I SEE SPIDEY
Eternal
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I think Mortal Kombat is easily the "best" videogame film but it still isn't a good film. I love it though but I acknowledge that it isn't good.
I think Mortal Kombat is easily the "best" videogame film but it still isn't a good film. I love it though but I acknowledge that it isn't good.

I can't believe people are sitting here scratching their heads over why Dungeon Siege or Wing Commander weren't more successful.It's easy. If you half ass your movie with a crappy script, lowball budget and hire your brother-in-law to direct then = bad movie. If the talent behind it is solid and the effort is put in to take the material seriously then = good movie. The idea that you can't make a good film from a game property just because "ur not playin" is ludicrous.
And yet, we still don't have a good video game adaptation after some 30 years. All this talk about 'you've just got to do this and that' fails to take into account the possibility that maybe, just maybe, the two mediums don't work well together.
And yet, we still don't have a good video game adaptation after some 30 years. All this talk about 'you've just got to do this and that' fails to take into account the possibility that maybe, just maybe, the two mediums don't work well together.
Good movies are good movies regardless of the source material.How long did we wait before we got any decent superhero movie again?
As the video I linked earlier clearly states: Nobody have tried to make a decent videogame movie.
Most of the time, these adaptations are not backed by proper creative visions, i mean, a vast majority is in the hands of the likes of Uwe Boll and Paul W S Anderson. How are these adaptations supposed to work in hands like that?
And yet, we still don't have a good video game adaptation. All this talk about 'you've just got to do this and that' fails to take into account the possibility that maybe, just maybe, the two mediums don't work well together.
Most of the time, these adaptations are not backed by proper creative visions, i mean, a vast majority is in the hands of the likes of Uwe Boll and Paul W S Anderson. How are these adaptations supposed to work in hands like that?
As the video I linked earlier clearly states: Nobody have tried to make a decent videogame movie.
So better to just not try at all, then? Very ambitious.
It also states other reasons that may come down to the medium itself.
I'm not suggestion the creative team doesn't play a part, but were talking about over 25 years of attempts and zero successes. All I'm suggesting is maybe there are reasons that go beyond simply the creative team. There's never been another medium that has been so troublesome in adapting into film, at some point the question has to be asked whether the medium itself is part of the problem.
All the problem with game adaptaion so far were problems with the creative team
The sated reason( in that video ) was they tried the wrong approach when adapting video games: trying to emulate the gaming experince and recreating the action intead of focussing on the story and expanding on the lore (Forward Unto Dawn eg).
What's so ambitious? Game worlds these days are far more ambitious with their size and scope because the medium allows it. What are you getting out of the films 2 hours story that you're not already getting in much greater depth in game form? Games can last a good 12 hours in story alone.
t:Hence why focussing on exploring expanding the lore is a much a better choice( much like the novels and comics tie-ins/expanded universe wont to do ) than trying to blindly emulate the gaming experince( which is futile to begin with) .
Although it would be hilarious if Warcarft tried to emulate the game experience of an RTS game.t:
If the solution is that simple why hasn't anyone come up with it before?
Just seems to me that we have to question the medium itself at some point. If Warcraft and Assassins Creed can't buck the trend, we have to start asking is it's even worth it anymore. Games can deliver a type of story telling experience no movie can emulate, so maybe they're just not a good match. To be honest I don't see why people desire the two mediums to mix so much.