Isildur´s Heir;34603043 said:Yes, i haven't played it, but that doesn't invalidate what i said.
By saying "There's absolutely nothing a film does for that story that the game doesn't already cover in great detail", you are making the mistake of addressing it like the movie would replace the game somehow.
That's a mistake since it wouldn't happen, not was there any point for it to be so; just like a movie doesn't replace a book.
But sure, not all things are easily translated into movie; maybe a tv show would be better suited.
When i talk about video game movies,i do not invalidate a tv show; in fact, in this case, the word "movie" has both meanings.
But, like i said before, a movie would not have those things that are so good in games because they are gameplay features, like upgrades, opening locked doors (shiv doors, there are 13 in the game, from what i gathered), or finding parts of some device.
If you've not played the game then you're actually not understanding what I'm saying. The story of who the characters are and what happened to the world are told not only through the cut scenes but through the gameplay itself. We're talking 20 hours worth of story told over 4 very long chapters. A film would have to be written in a way that does away with a lot that story, meaning it would more or less be unrecognisable in the end, which comes back to the main problem of video game adaptations, that they end up being nothing like the games they are based on. The biggest issue a film will face is that it's simple not as immersive, the world in The Last of Us sucks you in in a way film cannot replicate.