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2020/06/21 19:57:17
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
Azreal13 wrote: I also think you're crediting him with too much artistic integrity, my general impression is he fully understood the implications of the German tax laws around investing in movies and set out from the get go to exploit them, but I daresay that can't be proven without the man effectively confessing to what could amount to tax fraud.
A side note in terms of Uwe Boll's "personal integrity": At one point a few years ago, he challenged his critics to an exhibition boxing match. Lowtax from SomethingAwful took him up on it - wrote a negative review of one of his movies, and then went to the bout with some other critics.
It was an exhibition for charity, and Boll promised it would all be for show, just a fun thing for PR, and they would get training and equipment beforehand.
Not only did that not happen, but Boll did not disclose that he had a background as an skilled amateur boxer, and wound up absolutely beating the snot out of Lowtax and the other 2 critics who went to the event. One of them needed a paramedic, IIRC. He tried to "win by knockout", which is a pretty crappy thing to do with how the event was presented and the skill set of the opponents (one critic DID have some boxing experience, and Boll did not face him, if I remember - he only fought the totally inexperienced).
Uwe Boll is a POS.
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2020/06/22 09:45:05
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
Afaik Boll had everyone who wanted to step into the ring fill out a sheet with things like weight, height and experience. Then based on that list he handpicked the (smaller) critics he felt he could (and did) beat up. Real POS.
Edit: making everyone who knows about this feel old, a few years ago translates to 2006...
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/06/22 09:54:52
Sorry for my spelling. I'm not a native speaker and a dyslexic.
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2020/06/22 10:21:53
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
Edit: making everyone who knows about this feel old, a few years ago translates to 2006...
My whole life was spent waiting for the world to end in 2000 due to a divine/nuclear/environmental/computer apocalypse. So everything since then is gravy. 2000 will always be a few years ago.
2020/06/24 19:52:21
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
If so the Black Mirror episode Nosedive might qualify, really unsettling what if premise pondering if social media actually had a bearing on the real world, heck I even tolerated Bryce, plus it has a happy ending
I think there should be a separate category for films about games or films involving made up properties.
In films about games, there are some bad ones (The Wizard comes to my mind first) and also some good ones (the Southpark episode about World of Warcraft was good). Films about people playing made up video games is even bigger- since it will include The Last Starfighter, Tron, Ready Player One and Sword Art Online.
In films involving made up games, I can think of at least two Black Mirror episodes about made up video games that were good (Bandersnatch and USS Callister).
Still none of these are really adaptations of video games to film- they are films that involve video games, so I wouldn't count them. I would not count them as none of them face the same kind of challenges that are ever-present for proper video game adaptations to film.
(of course, if we do include video game to television adaptations, we get to include a lot of anime like Persona or Castlevania. I haven't watched enough of those to know if they are as bad as the normal video game to film adaptations, but I expect them to be better).
Automatically Appended Next Post:
Kid_Kyoto wrote: So yeah the plot of the Producers (Mel Brooks film and musical) was they got people to invest millions more than they needed then planned to disappear with the money after the show flopped.
They weren't planning to make a dozen plays over the course of decade, so why did people keep investing? Was it just that it was a no lose proposition, pay the money to Boll and maybe you'll get a profit, or pay it as taxes and never get it back (directly, barring intangibles like an educated society or safe streets)?
It might have come from a no-lose proposition. From what Bol said, the investors would get half their money back, so that cuts any risk in half. So unless they were able to write off the whole investment for taxes and THEN get half of it back from Germany, I don't think that's what was going on.
Also, I haven't actually heard any way in which the film would need to fail in order for this to work. Maybe it only pays out if the film has no profit? That's the Bol fanemy theory, but I can't find anything to substantiate it.
We know that Bol could not make whatever film he wanted. His investors beleived that video game properties would eventually pay off, so they only funded those.
Still, there's something fishy about Bloodrayne. The film bombed hard, then the sequel bombed hard then ANOTHER SEQUEL got made (and bombed hard). If this wasn't a way to scam the German government, then I don't know what kind of idiot kept investing in more Bloodrayne movies.
Azreal13 wrote: I also think you're crediting him with too much artistic integrity, my general impression is he fully understood the implications of the German tax laws around investing in movies and set out from the get go to exploit them, but I daresay that can't be proven without the man effectively confessing to what could amount to tax fraud.
A side note in terms of Uwe Boll's "personal integrity": At one point a few years ago, he challenged his critics to an exhibition boxing match. Lowtax from SomethingAwful took him up on it - wrote a negative review of one of his movies, and then went to the bout with some other critics.
