The design and business of gaming from the perspective of an experienced developer

Category: TV and Movies (Page 4 of 5)

The Smurfs Get The Smurf Smurfed Out Of Them

Okay, so I’m sick today, and so it’s entirely possible that this story about the Smurfs getting bombed by warplanes in a TV ad is entirely the product of my twisted and delirious mind.

UNICEF’s first adult-only episode of “The Smurfs,” in which the blue-skinned cartoon characters’ village is annihilated by warplanes, has terrified young children… The reactions ranged from approval to shock and, in the case of small children who saw the episode by accident, wailing terror.

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Malcolm at Burning Man

I don’t normally watch and record Malcolm in the Middle, but as I was flipping through my program guide, the tivo gave a description that was something like this:

When Hal and Lois discover Malcolm and Reese’s plan to sneak off to the Burning Man festival, they decide to make it a family outing, with predictably disastrous results.

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Blaming Grissom

There is a scourge in the media today, a genre so perverse that it makes people better killers, and undermines the very fabric of a civic-minded society. I am talking, of course, about CSI. From the New Scientist:

There is an increasing trend for criminals to use plastic gloves during break-ins and condoms during rapes to avoid leaving their DNA at the scene. Dostie describes a murder case in which the assailant tried to wash away his DNA using shampoo. Police in Manchester in the UK say that car thieves there have started to dump cigarette butts from bins in stolen cars before they abandon them. “Suddenly the police have 20 potential people in the car,” says Rutty.

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Random Things that Amused Me This Week

J of Damned Vulpine pointed out to me that the frontpage of the Miami New Times web site has a GTA theme. Another sign that video games are permeating into the mainstream. There appears to be no permanent link, unfortunately.

The Senate is proposing to ban Chimeras. Metafilter snarks well on the topic:

I can’t believe the stupidity of our leaders – to make all this noise about Chimeras when anyone with sense knows that Hydras are much more dangerous. To say nothing of the corrupting influence on our youth of the Satyr and River-Nymph Agenda.

 I’ve been saving this one for a while: the Wilhelm Scream. You’ve heard it dozens of times in dozens of films, including Indiana Jones, Star Wars and the Lord of the Rings film. Originally a sound clip called “as Man Being Eaten by Alligator”, it was originally recorded in the 1950s, and has been making cameos in films ever since. The audio file at this link gives a few good examples of the Wilhelm in action.

Lastly, GrowRPG is a neat little flash puzzle. Good for wasting an hour or two.

Making Entertainment On The Cheap

Fresh Hell pointed out a couple of good articles on ScriptSecrets.net which discusses an interesting topic – how to make movies on the cheap. It resonated with me since we have similar issues when building games as well. As much as we’d like everything to be the biggest and best, and as much as MMOs inherently invite the need of every feature under the sun, we constantly try to figure how to use and reuse art and code in order to keep costs manageable and testing under control. Continue reading

What I Learned From ‘War of the Worlds’

I’m very forgiving to big, stupid, explosion-laden blockbusters. I have found that I’m able to enjoy movies like Independence Day. I’ve defended Underworld against the haters. I’ve been able to tolerate the cheesiness of Day After Tomorrow. And when in the right frame of mind, I can even shut off my brain and enjoy the schlockfest that is Armageddon.

So when I say that War of the Worlds is bad, I really mean it. It’s worse than ID4. It’s worse than Signs. It may be the worst movie I’ve seen all year. Even with a few drinks in me, I could not ignore the stupidity seeping from every pore of the movie.

As a helpful explanation of why, I’ve provided my notes on what we’ve learned about making decisions from War of the Worlds. Warning, lots ofspoilers after the break.

  1. The story of an unlikable man with no real goals who accomplishes very little is much more interesting than, say, that of politicians and soldiers that are actually making decisions that have a chance to matter.
  2. When invading a planet with 6 billion members, there’s nothing inefficient about killing them off one at a time.
  3. If you need to gather up your human livestock to begin the harvest, it’s really helpful to start disintegrating stuff so the ones who survive run as far away from you as possible.
  4. An Electromagnetic Pulse will wipe out any and all electric devices except camcorders. These are immune.
  5. Explaining to your kids what’s going on will only slow you down. It’ll be far more impactful simply to let them experience the horror first-hand.
  6. When fleeing an alien attack, if you finally hit a part of town with electricity, there’s no need to turn on a television or radio to find out what the hell’s going on.
  7. Also, when trying to make food for your children in your responsible ex-wife’s fully stocked kitchen, it’s probably a waste of time to look in a refrigerator.
  8. Why waste time on planning a strategic attack on a planet when you can bury your army below the surface of the earth and just hope that someone builds a population center on top of them?
  9. Obsolescence be damned. Go ahead and bury those attack units now, your highly advanced alien race can’t possibly substantially improve that technology in the next million years or so.
  10. Brattiness is hereditary.
  11. When the crowded population center you live in is under attack, probably the best place to head to is another major population center.
  12. Even after dad has warned you that nearly any human being would consider killing you for your car, it’s perfectly reasonable to drive slowly into a restless, panicked mob.
  13. Restless, panicked mobs want minivans. Other cars are apparently allowed on the ferries unmolested.
  14. This may be because minivans are apparently immune to airplanes that drop out of the sky.
  15. If you have machismo, running into a front line unarmed is a perfectly logical course of action.
  16. Walking into a wall of fire where aliens are incinerating anything that moves is not, as you might expect, instant death.
  17. Even though the earth shakes with every footstep, only Tom Cruise and his Daughter can detect a tripod before it it standing on top of you.
  18. Humans are the only ones smart enough to invent sensors capable of detecting heat or motion, or for that matter, being as good as the naked eye or ear.
  19. There are many ways to attack your human enemies – disintegration, sucking the blood dry, or capture in your basket to become a human suppository. Aliens will leave the exact method to the whims of the tripod driver.
  20. It’s okay to kill people for being noisy. Knocking them unconscious and/or restrainting them is for the weak. Note: the ‘killing the noisy’ rule does not apply when ‘the noisy’ is your daughter.
  21. An alien invasion is a perfectly acceptable situation in which to turn into a dick. It’s also a perfectly acceptable situation to try to attack them with a shotgun, or perhaps even unarmed!
  22. Earth is the only planet in the universe with the concept of bacteria and immunities.
  23. If a robotic arm extension of a gigantic tripod meanders through your living room, the best course of action is to run outside where the rest of the tripod is, and then just stand there waiting to be picked up. If you prefer to spice things up, you might consider screaming to ensure you have it’s attention.
  24. Bacteria not only kills aliens, it also lowers their force fields.
  25. The townhouses of the Massachusetts Liberal Elite are sturdy enough to withstand alien invasion with no more hardship than an early autumn leaf drop.

