The version dubbed the "workprint version" is the oldest-existing cut of Blade Runner. This is an incomplete version of the film, as it had not yet been color-corrected or sound mixed and it lacked several parts of Vangelis' score. Ridley Scott stated that the workprint was "something that was pretty rough, but close enough to what I was after to let a preview audience see." Thus, the cut was shown to industry workers at the GoMillion Sound Studios in late February 1982 and to preview audiences in Denver, Colorado and Dallas, Texas in March 1982.[1]

This version was rediscovered in 1989 by Michael Arick, who initially believed it to be the international cut. It was screened the following year at the Los Angeles Fairfax Theater as part of a 70mm spring festival. During this screening is when it was discovered to actually be a surviving copy of the workprint. Because the workprint was closer to Ridley Scott's vision for the film than the theatrical cuts, Arick became interested in producing a reconstruction of the film, an effort that ultimately resulted in the 1992 Director's Cut.[1]




Blade Runner Workprint Download