"Tears in Rain" (also known as the "C-Beams Speech") is a brief monologue delivered by replicant Roy Batty (portrayed by Rutger Hauer) in the Ridley Scott film Blade Runner. The final form, altered from the scripted lines and improvised by Hauer on the eve of filming, is an often-quoted piece of science fiction writing. University of Miami Professor of Philosophy and cultural critic Mark Rowlands has called the monologue "perhaps the most moving death soliloquy in cinematic history".
Script and improvisation
Blade Runner - Final scene, "Tears in Rain" Monologue (HD) - The climax of the classic Sci-fi film "Blade Runner". Taken from the "Final Cut" version. Roy Batty: "I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. [laughs] Attack ships on fire off the shoulder...
In the film, the dying replicant Roy Batty makes this speech to Harrison Ford's character Deckard moments after saving him from falling off a tall building. Deckard had been tasked to kill him and his replicant friends. The words are spoken during a downpour, moments before Batty's death:
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.
In the documentary Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner, Hauer, director Ridley Scott, and screenwriter David Peoples stated that Hauer wrote the "Tears in Rain" speech. There were earlier versions of the speech in Peoples' draft screenplays; one included the sentence "I rode on the back decks of a blinker and watched C-beams glitter in the dark, near the Tannhäuser Gate" In his autobiography, Hauer said he merely cut the original scripted speech by several lines, adding only "All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain", although the original script, displayed during the documentary, before Hauer's rewrite, does not mention "Tannhäuser Gate":
I have known adventures, seen places you people will never see, I've been Offworld and back...frontiers! I've stood on the back deck of a blinker bound for the Plutition Camps with sweat in my eyes watching the stars fight on the shoulder of Orion. I've felt wind in my hair, riding test boats off the black galaxies and seen an attack fleet burn like a match and disappear. I've seen it...felt it!
Hauer described this as "opera talk" and "hi-tech speech" with no bearing on the rest of the film, so he "put a knife in it" the night before filming, without Scott's knowledge. In an interview with Dan Jolin, Hauer said that these final lines showed that Batty wanted to "make his mark on existence ... the replicant in the final scene, by dying, shows Deckard what a real man is made of".
When Hauer performed the scene, the film crew applauded and some even cried.
The speech is the last track on Vangelis's 1994 Blade Runner soundtrack, titled "Tears in Rain".
Critical reception
Sidney Perkowitz, writing in Hollywood science, praised the speech, "If there's a great speech in science fiction cinema, it's Batty's final words." He says that it "underlines the replicant's humanlike characteristics mixed with its artificial capabilities". Jason Vest, writing in Future Imperfect: Philip K. Dick at the Movies, praised the delivery of the speech, "Hauer's deft performance is heartbreaking in its gentle evocation of the memories, experiences, and passions that have driven Batty's short life".
Writing in The Guardian, Michael Newton noted, "In one of the film's most brilliant sequences, Roy and Deckard pursue each other through a murky apartment, playing a vicious child's game of hide and seek. As they do so, the similarities between them grow stronger â" both are hunter and hunted, both are in pain, both struggle with a hurt, claw-like hand. If the film suggests a connection here that Deckard himself might still at this point deny, at the very end doubt falls away. Roy's life closes with an act of pity, one that raises him morally over the commercial institutions that would kill him. If Deckard cannot see himself in the other, Roy can. The white dove that implausibly flies up from Roy at the moment of his death perhaps stretches belief with its symbolism; but for me at least the movie has earned that moment, suggesting that in the replicant, as in the replicated technology of film itself, there remains a place for something human."
Tannhauser Gate
Tannhauser Gate (variant spellings: Tannhäuser Gate, Tanhauser Gate) is an unexplained place name which was used only once in the film. The term has since been reused in other science fiction sub-genres. The name possibly derives from Richard Wagner's operatic adaptation of the legend of the medieval German knight and poet Tannhäuser.
The academic writer Joanne Taylor, in an article discussing film noir and its epistemology, remarks on the relation between Wagner's opera and Batty's reference, and suggests that Batty aligns himself with Wagner's Tannhäuser, a character who has fallen from grace with men and with God. Both men and God, as she claims, are characters whose fate is beyond their own control.
References in other media
The monologue's influence can be noted in numerous references and tributes.
- Ashley Dunn of The New York Times used the monologue in a 1998 article to describe the difficulty archivists face due to the evanescence of the Internet.
- The 1998 film Soldier, which is said to be a "spiritual successorâ to Blade Runner, includes a reference to Tannhäuser Gate.
- Tad Williams pays homage to the Batty monologue in River of Blue Fire (the 2nd book of the Otherland series): "I've seen things you people wouldn't believe [...] Attac ships on the fire off the shores of the Nonestic Ocean. I watched magic blunderbusses flash and glitter in the dark near Glinda's palace. All those moments will be lost in time like tears in rain."
- Rosa Montero and Lilit Zekulin Thwaites's 2012 science fiction novel Tears in Rain is set in a future where self-aware androids live among humans. The main character, Bruna Husky, is aware of her "mortality" in the same way that Roy Batty and his crew were, and Bruna often thinks about the significance of Roy's monologue. The androids in the novel, like those of Blade Runner, are known as replicants.
- An easter egg page
about:robots
in Mozilla Firefox alludes to the monologue: "Robots have seen things you people wouldn't believe" among a list of robot related trivia.