It was an exhibition for charity, and Boll promised it would all be for show, just a fun thing for PR, and they would get training and equipment beforehand.
Not only did that not happen, but Boll did not disclose that he had a background as an skilled amateur boxer, and wound up absolutely beating the snot out of Lowtax and the other 2 critics who went to the event. One of them needed a paramedic, IIRC. He tried to "win by knockout", which is a pretty crappy thing to do with how the event was presented and the skill set of the opponents (one critic DID have some boxing experience, and Boll did not face him, if I remember - he only fought the totally inexperienced).
Uwe Boll is a POS.
Please don't get me wrong. I think that Bol honestly tried to make good films, and tremendously sucked at it. He wasn't a guy who made terrible films on purpose, or he wouldn't have taken the criticism so personally.
I think this is also shown in how personally he took the failure of his Kickstarter for "Rampage 3" (he posted a video telling everyone to go f*ck yourselves" along with a tirade about the highly successful Avengers films, basically implying that Bol's films are real art while MCU movies are hacks).
He is a deeply insecure guy who was constantly looking for outside reinforcement of his delusions- and he gets very angry when his reality does not accommodate his delusions.
This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2020/06/24 20:33:14
2020/06/24 20:36:44
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
Maybe its just another Brooker observation that social media is really an MMO where you have an avatar / profile that isnt really you and the aim is the farm up a score of likes, retweets or wot not by presenting a version of your life you think is most likely to start the happy bits of your grey matter lighting up due to said likes just how regular games do
The not Resident Evil one was pretty good too
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/06/24 20:39:09
"AND YET YOU ACT AS IF THERE IS SOME IDEAL ORDER IN THE WORLD, AS IF THERE IS SOME...SOME RIGHTNESS IN THE UNIVERSE BY WHICH IT MAY BE JUDGED."
2020/06/24 20:42:34
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
It's not a straight up adaption but Alan Wake lifts an awful lot from David Lynch, specifically Twin Peaks, but a couple of other nods to his work. While not a straight up adaption the game is brilliant and one I'd recommend to anyone who hasn't played it. Steam summer sale is on next week so you'll get it for less than a pint of beer.
2020/06/24 20:54:43
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
Barbachop wrote: It's not a straight up adaption but Alan Wake lifts an awful lot from David Lynch, specifically Twin Peaks, but a couple of other nods to his work. While not a straight up adaption the game is brilliant and one I'd recommend to anyone who hasn't played it. Steam summer sale is on next week so you'll get it for less than a pint of beer.
There are some good games that were adapted from movies. While a lot of them are crap, there are some that are really great (various Star Wars, Goldeneye, etc). I don't think that's a point of contention.
It is about whether or not a film made of Alan Wake would suck. And the odds are definitely against it.
2020/07/06 06:17:53
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/07/07 02:15:03
"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."
2020/07/07 10:46:16
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
Nevelon wrote: Marines on mars fighting zombies and demons. With ehough of the right trappings, and even the FPS scene.
Close enough for government work.
Opinions obviously vary.
They specifically weren't demons. They went out of their way to rewrite the miniscule amount of plot the original game had. I've already had my mini-rant on this ITT but suffice to say the "plot" of the Doom movie was a really bizarre decision from the writers.
2020/07/09 03:52:35
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
I'm going to disagree with the majority and say I really enjoyed Warcraft. Probably helps that I'm not super familiar with the games or universe of it though.
Rampage, Detective Pikachu, and Sonic were all good fun too, as were Prince of Persia and all three Tomb Raider movies.
Wreck-It Ralph is kind of a meta pick, as it's not actually based on a real video game, but it still kind of a video game movie and it's awesome. The sequel, less so but not terrible. I could probably mention Ready Player One under the same sort of criteria (I liked it, although the book is FAR superior).
For me, both the first Mortal Kombat and Street Fighter were firmly in the "so bad it's good" category. Between the two, I definitely prefer Street Fighter, and that's mostly because Raul Julia as M. Bison just steals the show.
Haven't seen Doom or Mario Bros., but I've heard they weren't good. I have seen Wing Commander, and that is a terrible movie indeed. I don't even really know much about the games, and I still thought the movie was crap.
