Movie-Based Videogames - Not Actually That Bad? 77
Moryath writes "The fine folks at Glide Underground look like they've started a new weekly column - and for their opening run, they tackled the question of whether movie-licensed games are in fact cursed or not. Apparently it was in honor of too many reviewers picking up the new Chronicles of Riddick title, and proclaiming boldly that the game broke some curse - 'movie video games suck, it doesn't suck but it's a movie game, ergo curse broken.' Quite an interesting read, going back all the way to the days of Atari 2600 to examine the history of movie-licensed games."
My comments on the Riddick game (Score:4, Funny)
Re:My comments on the Riddick game (Score:2, Funny)
Super Mario Brothers-- good game(s), movie sucked.
Street Fighter-- good game, movie sucked.
Tomb Raider-- good game, movie(s) sucked.
Maybe the Riddick movie is based on the game?
Re:My comments on the Riddick game (Score:2)
If you're going to go with the crappy movie == good game, theory, reading the article would have shown you that bad movies like Toys, still made for bad video games.
More recently, Reign of Fire sucked. The Reign of Fire video game also sucked.
Re:My comments on the Riddick game (Score:1)
The movie came out after the game.
The release date for the Riddick game was 1 June 2004 [imdb.com]. The premiere for the Riddick movie was 3 June 2004 [imdb.com]. So it could be argued that the game came first.
(And I never noted that 'crappy movie means good game'. I noted that 'good game means crappy movie'.)
In Reign of Fire's case, the movie came out before the games did; the movie premiered 9 July 2002 [imdb.com], while the games didn't come out until 22 Oct 2002 [gamefaqs.com] (PS2 and XBOX), 31 Oct 2002 [gamefaqs.com] (GBA), and 26 Nov 2002 [gamefaqs.com] (GC); Thus, in th
Flip Reverse It (Score:1)
Those are GAME-BASED movies not MOVIE-BASED games.
so then is everyone looking forward to the Doom Movie [empireonline.co.uk]?
Max Payne is the one i'm really looking forward too - that game is just destined for John Woo greatness (and may pull him out that creative slump that he's been in recently..).
Re:My comments on the Riddick game (Score:2)
totally punches new paradigm in the neck
Re:My comments on the Riddick game (Score:2)
Well, that's how it's worked with Mario, Street Fighter, Tomb Raider...
New paradigm? No, same paradigm, working in the opposite direction.
Re:My comments on the Riddick game (Score:2)
Re:My comments on the Riddick game (Score:2)
I think you suck. It must be the influence of your mom =P.
The Riddick film wasn't a masterpiece, but it was a lot of fun and definitely worth the $7 I paid to see it the second time (first was free because I got a pass with my Pitch Black DVD).
Re:My comments on the Riddick game (Score:2)
I was quite disapointed because in Pitch Black, your set in a future earth universe. There are no other wierd humanoid races, just humans. Riddick is human, not some other race. Then all of a sudden you are dealing with several different races. To me it was a turn to the worse from Pitch Black.
Goldeneye? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, Goldeneye (Score:3, Informative)
Enter the Matrix (Score:2, Interesting)
Nemo + Haunted mansion (Score:2)
I got these games for the wife but Nemo was really fun to watch and pick up the controller at difficult portions. Frankly it was fun reliving the movie. Havn't seen haunted mansion, and looks like the game is nothing like the movie but its also a fun game. They are both puzzle/adventure games. Simple to play, decent graphics, a hell of alot less buggy then morrowind. I wouldn't mind recomending them at all.
Re:Nemo + Haunted mansion (Score:1)
Didn't the Nemo game come first ? (Score:2)
Unless I'm totally mistaken, the Nemo video game came out far before the movie did. So that really doesn't have its own curse going for it. That's why there can be DnD video games that are good - they weren't based on the abysmal movie. (Of Daily Radar "DnD movie fails saving throw against sucking ass" fame)
--LordPixie
Re:Didn't the Nemo game come first ? (Score:2)
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00008DH
Hahah, whoops ! (Score:2)
Of course, this was all based on a much older comic, if I'm not completely mistaken.
--LordPixie
Re:Enter the Matrix (Score:3, Insightful)
To this day I still haven't been able to play it all the way through on the PC. Apparently my 2GHz Athlon with 1gig of RAM and Radeon 9800Pro video card isn't powerful enough to render the "bullet time" effects. Riiight. Stick in a GeForce3, and it actually runs FASTER. Boggles the mind.
They promised new
Re:Enter the Matrix (Score:2)
Depending (Score:4, Insightful)
That being said, the Chronicles of Riddick isn't an adaptation of the movie, it's just a seperate story for the character which is both more creative a development and well made, so probably a bad example to use in comparison to other movie-licensed-crap.
Re:Depending (Score:2)
Are movies based on books "an obvious cash-in" and therefore not to be watched. (reference Lord of the Rings trilogy, Fight Club, Bladerunner, etc)
Evaluate each on their own merit.
