Ubisoft Launches Movie Studio To Make Movies of Its Games 114
Variety reports that Ubisoft, the game studio behind Assassin's Creed, the Tom Clancy games and the recent Prince of Persia titles, has launched Ubisoft Motion Pictures for the purpose of turning its game franchises into TV and movie franchises.
"Ubisoft's Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time was brought to the bigscreen by Jerry Bruckheimer, with Jake Gyllenhaal in the lead. The 2010 pic grossed about $335 million worldwide. The publisher started expanding its reach in 2007, when it launched Ubisoft Digital Arts, a computer animation studio, which created Avatar's ground-breaking 3D vidgame. A year later, it acquired Montreal-based visual effects house Hybride Technologies."
A good sign? (Score:2)
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Having the game makers and designers working on it can only improve what has been, for quite some time, a really awful form of movie.
Mainly because of Uwe Bol.
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Mainly because of Uwe Bol.
Don't get your hopes up; this is Ubisoft we're talking about
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Uwe-Bol-isoft?
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It's Ubi we're talking here. They might just hire him as their creative director.
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Making big, dumb Bruckheimer movies isn't really an improvement.
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At least Uwe Bol movies have a self-awareness of their own silliness. Michael Bay, on the other hand....
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You do realize that Uwe Bole is basically an in-real-life troll, right? I'm sure nothing makes him more happy than seeing the nerd rage that happens whenever his name is mentioned or he makes a new movie that shits on some nerds favorite video game.
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Anyone see Postal? I love that movie. Aside from that Uwe Bol shouldnt be allowed to touch any video game movie.
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I read the headline and face palmed myself so hard I passed out.
Re:A good sign? (Score:5, Insightful)
I read the headline and face palmed myself so hard I passed out.
Had you used face palm oil, then your hand would have slid off harmlessly.
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Great advice, gee, thanks. Now I hit the head on my table and woke my boss. And now I sit here in the office with some slick stuff on my palms, a dizzy look on my face and you better have some idea how to explain THAT to him!
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Great advice, gee, thanks. Now I hit the head on my table and woke my boss. And now I sit here in the office with some slick stuff on my palms, a dizzy look on my face and you better have some idea how to explain THAT to him!
Next time swing hand toward face, and not face toward hand. I hope this helps.
A common mistake ... (Score:3)
Having the game makers and designers working on it can only improve what has been, for quite some time, a really awful form of movie.
Game development and movie development are different skills, one is long duration interactive entertainment and the other is short duration passive entertainment. You seem to be making a very common mistake, assuming great talent in one area translates to great talent in another area. Whatever comes second, the movie adapted from the game or the game adapted from the movie, is usually inferior because of the budgeting and scheduling. Ie the constraints imposed on the development team and not necessarily the
Re:A common mistake ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Game development and movie development are different skills, one is long duration interactive entertainment and the other is short duration passive entertainment.
True. However, the game-to-movie direction today has more promise than the movie-to-game direction. Games made from movie franchises tend to be track rides - you will follow the plot. On the other hand, a free-play game provides known characters and settings on which a screenwriter can build a plot - even when the game barely has one. ("Prince of Persia" comes to mind.)
Um, I'm playing through Sands of Time right now... (Score:2)
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It will still be shite as stories from games just don't need telling, they need playing!
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So, now you destroy your previous argument by saying talent doesn't matter as much as budgeting and scheduling, which Ubisoft will undoubtedly be better at than if they hired out the job. I don't get it. Did you have a point?
No, you missed the point by a wide mark, and of course as the writer that is my fault. My point is that game and movie development require different skill sets and approaches, and that high performing individuals in one field may not perform very highly in the other. A corollary to this is that even when you do have high performing individuals (possible outside experts) they can be undermined by time and money. So if a game inspired movie is done poorly it may be that the wrong people worked on it, or maybe
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I agree - it's what Marvel have done with their movies. They made a movie company, because every time they tried to make a movie based on their comics, they'd either get massively ripped off, or the movie would be horrible, or both. They usually end up partnering with a major studio for distribution, but that's usually past the post.