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2020/07/09 04:20:53
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
AngryAngel80 wrote: I don't know, when I see awesome rules, I'm like " Baby, your rules looking so fine. Maybe I gotta add you to my first strike battalion eh ? "
The original animated streetfighter II movie-it even had a fantastic (original japanese, not the crappy american re-edit) soundtrack,
The other is the vampire hunter/dark stalkers OVA series.
they even used the iconic attacks.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/07/09 06:53:43
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2020/07/09 10:44:59
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
ZergSmasher wrote: I'm going to disagree with the majority and say I really enjoyed Warcraft. Probably helps that I'm not super familiar with the games or universe of it though.
I got the impression it was a set up movie assuming a franchise was near certain, setting it around the era of first few RTS game was an odd choice as its mass appeal was the MMO so missing out Thrall, Arthus, Jaina etc was a strange choice, also painting a purty human lady green with some joke shop teeth does not make a half-orc
"AND YET YOU ACT AS IF THERE IS SOME IDEAL ORDER IN THE WORLD, AS IF THERE IS SOME...SOME RIGHTNESS IN THE UNIVERSE BY WHICH IT MAY BE JUDGED."
2020/07/09 13:22:49
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
ZergSmasher wrote: I'm going to disagree with the majority and say I really enjoyed Warcraft. Probably helps that I'm not super familiar with the games or universe of it though.
I got the impression it was a set up movie assuming a franchise was near certain, setting it around the era of first few RTS game was an odd choice as its mass appeal was the MMO so missing out Thrall, Arthus, Jaina etc was a strange choice, also painting a purty human lady green with some joke shop teeth does not make a half-orc
I mean, that's how warcraft has always done all its female versions of the character races.
Troll man: Crazy 3-foot tusks, gorilla stance, 8 inch nose, 2 foot ears, big fat fingers
Troll lady: Hawt bewbs lady painted blue with petite little costume shop fangs standing fully upright with normal human limb proportions
"Got you, Yugi! Your Rubric Marines can't fall back because I have declared the tertiary kaptaris ka'tah stance two, after the secondary dacatarai ka'tah last turn!"
"So you think, Kaiba! I declared my Thousand Sons the cult of Duplicity, which means all my psykers have access to the Sorcerous Facade power! Furthermore I will spend 8 Cabal Points to invoke Cabbalistic Focus, causing the rubrics to appear behind your custodes! The Vengeance for the Wronged and Sorcerous Fullisade stratagems along with the Malefic Maelstrom infernal pact evoked earlier in the command phase allows me to double their firepower, letting me wound on 2s and 3s!"
"you think it is you who has gotten me, yugi, but it is I who have gotten you! I declare the ever-vigilant stratagem to attack your rubrics with my custodes' ranged weapons, which with the new codex are now DAMAGE 2!!"
"...which leads you straight into my trap, Kaiba, you see I now declare the stratagem Implacable Automata, reducing all damage from your attacks by 1 and triggering my All is Dust special rule!"
2020/07/09 13:44:14
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
My problem with Warcraft is that it looks like a B movie while it's a 160 mln $ blockbuster.
I watched a couple of times and it's not terrible, but nothing on it (acting, plot, visual effects, etc...) is worth a sequel, that's the impression I got.
2020/07/09 15:12:05
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
ZergSmasher wrote: I'm going to disagree with the majority and say I really enjoyed Warcraft. Probably helps that I'm not super familiar with the games or universe of it though.
I got the impression it was a set up movie assuming a franchise was near certain, setting it around the era of first few RTS game was an odd choice as its mass appeal was the MMO so missing out Thrall, Arthus, Jaina etc was a strange choice, also painting a purty human lady green with some joke shop teeth does not make a half-orc
I mean, that's how warcraft has always done all its female versions of the character races.
Troll man: Crazy 3-foot tusks, gorilla stance, 8 inch nose, 2 foot ears, big fat fingers
Troll lady: Hawt bewbs lady painted blue with petite little costume shop fangs standing fully upright with normal human limb proportions
true but in game everyone is a stylised cartoon so it doesnt stick out as much, it may have been a practical choice given her lengthy screen time as the other female orc looks way better but looks like a lot more work in make up and costume along with cgi tweaks
"AND YET YOU ACT AS IF THERE IS SOME IDEAL ORDER IN THE WORLD, AS IF THERE IS SOME...SOME RIGHTNESS IN THE UNIVERSE BY WHICH IT MAY BE JUDGED."
2020/07/12 05:03:11
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
The Rampage film starring Dwain The Rock Johson was based on a game about humans that morphed into Kaiju and go stomping on cities.
