BioShock Movie To Be Made By Universal 157
azuredrake writes "Gamasutra reports that Universal Pictures has just announced a completion of licensing negotiations to bring the game BioShock to the silver screen. For those unfamiliar with the property, it was the much-lauded Game of the Year contender, praised for its storyline which emerged through gameplay, not just cutscenes. The director for the project is to be Gore Verbinski, who proved himself on the Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy, and the current writer for the screenplay is John Logan, who is recently known for the also-creepy Sweeny Todd."
proved himself (Score:5, Insightful)
Proved himself what?
I mean, did you sit through the last one?
Re:proved himself (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:proved himself (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:proved himself (Score:4, Funny)
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What I meant was, that I haven't seen any decent movie which was based on a game, no matter who directed it.
May I remind you of:
* Tomb Raider, directed by Simon West,
* Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life, directed by Jan De Bont,
* Mario Bros, directed by Rocky Morton and Annabel Jankel
* Street Fighter, directed by Steven E. de Souza,
* Wing Commander, directed by Chris Roberts,
* Final Fantasy, directed by Hironobu Sakaguchi
* Double
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Chrissakes, the BFG was fucking blue and when it was fired everyone in the room didn't die. That's about as faithful as an Atheist in a strip club.
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Yes; "fairly" there implies that you consider it fundamentally faithful and only differing in relatively unimportant ways.
Is that an accurate characterisation? You may think so; many of us disagree. The game is about teleportation research that opens portals to a literal Hell populated by supernatural demons and the tormented souls of the damned. The movie, meanwhile, is about genetic research involving a chromosome that mutates humans into monsters. There really isn'
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Forever... (Score:1)
Re:proved himself (Score:4, Insightful)
Um. They made a movie about a game about demons and hell without the demons or the hell.
It was some ancient civilization and some sort of "rage virus." Which exists nowhere in any Doom I've played.
How exactly is "throwing out the entire fucking premise" faithful?
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They changed the entire premise. It would be like a Tomb Raider movie without Lara Croft or tombs.
"The Rock is an asshole on Mars for 90 minutes" has no possible resemblance whatsoever to Doom, no.
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I don't remember anything about the Doom movie that was really specific to Doom, other than the first-person scene, and the Imp-like alien.
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Then the Doom movie has my permission to suck. As you were.
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Re:proved himself (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:proved himself (Score:4, Insightful)
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Just my opinion of course. Obviously a lot of people enjoyed them.
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I made it through 1 and a half of the Pirates trilogy movies. Without Johnny Depp I'd never have made it through the first. Verbinski took some very talented actors (and some truly awful ones (Bloom and Ikea Knightley, for example)) and proved that he barely has the ability to direct traffic. The second movie was a long rambling mess that I walked out of halfway through -- that was 100% the dire
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Yes yes I know a lot of people will say the Japanese version was better, but the American one was still a good movie.
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Re:proved himself (Score:5, Interesting)
Bioshock, as a film, would benefit from being CGI free. It has a nice steampunk quality to it, and thus should done to feel appropriately so.
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The city in general would just have to rely on more realistic looking, and time-tested cinematic techniques. You would need proper sets, matte backdrops, and probably some scale models for the all-encompassing shots. If done properly, this would come together far mo
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Sure, the alien from Aliens was damn near perfect without any need for CGI, but that's because the film makers could leave plenty to the imagination when the alien was onscreen. It wasn't ever really necessary to
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Completely incorrect (Score:2)
Where do people get this shit that they spout as fact?
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Don't do the in game story! (Score:5, Interesting)
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I don't think this director is the one to pull that off. He might make a fun movie but then again a movie about philosophy would be kind of boring.
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At least they'll be consistent.
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The "Writer" of Star Trek: Nemesis (Score:2)
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I've heard that many Logan scripts require ghost rewrites to prevent them from becoming train wrecks. Gladiator, The Aviator, and The Last Samurai had the benefit of large studio backings combined with reputable directors and strong casts. Frankly, while waiting for Nemesis, I recall people warning of the impending doom of the script with anecdotes about Ridley Scott having found it necessary to get a ghost writer to make sense of the Gladiator script. Though Logan seems to be a popular writer, remember
Film requirements.... (Score:5, Funny)
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This will all be true even if you go to see it in a theater.
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Razzing Bioshock aside, I loved the game. Still haven't played it in 'true' widescreen yet, as my cousin has had my copy since last November and it hasn't been worth the drive to go get it.
