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Worst video game to movie adaptations

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  • Rombie
    replied
    Originally posted by Gideon Quinn View Post
    Didn't realise the thread had gone on 2 pages!
    Ah, fair enough. I just re-read my post and it sounded a lot more harsh than it was supposed to be. Sorry

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  • DONNIemo
    replied
    Originally posted by chris_survivor View Post
    Besides Residen Evil

    Nuff said!

    Oh and... DOOM what a shitstorm letdown.

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  • Gideon Quinn
    replied
    Originally posted by Rombie View Post
    ^ Thanks for telling me something I already know. Aris said this already and I made a comment about in the post right above the one you just wrote if you look.
    Didn't realise the thread had gone on 2 pages!

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  • Carnivol
    replied
    I guess with Wing Commander, Chris Roberts and Freddie Prinze Jr. proved that even if you have the original franchise director writing and directing the movie, you don't necessarily get an amazingly ZOMG OMG BEST ADAPTION EVER!!1! or maybe you do... it's just that without the gameplay portion; It's missing the key part of a game... the gameplay. I never loved Wing Commander for its ZOMG CUTSCENES and HOLY SHIT STORY, but rather the fact that you had awesome space sim missions and your success ratio in the missions + choices during cutscenes actually MEANT something. You were in control!

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  • riderkid
    replied
    im amazed wing commander sucked, i thought it wasn't that bad actually

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  • K-Mart
    replied
    I thought that quite a few were done good as movies, as films, they usually blow. Silent Hill is the GOD of movie adaptations. It wasn't amazing in any shape, form or fashion, but it stayed true to the series, contrary to most others, namely Street Fighter, which was just a huge brawl.

    For the worst, I'd have to say Dead Or Alive was quite botchy. They couldn't even keep the fighting styles of the original characters, and by LORD they even screwed up the genders! But heck, I'm a sucker for Kevin Nash. His biceps give me the vapors.

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  • Rombie
    replied
    ^ Thanks for telling me something I already know. Aris said this already and I made a comment about in the post right above the one you just wrote if you look.
    Last edited by Rombie; 05-29-2010, 08:18 PM.

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  • Gideon Quinn
    replied
    Originally posted by Rombie View Post
    The guy who played Johnny Cage didn't want to do a sequel and only agreed to it if his character was killed off at the start, which is why that happens.
    Actually, it was an entirely different actor playing Johnny Cage in that movie.

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  • Rombie
    replied
    ^ Ahaha... that fight I mentioned earlier from the second film is even sillier than I remembered it. Grabbing that link.

    Conquest's fights were okay, but it was the whole package which made it a surprisingly decent show. That said most of the time I saw it was like 2 or 3am in the morning when I would be coming home drunk and it would be on so my memory could be hazier than I recall. The few times I saw it sober though it seemed as good.

    Originally posted by aris13 View Post
    Actually Linden Ashby who potrayed Johnny Cage in MK1 didn't appear in the sequel so I'm thinking that he didn't want to do the sequel in the first place. Ironically later in 2003 he agreed to appear as Cage in the now scrapped film MK3evastasion along with Robin Shou (Liu Kang) and Chistopher Lampert. Warner Brothers are planning a reboot at this point.
    Oh yeah, I forgot it was a different actor even it seems. LOL. Looked it up and you were correct. For some reason my memory still thinks it was the same guy.

    Worth noting, Dennis Hopper died yesterday. RIP King Koopa... lol (at that, not his death). (Edit - should have checked the Celeb deaths thread)
    Last edited by Rombie; 05-29-2010, 06:52 PM.

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  • CODE_umb87
    replied
    Originally posted by aris13 View Post
    And yes the TV show called Conquest was good and included some of the greatest choreographed fight scenes I have ever seen.







    You would think that they'd do a little better with the fight scenes in Conquest since there had already been two major motion picture films.

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  • nemesiswontdie
    replied
    Originally posted by aris13 View Post
    Actually Linden Ashby who potrayed Johnny Cage in MK1 didn't appear in the sequel so I'm thinking that he didn't want to do the sequel in the first place. Ironically later in 2003 he agreed to appear as Cage in the now scrapped film MK3evastasion along with Robin Shou (Liu Kang) and Chistopher Lampert. Warner Brothers are planning a reboot at this point.

    And yes the TV show called Conquest was good and included some of the greatest choreographed fight scenes I have ever seen.
    I remember watching Spike Tv god knows how long ago and every commercial break they did a minute long interview and the girl who played as Sonya from the 2nd MK movie said they were working on a 3rd MK movie which actually got me excited lol. I'm hoping for that reboot.

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  • Beanovsky Durst
    replied
    Originally posted by Carnivol View Post
    I suspect Event Horizon's rumored Doom origin is why Doom ended up trying to be Aliens meets Evil Dead or something.
    Exactly. In my mind, Event Horizon is the real Doom movie... Which is kind of bizarre since is directed by, you know, Paul WS Anderson LOL.