The Rampage from famed video game to film adapter Uwe Bol is one of his few films that was not based on a video game (and to which he made two sequels).
Surprisingly, the critical response to the Uwe Bol film was more positive than to the Johnson film, which obviously does little to recommend the Rock's film.
ZergSmasher wrote: I'm going to disagree with the majority and say I really enjoyed Warcraft. Probably helps that I'm not super familiar with the games or universe of it though.
I got the impression it was a set up movie assuming a franchise was near certain, setting it around the era of first few RTS game was an odd choice as its mass appeal was the MMO so missing out Thrall, Arthus, Jaina etc was a strange choice, also painting a purty human lady green with some joke shop teeth does not make a half-orc
I mean, that's how warcraft has always done all its female versions of the character races.
Troll man: Crazy 3-foot tusks, gorilla stance, 8 inch nose, 2 foot ears, big fat fingers
Troll lady: Hawt bewbs lady painted blue with petite little costume shop fangs standing fully upright with normal human limb proportions
true but in game everyone is a stylised cartoon so it doesnt stick out as much, it may have been a practical choice given her lengthy screen time as the other female orc looks way better but looks like a lot more work in make up and costume along with cgi tweaks
I think you're spot on. It is really hard to adapt cartoon logic into a live action piece- I'm not sure that there was any way for them to actually get Warcraft 'right' and still make a live action film.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/07/12 05:15:48
2020/07/12 07:07:16
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
I remember when Rampage was the hot arcade game. Wasn’t it before the TMNT game? The TMNT game that took the Double Dragon formula and ‘modernized it’, ushering in the Simpsons game and all the Marvel hero games that seem so primitive today?
I thought the following were excellent but you may not agree......
Dead or Alive
With DoA, you can tell that the creators really put a lot of thought into "Okay, what's the core appeal of this franchise, and how do we translate that to the screen?"
"The 75mm gun is firing. The 37mm gun is firing, but is traversed round the wrong way. The Browning is jammed. I am saying "Driver, advance." and the driver, who can't hear me, is reversing. And as I look over the top of the turret and see twelve enemy tanks fifty yards away, someone hands me a cheese sandwich."
2020/07/13 13:28:26
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
I thought the following were excellent but you may not agree......
Dead or Alive
With DoA, you can tell that the creators really put a lot of thought into "Okay, what's the core appeal of this franchise, and how do we translate that to the screen?"
That beach volleyball scene was absolutely integral to the plot!
2020/07/13 14:31:29
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
BobtheInquisitor wrote: I remember when Rampage was the hot arcade game. Wasn’t it before the TMNT game? The TMNT game that took the Double Dragon formula and ‘modernized it’, ushering in the Simpsons game and all the Marvel hero games that seem so primitive today?
Yes, I just did some checking, and your timeline looks dead on.
Rampage-1986
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - 1989
The Simpsons - 1991
Captain America and the Avengers- 1991
With the two year gap between TMNT and the other brawlers like it, I think it is safe to say that those games were deliberately modeled after TMNT. And brawlers before that were things like Double Dragon and Final Fight -which definitely had a different feel to them from TMNT and later brawlers, but I'm not sure that I can put my finger on exactly what changed.
2020/07/13 15:06:40
Subject: Re:Are there good films based on video games?
I thought the following were excellent but you may not agree......
Dead or Alive
With DoA, you can tell that the creators really put a lot of thought into "Okay, what's the core appeal of this franchise, and how do we translate that to the screen?"
That beach volleyball scene was absolutely integral to the plot!
piffle tis nowt but a straight up rip of Top Gun (without the tacked on lady cuddling bit lest you had had any wrong thinks regarding playing with the boys...)
@ Odin, Yep likewise I think maybe the latter games felt more just mash the attack whereas Double Dragon had a kind of, limited, move set, also fractual drift and impending gimmerdom 30 years on may play a factor
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/07/13 15:13:35
"AND YET YOU ACT AS IF THERE IS SOME IDEAL ORDER IN THE WORLD, AS IF THERE IS SOME...SOME RIGHTNESS IN THE UNIVERSE BY WHICH IT MAY BE JUDGED."
2020/07/13 16:29:59
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?
I know people won;t agree with me but I liked the mutant chronicles movie and think that given it's clear lack of budget and decision to spend what they had on actors instead of effects it was good.
So yes, IMO there's one.
"But the universe is a big place, and whatever happens, you will not be missed..."
2020/07/13 16:50:28
Subject: Are there good films based on video games?