Give credit to the developer... (Score:5, Insightful)
The underlying problem is still and will always be there- games based on movies tend to be promotional tie-ins first, games second.
Re:Give credit to the developer... (Score:2)
Another huge problem being : time
These companies are usually given 6 months, give or take, to build an engine and game thats up to par. Rarely is this pulled off with a quality product.
And I wouldn't say just because this 1 movie-based game is acceptable/good, that the "curse" is broken. I have faith that someone else will waste time/money developing a movie-based game th
Tigon? (Score:1)
It's not that movie-related games are bad, just movie-regurgitating ones. On that note, anyone know of other games that did this? This, Matrix, Aliens vs Predator?
Re:Tigon? (Score:1)
I Agree (Score:3, Interesting)
(briefly) Looking over the article it seems as though it was written more from a console standpoint. If you look at the arcade you'll notice that most movie based games are actually enjoyable. It's true that they are mostly shooters/fighters though.
Star Wars Trilogy [shinforce.com] was a great time sink and provided a lot of enjoyment for me on my lunch breaks.
Star Wars Racer [sega.co.jp] had a lot more excitement than the actual movie
The Jurassic Park shooter was fun also.
I wouldn't call the above games great, they had their problems but they definately didn't suck.
On a tangent, it's a shame the arcade scene isn't how it used to be. I miss the days that sega ruled the arcades.
Predator on NES (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Predator on NES (Score:1)
It really wasn't a movie game (Score:4, Informative)
The game took place before pitch black in the timeline. The only real similarity was the Riddick charactor.
It had it's own plot, storyline, etc. I think it did well because it didn't even try to be a movie game. It stood on it's own and was just a good console shooter.
--Chris
Aliens games (Score:3, Insightful)
So, the idea of "one game that breaks the curse" doesn't really work for me.
Re:Aliens games (Score:2)
I think time has made your memories of that awful game fond.
Here are the good Alien-based games I've played:
- Aliens (C64)
Here are the bad Alien-based games I've played:
- Alien (Atari 2600)
- Alien 3 (Multiplatform)
- Alien Trilogy (PC) *
- Aliens (PC - this is the comic-book style one) **
* this one is the absolute worst. The developers were too lazy to make a Ripley model
Re:Aliens games (Score:2)
Some are, some aren't. (Score:2)
Have movie-based games become better (relative to other games released around the same time on the same platforms over the last decade? Probably, and that's probably the result of Hollywood paying more attention to them, as well as games becoming the big business it is today. Is the average movie-based game as good as the average non-movie-based game? Possibly, since they typically contain very little innovation (which of y
The answer is simple: (Score:5, Insightful)
Movie INSPIRED games tend to be good.
Re:The answer is simple: (Score:2, Insightful)
Somehow I don't think whether it's using a movie liscence or not matters there. It's just an issue of if the developer can take the time to give the game the polish it needs.
Re:The answer is simple: (Score:2)
What about combinations (Score:1)
And the top down Jurassic Park game for the NES(or SNES? I can't remember) I was so close to beating that game until I got killed by a bug. I got stuck in a plant. That was the last time I played it.
Movies that should have been Video Games... (Score:3, Insightful)
I was rather underwhelmed by the plot in Chronicles of Riddick, I mean really, dude escapes from prison, gets tangled up with a religeous military commander, lots of gunfights, melee, corny jokes... great video game, defintely not your epic sci-fi.
Even Shrek 2, for all its comedy, the whole thing with the Keebler Elf Potion Factory, so help me I was sitting in my chair thinking "conveyor belts, jump to the next one, swing on the machine... Shrek 2 The Video Game is on its way". It's almost like scenes are gratuitously added to the movies so that there's something to do to stretch out a game.
Of course from the capitalist perspective, it's ingenious. You'll blow $8 on a movie for two hours entertainment, $20 for a DVD, but if you can get people to spend $50 on a game, now that's serious profit.
Not a 1 to 1 relationship, just a disadvantage. (Score:2)
The best games let the gamer tell the story by making interesting choices about how to proceed. In many cases movies have already made those choices (implicitly and explicitly) so there's less p
Movie-based games (Score:3, Insightful)
First of all, we have games which come out within the same immediate time-frame as the movie they're based on. These tend to suck. Examples include, but are by no means limited to: Enter the Matrix, Fifth Element, Terminator 3, etc, etc, etc. I'm sure you can think of many more. This is where Chronicles of Riddick breaks the rules; it falls into this category and doesn't suck. But most games in this group are, and always will be, cheap attempts to cash in on a movie whose brand has a short shelf-life.
The second group contains games based on movies or movie franchises which appear when the movies aren't the hype-of-the-moment. In general, these tend to be games based on *good* movies, since only the better movies stand up over time. Examples here include: Aliens vs Predator games (excluding the recent console RTS), Blade Runner (the adventure game - it's aging now, but it still rocks) and Terminator: Future Shock (and Skynet). Perhaps because the movies aren't flavour of the moment, these games have more freedom to move into expanded universes and craft a plot that works well for a game, rather than a movie.