Here’s what I liked.

  • Anytime the tripods were on screen, I was able to enjoy the film.
  • The flaming train was cool.
  • The New York/Boston snipefest between father and son made me laugh out loud.
  • I was left with the impression that not only were the robots planted here millions of years ago, so were we, and as such the invasion was really just a ‘harvest’ of their planted human crop. But this is probably all in my head, and while cool (an interesting answer to ‘why are we here’), makes the ending of death by bacteria all the stupider.

Overall, either get liquored up for this one, or go see Batman again instead.

Original comments thread is here.

I’m Watching Too Much TV

Dave Rickey has something to say about the panic that television executives are feeling about the rise of computer games as an alternative life diversion. By his count, MMO players who used to watch the 28 hours of TV that most people watch now play MMOs for 20 hours a week and watch TV for 8. Which is to say, they’re not necessarily socially more degenerative than the norm. Hell, they’re the ones actually interacting with other people!

All that being said, I’m watching too much TV right now. Getting a DVR will do this to you. I go through phases with hobbies, and currently, I’m playing MTGO on a laptop while my fiance watches TV. A DVR helps a lot – erasing the commercials makes it much easier to justify wasting any amount of your life on TV. Here’s what I’m watching. Continue reading

Doom Movie to Not Contain Doom-like Content

Idle Thumbs has been in a tizzy for the last couple of days because the Doom Movie will not be based on Hell, Space Marines or anything else vaguely Doomish. To quote their source article:

Doom 2 was subtitled ‘Hell on Earth’, and the key plot point of Doom 3 is that the monsters in-game are Hellspawn, hence the multiple pentograms and such vile creations as dead-baby-cherub-wasp combinations. A ‘necessary’ change, or a neat way to avoid right-wing criticism? We wonder.

To quote Idle Thumbs:

Why bother?I

t may be worse than this. I’m not a zealot about brand protectionism the way that some people are. Hell, I even like the taste of Diet Cherry Vanilla Dr. Pepper. I tried to put steampunk into Ultima (I plead duress). But I still firmly believe that brands have real value, more value than the people who create these brands seem to grok. If you’re Id, then the Doom brand is your bread and butter. It’s got a core fan base that loves what the brand stands for and is willing to evangelize it, so long as you don’t betray what the brand stands for.

Doom is, fundamentally, about being a space marine killing demons from hell on a space station with a shotgun. At its core, when I think of my fondest memory in any of the Dooms, that’s what comes to mind. It’s also shockingly original – except for perhaps Event Horizon, what other movies can you think of that bring theological themes of heaven and hell into sci fi?

The Doom movie, as currently slated, looks to strip out the demons from hell, strip out the space marines, and set it in common times. If we’re lucky, though, maybe they’ll remember to give someone a shotgun. The Id guys would be better served by having a crappy movie that exactly fit Doom’s themes and values than by having a mediocre to good movie that betrayed them. They risk enraging their core evangelists, and confusing more tertiary fans who thought they knew what Doom was about. They also end up looking like ‘me-too’ers with a warmed over Resident Evil ripoff, rather than the venerable market leader with a golden IP that they are.

In the long run, this could easily weaken the franchise, hurting it in the long haul. But try telling that to the money guys, who see a quick way to cash in.

EDIT: It seems that lately, Penny Arcade has been annoyed by exactly the same things I am.

We’re Stupider than Hollywood

Back in 1977, Star Wars made summertime the best time to release an action film, and Memorial Day has become money movie day in the states. If you can, you launch your big budget extravaganza on Memorial Day. That gives your movie the biggest chance to succeed. But that being said, the movie companies aren’t stupid about it. They know that even an avid movie fan rarely spends more than 2 hours in a movie theatre any given week.

In 1999, Star Wars Episode I decided it would release on Memorial Day. Rather than everyone try to dogpile on that day, every other movie decided to cede the coveted Memorial Day release to the big dog. The lone exception was Notting Hill, a chick flick marketed as a movie mom could watch while the kids were geeking out in the next studio over. Can you imagine geek movie history if The Matrix had decided to release the same weekend?

So what does this have to do with us? Well, we, in the games industry, are collectively stupid, that’s what.

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