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  • aris13
    replied
    Originally posted by Rombie View Post
    The guy who played Johnny Cage didn't want to do a sequel and only agreed to it if his character was killed off at the start, which is why that happens.

    The whole movie reminds me of a bad TV show. Ironically there was a Mortal Kombat TV series which was actually quite good.
    Actually Linden Ashby who potrayed Johnny Cage in MK1 didn't appear in the sequel so I'm thinking that he didn't want to do the sequel in the first place. Ironically later in 2003 he agreed to appear as Cage in the now scrapped film MK3evastasion along with Robin Shou (Liu Kang) and Chistopher Lampert. Warner Brothers are planning a reboot at this point.

    And yes the TV show called Conquest was good and included some of the greatest choreographed fight scenes I have ever seen.

    Leave a comment:


  • Darkmoon
    replied
    Originally posted by Mr_Zombie View Post
    I don't remember the whole Kitana-Sindel storyline, but the story about Sub-Zero, his brother and Scorpion (not to mention between the new Sub-Zero and Lin Kuei and the whole plot with turning ninjas into cyborgs) was a little more complicated. The biggest problem with the movie was that they wanted to put as many characters there as they could, and thus there was no real storyline, just a series of: a new character appears, a fight scene, that new character either dies or joins main heroes;
    Oh, it was still a shit film. It just amused me becaue it did get a lot of story points correct, labeit very cliff notes and, well, shit. I mean, there is something a lot more epic about two members of different ninja clans battling, one sending the other to hell, the dead one becomming a hellspawn and rising from the depths to get revenge on the first one because he's been tricked into believing that his clan was all murdered by him, killing him and returning to the grave...only to find out he's alive in another tournament but finding it's actually his brother who isn't the same brand of evil while the now dead version is corrupted by hell into a walking shadow and manages to take control of his former friend who is now a smokin' cyborg than, 'lol, yeah, that was my brother.'

    ...I really, really like Mortal Kombat, hence why the last game got on my nerves. No plot for all those characters.

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  • Rombie
    replied
    Funny this topic comes up, I'm working on a blog post right now about the history of videogame adaptions and why they've failed.

    The one scene from MK2 I remember above all is the fight between (the new) Sonya and Mileena which basically ends up as mud wrestling and they both get covered. And then Sonya after winning catches up to the rest of the good guys but her clothes are back to freshly clean.

    The guy who played Johnny Cage didn't want to do a sequel and only agreed to it if his character was killed off at the start, which is why that happens.

    The whole movie reminds me of a bad TV show. Ironically there was a Mortal Kombat TV series which was actually quite good. It had Kristanna Loken in it ironically too, considering she's ended up in a few of Uwe Boll's videogame shitfests.

    It's definitely the worst of the "successful" films, then Mario Bros, but I think Boll's stuff is definitely the worst of all films in the genre - if you can call it that.

    In case anyone is interested, here is the list of the most to least successful live action videogame films until now according to Box Office Mojo (first total is US, second is international - ranked by US):

    1. Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (aka. Tomb Raider) (2001) - $131,168,070 / $274,703,340
    2. Mortal Kombat (1995) - $70,454,098 / $122,195,920
    3. Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle Of Life (2003) - $65,660,196 / $156,505,388
    4. Resident Evil Apocalypse (2004) - $51,201,453 / $129,394,835
    5. Resident Evil Extinction (2007) - $50,648,679 / $147,717,833
    6. Silent Hill (2006) - $46,982,632 / $97,607,453
    7. Max Payne (2008) - $40,689,393 / $85,416,905
    8. Resident Evil (2002) - $40,119,709 / $102,441,078
    9. Hitman (2007) - $39,687,694 / $99,965,792
    10. Mortal Kombat Annihilation (1997) - $35,927,406 / $51,376,861
    11. Street Fighter (1994) - $33,423,521 / $99,423,521
    12. Doom (2005) - $28,212,337 / $55,987,321
    13. Super Mario Bros. (1993) - $20,915,465 / n/a
    14. Wing Commander (1999) - $11,578,059 / n/a
    15. House of the Dead (2003) - $10,249,719 / $13,818,181
    16. Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li (2009) - $8,742,261 / $12,707,250
    17. Alone In The Dark (2005) - $5,178,569 / $10,442,808
    18. In The Name Of The King: A Dungeon Siege Tale (2007) - $4,775,656 / $13,097,915
    19. BloodRayne (2005) - $2,405,420 / $3,650,275
    20. Double Dragon (1994) - $2,341,309 / n/a
    21. D.O.A. - Dead Or Alive (2006) - $480,813 / $7,500,497
    22. Postal (2007) - n/a (Never Officially Released Wide in the US, 21 screens only) / $146,741
    23. Far Cry - $0 (Never Officially Released in the US) / n/a
    Last edited by Rombie; 05-29-2010, 09:25 AM.

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