Joe Jukic & Nelly Furtado — a quiet conversation after midnight
JOE:
You ever notice, Nelly, how Blade Runner is crawling with birds… but almost none of them are alive?
NELLY:
Yeah. Tyrell’s owl especially. It’s beautiful, but it’s wrong. Like it knows too much and feels nothing.
JOE:
Exactly. Owls are supposed to be wisdom, night vision, the soul seeing in the dark. But that owl? Synthetic wisdom. Corporate enlightenment. Knowledge without mercy.
NELLY:
Which is kind of the scariest thing in the movie. Not the violence—just the idea that even nature’s symbols get patented.
JOE:
That’s the trick. In Blade Runner, real animals are basically extinct. So birds stop being messengers of God or freedom and turn into luxury products. If you own a bird, you’re rich enough to pretend the world isn’t dead.
NELLY:
And then there’s Batty’s dove. That one still hurts me.
JOE:
Yeah… the one real-feeling bird in the whole movie only appears at the moment of death.
NELLY:
White dove. Old-school symbol. Peace. Spirit. The Holy Ghost. And he lets it go right when he chooses mercy instead of revenge.
JOE:
Which flips everything. The “monster” understands the soul better than the humans. The bird flies up, and Batty goes down. Like his humanity finally escapes the cage.
NELLY:
That’s why the rain matters too. “Tears in rain.” Water washing the city, baptizing a machine.
JOE:
Birds usually mean transcendence. In Blade Runner, they only show up when someone breaks free of the system—if only for a second.
NELLY:
So the question is… who’s more artificial? The replicants who dream of birds, or the humans who buy them?
JOE:
That’s the punchline. The movie isn’t asking if machines can be human. It’s asking if humans still are.
NELLY:
Maybe that’s why the future feels sad instead of exciting. No birdsong. Just neon and engines.
JOE:
And one dove, one moment, saying: it didn’t have to be this way.
(They sit in silence for a beat, like listening for wings that aren’t there anymore.)
