Things have gone a little quiet on the impending Best Video
Game Adaptation Ever front.
Can a video
game adaptation ever be successful?
Even after getting an average response from the critics, film went on to become the highest - grossing video -
game adaptation ever worldwide.
Rampage just might be the most entertaining video
game adaptation ever made.
South Park: The Stick of Truth was one of the best TV - to -
game adaptations ever, thanks in large part to the story, writing, and voices of creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker.
Not exact matches
If Johnson
ever gets his other long - gestating
game adaptation Spy Hunter off the ground, cast these men!
Now streaming on Netflix, Gerald's
Game is the latest Stephen King novel to receive a feature film
adaptation, and while I probably won't find myself
ever revisiting this movie, it's worth a watch if you can stomach it.
Alien: Isolation is one of the most faithful video
game adaptations you're
ever likely to play, coming across as an homage to Alien and a like - for - like recreation of the used future Ridley Scott introduced us to in 1979.
Toby Kebbell is out doing the press rounds for Warcraft, the film
adaptation of the
ever - popular World Of Warcraft
game for which he once again donned a motion - capture suit, this time to play the orc chieftain Durotan.
Fans of the hit series will probably even call this the best
game - to - film
adaptation ever produced, and they wouldn't be too far from the truth.
After making his mark in the early thirties with two very different films, the anarchic send - up of the bourgeoisie Boudu Saved from Drowning and the popular - front Gorky
adaptation The Lower Depths, Renoir closed out the decade with two critical humanistic studies of French society that routinely turn up on lists of the greatest films
ever made: Grand Illusion and The Rules of the
Game (the former was celebrated in its time, but the latter was trashed by critics and audiences — until history provided vindication).
Silent Hill: Revelation 3D will be released wide October 26, 2012 in time for Halloween, but today Open Road took to the San Diego Comic - Con to share the first
ever footage from the video
game adaptation.
While I had a few minor issues with the film, I thought it was, and still is, the best video
game - to - film
adaptation ever released.
Of course, it also helps that the sights and sounds are the most authentic a
game adaptation of Dragon Ball has
ever had.
Dragonball Z, one of the most popular animes
ever created, has seen its fair share of video
game adaptations.
Matt Rodgers on the best
ever video
game movie scenes... The first part of 2018 will see two high profile videogame
adaptations hit the big screen in an attempt to do what 2016's Assassin's Creed couldn't, by breaking a curse which has stretched back as far as 1993's infamous Super Mario Bros. movie.
And, as far as I know, the only good movie
adaptation of a board
game ever.
Video
game adaptations are rarely, if
ever, a sensible idea and the PlayStation franchise only has mid-tier name recognition.
Has the honour of being the most successful
game - to - movie
adaptation at the box office
EVER.
In a special, console - only addition, Double Dragon the NES
adaptation introduced most players to a 1 - on - 1 fighting
game for the first time
ever.
Ever since 1983 there have been video
game adaptations of the films, and these have ranged from exceptional (TIE Fighter) to truly awful (Yoda Stories).
And I know a lot of
gamers give it a hard time and I don't understand it because of all the
game adaptations I've
ever seen, it is the most faithful in trying to recreate and capture the essence of the
game it portrays.
Because there aren't enough horrible movie
adaptations of our favorite video
games, Brett Ratner has decided that a Guitar Hero movie would pretty much be the best idea
ever.
Ubisoft's creative superman Michel Ancel discussed targeting the mainstream with his
game adaptation of King Kong, and we had our first
ever Brighton special.
the closest it's
ever gotten to having an eighth generation console
game (256 port not withstanding) is its
adaptations of the Pac - Man and the Ghostly Adventures cartoon on Wii U, which I count as one of the aforementioned crappy cartoons.
When it comes to outstanding experiences that do not fall into the former categories, then I can only think of «Disaster: Day of Crisis ``, by far the most consequent
game ever created, a mix of a disaster - movie
adaptation, the Rock, wii motion controls, every gameplay mechanic you can
ever think of and giant hamburgers as medipacks.
Mass Effect and its sequel have been described as cinematic by just about everyone who % 26rsquo; s
ever written about them, so we have high hopes that here, finally, is the Holy Grail of
game - to - movie
adaptation.
We've made the biggest and the best video
game movie
adaptation ever, so that's made us the premium brand in terms of adapting video
games.
If there's
ever been a concept just begging for a tabletop
game adaptation, it's that of a group of terrified civilians trapped in a city turned...
Many hold 2004's Spider - Man 2 (a loose
adaptation of the Sam Raimi - directed movie of the same name) in the highest esteem, touting it as the best Spider - Man
game to
ever exist.
I consider this
game is a loose
adaptation of Silent Hill because it takes great liberties with the plot such as having Cybil actually meeting up with Cheryl in Midwich or having Harry get possessed... neither of which happened or was the possibility of occuring
ever hinted at the in Silent Hill.
Has there
ever been a TV
adaptation based on a series of books that has become as much of a juggernaut as
Game of Thrones has?
Dragonball Z, one of the most popular animes
ever created, has seen its fair share of video
game adaptations.
The Condor Trilogy has been compared to both The Lord of the Rings and
Game of Thrones, yet it is only now, forty years after its first publication and some forty
adaptations down the line, that it is making international news with the announcement of its first
ever English translation, to be published by MacLehose Press in February 2018.