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They made a movie company, because every time they tried to make a movie based on their comics, they'd either get massively ripped off, or the movie would be horrible, or both.
So basically they no longer get ripped off by they can still make shitty movie [wikipedia.org].
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What sucks is you'll have to have an online constant connection in the theater to actually see any movie they put out.
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"Having the game makers and designers working on it can only improve what has been, for quite some time, a really awful form of movie."
Yes, perhaps we'll have more pieces of high art like the Wing Commander movie if the creator's of the game are involved.
Don't hire Uwe Boll! (Score:1)
Please please don't hire Uwe Boll!
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I'm sure they'll debut with a cooperation between Uwe Boll and Michael Bay.
Vidgame? (Score:2)
Vidgame? Is that a thing? Or just that "kids today can't be bothered to call something by a name longer than two syllables" way that marketeers rename TV shows and movies...?
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"Tonight, on a special episode of HowMom..."
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Episode has three syllables, it would probably be shortened to "e-sode" or just "epi"
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Yes, because this is the first generation ever to use contractions
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New Ubisoft theater requirements (Score:4, Funny)
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You also need a constant internet connection plugged into your skull.
*Bathroom use is extra at theaters showing ubisoft productions.
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Will that be before signing up for an online account or after the online registration? I'm assuming it can't be done until you've purchased your popcorn, soda, and candy.
Learned nothing from Square Pictures? (Score:2, Interesting)
Not to mention movies made out of video games tend to not fare well anyway.
Good news (Score:1)
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So long as they drop that dumbass idea to do live action, and just have their cinematic animators do it.
'Myst' movie is in the works (Score:3)
How convenient (Score:3)
How convenient, Ubisoft's largest studio happens to be in a city equipped for major motion picture production, Montreal. A city that can fill in both for European and American cities, with major sound stages and VFX companies.
Great - I Can Avoid A Whole Class Of Movies (Score:3, Interesting)
As a moviegoer that "sees everything that is not too dumb for words" I avoid movies that have anything to do with videogames because, so far, they universally suck. There's nothing remotely believable about the movies, the are all computer video effects and no real story that makes much of any sense. Everything is simply game-play on the screen, and I don't get to have any fun with it.
Coming in a close second is "movies having anything to do with existent toys", which would mean things like the transformer series. Saw a trailer for the upcoming transformers movie last night. Nope, gonna miss that one, too.
Wanna sell me a movie ticket? Tell me a story, preferably with MOVIE STARS in it, not some bozo I've never heard of before that, incidentally, doesn't know squat about acting. Last night's movie for me was Fast Five. At least we have a star or 2, and some fun car chases. Yeah, its terminally stupid, too, but at least fun to look at.
Best movie in the theater at the moment? The Conspirator. Now, THAT tells a story. Water for Elephants, 2nd best, and ditto, tells a story.
Surprisingly, the comic book series have proved very entertaining, although any new movie having anything to do with anything from DC comics is getting a pass as long as the writers think that Superman should somehow be ashamed of being a US citizen, and wishes to renounce that citizenship. They can all go pound sand...
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Yes thats really weird, the cutscenes of the games usually are better movies than the movies based on video games. I guess this is due to the fact that the game creators care about the stories they want to tell while Hollywood only cares about cashing in on a name and thinks they can shove everything down the throat to their supposed 12 year old target audience. Hollywood has not gotten the clue that the majority of the people who play those games are in between 20 and 35.
I have not even remotely cared abou
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"I avoid movies that have anything to do with videogames because, so far, they universally suck"
Silent Hill.
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Silent Hill? I never saw that come thru my local movie theater. I've seen lots of titles in these replies of movies I never saw on the marquee at my local theater. Maybe they came thru during late '07 - early '08, when I was in Iraq? OBTW, I mostly only look at new movies that come thru theaters. Don't rent movies, don't steal 'em off the net either, and mostly can't stand watching anything on commercial TV 'cuz of, well, the commercials. Even on DVR, its generally not worth the annoyance of having
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Silent Hill is generally acknowledged as the best videogame-to-movie adaptation, and I agree. It captured the game's atmosphere very well, and even added to it. Not every movie has to be a character-driven story. A movie that offers only action, comedy, gore, or scares, is still a good movie if that's what you want to see. So I disagree with the OP's assertion that videogame adaptations "universally suck".
