fiction. ...
Evangelos Odysseas Papathanassiou (Greek: ÎÏ
Î¬Î³Î³ÎµÎ»Î¿Ï ÎδÏ
ÏÏÎÎ±Ï Î Î±ÏαθαναÏίοÏ
IPA: ) (var. ...
The Blade Runner soundtrack by Vangelis is a dark melodic combination of classic composition and futuristic synthesizers which mirrors the film-noir future envisioned by Ridley Scott. ...
Despite the initial appearance of an action film, Blade Runner operates on an unusually rich number of dramatic levels. ...
This article is about characters from Blade Runner. ...
Voight-Kampff Originating as a fictional tool in Philip K Dicks novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, the Voight-Kampff machine or device (spelled Voigt-Kampff in the book) also appeared in the books screen adaptation, the 1982 science fiction film Blade Runner. ...
Police spinner flying over industrial sprawl. ...
Soldier is a 1998 science fiction film directed by Paul W.S. Anderson. ...
Postmodernism (sometimes abbreviated Po-mo[1]) is a term originating in architecture, literally after the modern, denoting a style that is more ornamental than modernism, and which borrows from previous architectural styles, often in a playful or ironic fashion. ...
Berlins Sony Center reflects the global reach of a Japanese corporation. ...
A cult film is a film that has acquired a highly devoted but relatively small group of fans. ...
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