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Ryan Gosling hits dark notes in 'Blade Runner 2049' clip at CinemaCon

Bryan Alexander
USA TODAY
Ryan Gosling took the stage at CinemaCon 2017 to introduce footage from 'Blade Runner 2049.'

LAS VEGAS — Ryan Gosling showed some very different movie chops Monday night.

Gosling revealed more of his sci-fi adventure in Blade Runner 2049, kicking off the world premiere of extended footage for the highly anticipated film at CinemaCon, the national convention of theater owners.

It's a follow-up to 1982's classic Blade Runner, which was directed by Ridley Scott and featured Harrison Ford in dystopian Los Angeles as Rick Deckard, a law enforcement agent tracking down genetically engineered replicants.

Blade Runner 2049 (in theaters Oct. 6) picks up the action with Gosling as the LAPD's mysterious Officer K.

"Prepare to start going steady with the edge of your seats," a hoodie-clad Gosling told the CinemaCon audience.

The new footage shows Gosling meeting up with the retired Deckard (Ford) and included plenty of Jared Leto as a creepy villain and a fellow officer played by Robin Wright.

Sony Motion Picture Group chairman Tom Rothman, who stood on stage next to Gosling, took a shot at small-screen movie offerings after showing off the visually stunning footage: "Netflix, my a--," he said.

Ryan Gosling stars as jazz pianist Seb in 'La La Land.'

Blade Runner 2049 is a big step away from Gosling's Oscar-nominated performance in 2016's La La Land, in which he starred as a aspiring jazz pianist. But the Blade Runner 2049 clip (and the movie's trailer) shows Gosling briefly tickling the ivories in Deckard's house.

Gosling told USA TODAY that he didn't expect the piano scene to make it into the trailer.

"La La Land hadn't even been cut when we shot (Blade Runner)," said Gosling. "But somehow they went right for the piano scene for the trailer. I was just waiting for the (La La Land) comparisons after that. And they are out there."

Even Gosling hasn't yet seen Blade Runne2049 in its entirety. But he says the dystopian world is even more complicated in the new film.

"I cannot get into why it's more complicated. But it is, (while maintaining) the original film's themes and story," Gosling said. "I don't even know if I'm allowed to say that I enjoyed making the film at this point. It's all very secret."

The actor was a toddler when the original Blade Runner came out.

"But I saw everything that other movies stole from the film," he said. "It was quite a prophetic film in so many ways."

Harrison Ford in 'Blade Runner' in 1982.

He also explained to USA TODAY the big hug he gave Moonlight star Mahershala Ali backstage at last month's Oscars. The show of love came after the stunning news that Moonlight had actually won the best picture Oscar, when La La Land had already been announced as the winner.

"Mahershala is one of my favorite actors and Moonlight was a stunning piece of work. Groundbreaking," said Gosling, who starred with Ali in 2013's A Place Beyond the Pines. "I was so thrilled for them. I was thrilled for him. It couldn't have happened to nicer people.

"And Mahershala had just had a baby. So there were a lot of reasons to give him a hug then."

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