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Silent Hill is generally acknowledged as the best videogame-to-movie adaptation,
Yes, and Martin Borman was the best senior Nazi.
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You want a story? Then forget the movies, they are just too short. Grab a great TV series and you get great story and lots of fun. Series like Babylon 5, Quantum Leap, Jericho, Battlestar Galactica, Firefly....
Oh, most of those have had actors who "no one know". Not big Movie Stars like Vin Diesel etc....
There are lots of great actors who are better than most of big movie stars are, but they have never got or went to movie business.
The same thing applies to TV series as for books and comic books. They are l
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The first dexter didn't do this so obviously and I would say its a prime example of a full story in a TV series. No pointless filler episodes either.
Firefly will always be shiny.
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I always think of it like some xml format for plot telling.
I really need to find a torrent of that xml template before November, then...
Re:Great - I Can Avoid A Whole Class Of Movies (Score:5, Insightful)
Wanna sell me a movie ticket? Tell me a story, preferably with MOVIE STARS in it, not some bozo I've never heard of before that, incidentally, doesn't know squat about acting.
One of the last few movies that Ive seen for the first time recently had absolutely no one I had ever heard of, and it was probably one of the best movies I have ever seen. The movie was Winter's Bone. It shows that having a big name star in a movie does not make the movie good; in many cases, the big name actor either overshadows everything else, or simply plays every character exactly the same, without even subtle changes from film to film.
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Yeah, the starless good movie is always a possibility, too. See "The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo," which is Swedish with subtitles and everything, unless you get the DVD with the English dub on it, and... it is fantastically engrossing, an excellent story. It is also really, really RAW, with 2 rape scenes and a severe sexual abuse scene in it, as well as other violence, attempted violence, and just plain serious conflict. I loved it, and never had a clue of these actors before.
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Ah, I see, you don't mind if a movie is shit, as long as it's pretentious.
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The thing is, videogames and movies serve two different purposes. A videogame serves to entertain, either solo or alone.
A movie's purpose is NOT to entertain. Instead, it's purpose is to put asses in seats.
Those two differences in purpose, while not typically mutually exclusive, do come to be at odds very often. If it's a game, typically the one that leads to more entertainment wins. If it's a movie, though, the result that will put more asses in seats will generally win out.
After all, we have summer blockb
Bad Video Game Movies? (Score:2)
Of course there are going to be bad video game movies. There's enough bad normal movies to provide an expectable base % of required good movies to make a genre worthwhile.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_films_based_on_video_games#International [wikipedia.org]
You can see that there are a good selection of bad movies in there, but there are a few that scored surprisingly high on rotten tomatoes despite being a very narrow genre, where I'd consider anything with close to 30% or above to have a 'critical acclaim' mark if
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Fast 5 is no Academy Award candidate, for sure. But at least things seem to happen ALMOST for real. No, they couldn't do what they did with that train. And ripping a vault out of its concrete mount and dragging it down the road for miles is totally impossible,but using it as a weapon against the cops that are chasing them was just FUN. But they'd have needed a pair of Caterpillar tractors to drag the thing, much more slowly.
But I'm thinking of a video game movie lately, can't remember the name, but was
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I didn't like Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, mostly because of the flying martial artists. Impossible is impossible, and I have to ask myself what I'm doing sitting there watching such nonsense. You know the outcome of any contest / conflict within the movie is not obeying any known framework of rules, so its outcome will be purely what the moviemaker wants it to be, rather than what you can logically conclude from the presented situation that one or the other contestants / combatants was more skillful.
Sp
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Hey, I can't explain it, and it might not be logical, but when I sit there and watch, stuff like Crouching piss me off, while stuff like Spiderman and Batman entertain me. I have yet to figure out why I feel that way, but have noticed years ago that I find it easier to forgive nonsense in some movies, but not others. My "reasons" are simply speculation about why this is so, but I don't really know. I only do know that I have yet to find a videogame associated movie that I liked.
