I know art's subjective, and all, but I really struggle to understand how anyone can not be blown away by 2049. If only with regards to sheer craftsmanship, it's staggeringly accomplished, so any lover of cinema should find much to enjoy simply experiencing the film from moment to moment.
I grew up with the original, and with a handful of other films it helped define the entire medium for me. In many ways I feel 2049 improves on it, in almost every way. It can never have its impact or legacy, of course, so in the grand scheme of things it's a historically 'lesser' film. But Blade Runner took decades and several versions to find its way to the Final Cut, and there isn't a single version which I can say is 'my' Blade Runner given the changes[footnote]I suppose it has to be the Director's Cut. I dislike some of the digital fiddling and extra audio done on Final Cut A perfect version would probably be a remastered Director's Cut, minus the unicorn insert.[/footnote].
And so, 2049 out of the gate is more focused in every possible way. It knew what it wanted to be before a shot was filmed, which cannot be said of the messily tampered with original.
It cannot ever mean more to me than the original, but I do think it's better, and me saying that about a sequel to a beloved film I never wanted made is--- well, maybe one of the biggest surprises I've ever had where film's concerned. Though when I heard Villeneuve would be behind it, along with Roger Deakins, I at least trusted they'd try to do the original justice.
In a way, the most powerful thing about seeing it for the first time was a sense that this really was a work of art with a big budget being shown in mainstream cinemas. Sure, it didn't do well... but frankly that says a lot about mass market punters as opposed to the film itself. The aesthetic, the pacing, the ideas - to me it represents the very best elements of the medium. I'm not a fan of Chris Stuckman, but he echoed my reaction in that it was a reminder of why I love cinema itself, and just how powerful and engaging/transportive an experience it can be.
Maybe it's not accurate to say Villeneuve is the true mainstream brainbox, given how few - relatively speaking - people see his films. Chris Nolan just about takes that title (despite almost all of his films actually containing incredibly patronising moments). But across Sicario, Arrival, and 2049, he really is in a class of his own right now. No one is doing what he's doing, on such a scale, and to such a high degree of craftsmanship.
He's an incredibly articulate, engaging speaker, too, so his interviews are always good value. I hope the Blu-ray comes packed with behind the scene's content.