Of course, half-way between the two groups, we have the Star Wars games, some of which rock and some of which suck. I think, however, that the same rule holds true here. Think about it... in the early and mid 90s, before the prequels, Star Wars games tend to rock. We have the SNES platformers/shooters, the X-Wing and TIE Fighter series etc. Sure, there's the odd dud, like Rebel Assault, but at least they're innovative duds. When Episode 1 comes out, the quality of Star Wars games, even from an objective, non-Jar-Jar-bashing point of view falls through the floor. We get a few utterly forgettable shooters and third-person games. Even today, when the license has recovered a bit from its nadir, the best games (Kotor and JK2) are those which are based more heavily on the universe of the original trilogy.
Re:Movie-based games (Score:2)
hed.
I dunno ... (Score:2, Funny)
Commodore 64 my man... (Score:2)
The NES version was good on its own, but it still was a mediocre port of the fantastic C64 version.
Game based on Movie about a Game (Score:4, Funny)
Now that was scraping the bottom of the barrel.
Re:Game based on Movie about a Game (Score:1)
Re:Game based on Movie about a Game (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:1)
Nephilium Faith is a euphemism for prejudice and religion is a euphemism for superstition. -- Paul Keller
Game and movie share Karma (Score:2)
That means that if the movie is really, really good, there just isn't enough juice left to make a good game.
Luckily for the programmers on Riddick, they found that the pool had been strangely untouched when they got to it.
Well. (Score:3, Insightful)
Cross-media retellings generally suck. The novellization of a movie, the movie of a novel, the miniseries of the novel, the comic adaptation, and the video game license.
Cross media *shared universes* however, can be great. Note the Halo novels; the retelling of the video game blows, the other two novels are wonderful. Riddick: Butcher's Bay; not the movie, just a different chapter.
Enter the Matrix, well, I didn't think it was so bad. Rushed, certainly, but I quite liked it.
The Primary Distinction (Score:2)
games based on a movie (ie the game plot and objectives mirror the movie plot and objectives)
vs.
games inspired by a movie (ie games that merely occur in the same universe with more or less the same characters as a movie)
I know there are exceptions to the rule on both sides, so I do not need to be inundated with examples. But generally, this seems to be the determining factor.
LoTR (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:LoTR (Score:1)
They're mentioned in the article (Score:2)
It's called "doing your homework".
I Don't Really See The Point In This Article (Score:1)
I don't understand why the author chooses to defend mediocre titles, as that
Forgotten Sucky Movie Licenses... (Score:2, Informative)
- Home Alone
- Home Alone 2
- Lawnmower Man
- Wayne's World
And let's not forget one of the BIGGEST license hounds: Acclaim.
- Judge Dredd
- Demolition Man
- Dragon - The Br
Didn't do his homework? (Score:3, Insightful)
You're saying that because he didn't mention your particular games - or because he didn't go by the "well the impression comes from the percentage of games" - that he didn't do his homework.
Isn't it more likely that he was just trying to show that there are plenty of movie-license gam
Re:Didn't do his homework? (Score:1)
My point was that with 10 minutes of combing *1* system's library, I could find a boatload of crappy movie licensed games. To me, it's hard to justify destroying that stereotype by saying "here are a few good ones."
Now, the question as to whether or not that percentage is *higher* than the regular percentage of crappy games is an excellent one, and if
Actually... (Score:1)
I have Riddick however is actually an amazing game, It doesn't do stealth as well as splinter cell however its significatly better than Manhunt (nearly as brutal too). Its not as good a raw shooter as say Quake 2 (still amazing) but its nearly that good (only really hampered by the lack of guns and the fac
Movie-based games as a genre (Score:3, Informative)
What makes the movie-based genre different? The movies still get seen from time to time, especially the good ones. That makes us remember the games even if they were terrible. I can't remember most of the slew of crappy 1-on-1 fighter games from the mid-90's that were SF2/MK clones, but I can remember most of the NES movie conversions that were terrible (Total Recall, Three Stooges, Karate Kid, Rambo).
Movie-based games only seem worse because we actually remember the bad ones from this genre.
breaking the curse (Score:1)
Demolition Man 3DO (Score:1)
ah memories. (Score:2)
And Ghostbusters on the Apple
Tron: Deadly Discs (an incredibly rare game) was also a lot of fun, and the best tron-based game I've played.
I think the key is that the games need to provide actual gameplay, and not much story. We know the story, we've seen the movie.. don't waste our time with FMV.
They're not that good yet (Score:1)
Just because "Riddick" is a decent title doesn't mean the flood gates are open again for more movie based games. We've still got a ways to go before games rival the movies their based on.
For now I think publishers should learn from the lesson "The Chronicles of Riddick" has taught us:
If you wanna release a game based on a movie you gotta be playing hard ball. Gamers aren't as stupid as you thi