Re:Film requirements.... (Score:4, Informative)
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I would really have liked to play Mass Effect on the PC, the 360 version has too many loading issues due to constantly streaming of the DVD (it was clearly not really a finished game, even though the content is all there and very high quality) I assume that presumably wouldn't be a problem on a powerful desktop PC so I was looking forward to it until I heard it had the crappy copy protection scheme.
A representative of the guys behind Trackmania (whic
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The steam version of bioshock as well as trackmania have none of the above problems.
Thanks, I wasn't sure about that.
I purchased Unreal 3 over Steam, and it still had a serial number on it. I was surprised at this, but Steam played nice and shows you the number as a popup at just the right time when you are installing, so you can enter it into Unreal (a nice solution).
After seeing that in particular I wasn't sure how much other third party titles were integrated with Steam so have been quite wary (incase it was the same installer, just wrapped additionally in the Steam downloader).
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The 3 install limit and no cd-requirement were already present.
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ummm (Score:2)
So what you're telling us is that it's gonna star Johnny Depp?
Re:ummm (Score:5, Funny)
He pulls off effeminate pretty well.
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Re:ummm (Score:4, Funny)
translation please (Score:2, Insightful)
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As for Hellcom's Final Fantasy comment, Final Fantasy used to use cut scenes that were pre rendered to make ps1 and ps2 games look as good as ps3 games. Now that the ps3 is out, they will likely not use them for size reasons.
Re:translation please (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is why the film will suck.
A key underlying theme in Bioshock is the illusion of choice--sort of a meta-commentary on gaming itself as a medium. (*Spoiler warning*) The player is placed in a broad, seemingly very open environment, invited to make choices as he participates in the story. The twist in the plot is where you find out you're really NOT a participant at all, but an automaton performing as you are expected to by outside actors. I really thought this was a rather clever response to Ebert's principal argument against "games as art"--that games as an interactive medium lack authorial control. The Bioshock authors used the interactivity to demonstrate why authorial control is paramount to the way games tell stories.
There's no way to convey this through a film. The passive viewer loses the sense of interactivity and participation that made the game philosophically compelling. I'm sure the movie will look pretty, and I'm sure they'll spend a lot of money on it. I'm also sure it won't be able to add anything to what the game already accomplished.
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Whereas I loved the game, I think the story is still very much overrated.
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Basically, the game succeeded on one front, who's to say the movie won't come at the material from another angle and succeed brilliantly also?
Stop thinking in the narrow 'the movie must just be the game all over again' mindset. The game introduced a world, how they use the world in a movie is open for vast int
World changing? (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:1)
-BA
Correction (Score:1)
niversal (Score:2)
Objectivist film (Score:2, Interesting)
Well, with the exception of The Fountainhead, which was accidentally filmed as a screwball comedy.
Thank fuck. (Score:2)
Universal? Again? (Score:5, Interesting)
Perfect hollywood movie (Score:2)
Great (Score:1)
I kinda hope they bring back System Shock - I'd like to see a new sequel in that series. Not as a movie though.
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You have a choice to make (Score:5, Funny)
You can...
(1) Harvest the clerk, and get into the movie for free along with unlimited popcorn.
or
(2) Save the clerk, teaching him how to operate a register. You'll still have to pay a bit to get in, but at least you helped the world a bit and the clerk might hook you up with some presents later.
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To Quote Ask A Ninja (Score:2, Funny)
Bruce Campbell (Score:2, Interesting)
The Phantom Empire (Score:2)
There is a place for comic relief - but sci-fi, fantasy, and horror almost always works best when played straight:
Very likely the world's first singing-cowboy science-fiction adventure, this 12-episode chapterplay features Gene Autry in his first starring role -- as "Gene Autry," the proprietor of Radio Ranch.
It is said that Wallace MacDonald...came up with the concept while under the influence of nitrou
I can haz a Portal movie? (Score:3, Interesting)
If there is a Half-life/Portal movie, to which some people have speculated, why not have the following people play the possible role.
same old (Score:1)
Iron man is a case in point. Interesting for the first hour, then repetitive (in the sense of "I've seen this movie before") for the second hour.
I'd like to see people complain about movies and try to get their money back. That will
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would fit right in over there.
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Re:OK (Score:4, Informative)
Well of course the game gets it "wrong." If this crackpot Utopia had actually worked there is no story.