Tag Archives: gore verbinski

Dark Souls: 5 Video Games That Should Be Horror Movies

Now that the scariest parts of   Silent Hill: Revelation 3D   are proving to be the grisly reviews and box-office results,  it’ s a good time to look at a handful of choice video games that have much greater potential than the Konami franchise to be blockbuster horror movies. In at least two of the examples I cite below, along with the pros and cons of adapting them, the film industry apparently agrees — or did at one point — that the game titles would translate well to the big screen. Actually making the movies adaptations of the games has not worked so well. 5. BioShock In 2009, BioShock looked like it was destined to be a movie.   Pirates of the Caribbean franchise master Gore Verbinski was slated to direct the visually stunning game in which a plane-crash survivor in 1960 finds himself in the underwater Art Deco-style city of Rapture and its mutated inhabitants to survive.   When the project ran into budget issues, Verbinski turned over the director’s reins to 28 Weeks Later  filmmaker Juan Carlos Fresnadillo and agreed to serve as a producer.  Last May, however, Fresnadillo told Playlist  he was no longer involved and that the project was on hold because Universal Studios and the game’s creator couldn’t agree on a budget or whether the project should have an R rating or a PG-13, which would attract a broader audience.  With the much-delayed third game of the franchise, BioShock Infinite  due out in February 2013, and set, this time, in a floating sky-city called Columbia, it’s time to revive this project. Pros: BioShock is beautiful. Simply seeing the steampunk city of Rapture on the big screen would be worth the ticket. With more than 4 million copies of the game sold and a plot that a) is better than most fantasy/horror movies and b) has actually driven the argument of videogames as art, it’s remarkable that it’s not already a movie. Cons: Video games inevitably lose their interactive components when they’re adapted into feature films, but these elements are so integral to the telling of the story that removing them could prove problematic. Videogame tropes such as highlighted objectives and extended cut-scenes aren’t  optional extras in this case: they’re built into the plot the same way your heart is built in to you. 4. Left 4 Dead Pros: Valve’s multiplayer masterpiece — and its sequel, Left 4 Dead 2 — are the most viciously fun co-operative games ever made. Four very different characters must team up to survive the zombie apocalypse, or at least make it a little bit further. In addition to the teamwork element, which would translate well to the big screen, Left 4 Dead has some of the best incidental writing in games. Valve understands that writing dialogue is just as important as writing code, because nobody cares if a character’s hair is beautifully rendered when they can’t stand to spend the time with him. Added bonus: the game treats each level as a movie, complete with loading screen posters. Cons:   Since there isn’t exactly a shortage of zombie projects out there in movie land,  the writing and direction have got to be exceptional.  Done properly, the combination of white-knuckle action and well-developed characters could make zombie movies exciting again. Maybe Hollywood should give Valve a lot of money and ask it to produce a script.

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Dark Souls: 5 Video Games That Should Be Horror Movies

3 Simple Suggestions for a Global Clue Remake

Two and a half years ago, Universal announced that Clue was getting a big-screen revamp in the form of a global caper directed by Gore Verbinski. Well, most of that information remains true: Clue , Gore Verbinski, and globetrotting are all part of the picture, but Universal has dropped the property in favor of its other board game-based projects like Candy Land , Battleship , Ouija , and the Taylor Lautner-attached Stretch Armstrong . Now, here’s what makes Clue different than other board games — at least in my eyes: It rules , and those properties don’t. In order to protect the valor of Clue , Movieline is offering three ways for the film to retain the sinister cool of its original film and game(s). Frankly, Miss Scarlet, we give a damn.

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3 Simple Suggestions for a Global Clue Remake

Disney Casts Tom Hanks and Tim Allen in Live-Action Jungle Cruise

Tom Hanks and Tim Allen as cartoons? An unbeatable box office combination. Tom Hanks and Tim Allen as live-action middle-aged dudes on a jungle adventure? Hopefully an unbeatable box office combination. At least that’s what Disney is probably hoping. According to THR , they’ve cast Hanks and Allen in Jungle Cruise , a “big action-adventure movie with unique aspects that will make it more than just a straight-up adventure.” Unique aspects like animating Hanks and Allen as a couple of toys? No? Oh. [ THR /Heat Vision ]

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Disney Casts Tom Hanks and Tim Allen in Live-Action Jungle Cruise

REVIEW: Gore Verbinski Loves the Uglies in Rango

When it comes to animation, kids like bright colors, and often adults do too. That’s just one reason to applaud Gore Verbinski’s Rango for having the courage of its convictions: Once you get past the ho-hum candy-color-pop of the opening sequence, the movie’s palette unfolds in various shades of sandy ochre, earth taupe, thundercloud gray and many, many permutations of mud brown. I wasn’t sure if I wanted to watch Rango or wear it.

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REVIEW: Gore Verbinski Loves the Uglies in Rango

Watch Cookie Monster Audition for Saturday Night Live

Rango Trailer: Johnny Depp is a Leaping Lizard

That Rango teaser a little while back? Really weird. Fortunately, the full trailer for Gore Verbinski’s computer animated comedy is much more comprehensible, and in this one, voice star Johnny Depp is front and center — well, his lizard likeness is, anyway.

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Rango Trailer: Johnny Depp is a Leaping Lizard