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There's no other way to interpret the Superman thing than as a slap at this Great Nation. And, I'm not sending money towards any group that does that.
No, I know BHO was born in Hawaii, Bill O'Reilly's research department found the birth announcement in 2 Hawaiian newspapers of that era years ago, so it was proven in my mind, no birth certificate required.
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And, additionally, this all supports the very, very wrong view, in my opinion, that the USA is evil as a country. Why WOULDN'T Superman want to be associated with the USA, its gov't, its people, etc? That is the thing that really has me steamed, the DC writers are buying into this idea that the USA is generally wrong, is a bully, and should be brought down, or at least that is what a lot of people seem to think, most of them being on the left. I vehemently disagree.
Makes sense... (Score:1)
...the cut scene frenzy and extreme linearity of playing Assassin's Creed makes it very much like watching a movie, so it makes sense they may just as well make them full-fledged ones. Not much point in interacting anyway, when all you're doing is helping to drive a plot forward.
Bol-Uw-ood ? (Score:2)
and I thought the matrix was bad...
A gaming movie studio... (Score:2)
... what could go wrong?
The reason video game movies suck (Score:2)
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Could be worse. (Score:2)
Can't wait to see which eyeball-injected DRM solution they require to watch their movies, though! Always-on 3G internet connection by rectal probe?
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eyeball-injected DRM solution
I'd wait until the second patch is out before seeing it if they are going to put you through all of that.
The big question (Score:2)
Will they require a constant internet connection to watch their movies? And will you have to restart watching from the beginning if your connection drops?
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A dropped connection is clear evidence of attempts to circumvent DRM. The right to play the movie will be remotely revoked, but users will be invited to purchase a replacement at 20% off the recommended retail price. The CEO of Ubisoft will personally shit in to an envelope and post it to anyone purchasing Ubisoft movies.
Video game recorders (Score:1)
There are few things what I would wish for every PC game developer would include
1] Co-Op and not just deatchmatch or capture the flag
2] Video recording by game engine
The 2] means that the game can be recorded by game engine so even if you play few hours, you get recording what is size of few tens of megabytes and not gigabytes.
And later after recording, player could share the recording to anyone else if wanted. Or edit it (and then share) and even export it to wanted format.
And it should not be just so easy
It'll never work (Score:2)
How can they hope to live up to the masters of the genre, like the great Uwe Boll?
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Have they learned nothing... (Score:2)
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Sadly, yes. The Resident Evil series has been an absolute cash-cow (though I suspect it's a bit milked-out now) - they may be dreadful movies, but they've been effectively pitched and marketed.
The Silent Hill movie also did ok, grossing $97m worldwide on a $50m budget (according to wikipedia). That said, Silent Hill was, while by no means great, at the better end of the scale for a video game adaptation - and here in the UK, it was marketed more as a "normal" horror film than as a video game adaptation. I c
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Having never played the games I have no idea how closely (if at all) they follow the game plot(s). My guess is, not closely at all? Still, the Resident Evil movies weren't THAT bad if you took them as a pretty typical zombie flick franchise.
I like 'em better than the Romero originals if only because RE movies actually have more sympathetic characters. I never did like Romero's automatic assumption that people would always turn on each other rather than band together to deal with disaster.
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Do what everyone else does (Score:1)
Load an existing script from the same genre into a word processor (or just use an Alien script)
Search and replace character names
Refine a bit
Film the movie
Wonder why it failed
"Avatar's ground-breaking 3D vidgame"? (Score:2)
Wow, this is the first I've seen the Avatar games described as "ground-breaking".
They are aweful, scoring from 50 to 60 on metacritic. We're talking about a real revolution there!
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No more House of the Dead please (Score:2)
Vidgames (Score:1)
I'm Okay With It... (Score:2)
Those little bunnies are hilarious!
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Their top priority... (Score:1)
Point, Click, Pray (Score:1)
Paging Uwe Boll, paging Mr. Boll... (Score:1)
Is it sad? (Score:1)
Chessmaster (Score:1)
I can't wait to see what they can do with Chessmaster!