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Why The Last of Us Movie Could Be Great for Gaming


On 07/27/2014 at 03:05 AM by Casey Curran

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One bit of news at Comic-Con is that Sam Raimi is producing The Last of Us movie while Neil Druckman, who wrote the video game, is writing the script. Ever since it was first rumored, however, many people have been against a Last of Us movie. How it would condense too much from a fifteen hour game. How it would probably not tell the story as well as the game did. I agree with both of these notions one hundred percent. And I am also one hundred percent on board with this movie.

Last week, I would have been with the rest of you. But seeing Sam Raimi was producing it (by the way Sony, don't even look for a director, get this guy to do it too) made me think of how far comic book movies had come since the original Spider-Man. How Spider-Man was the exception with good comic book movies, Thor and Captain America would have never had good movies ten years ago, and Spider-Man, The Dark Knight, and Iron Man legitimized these as a staple in comic book movies.

Now imagine if The Last of Us had the same effect on video games. Say this movie is a hit both critically and financially. This could open the doors to make video games a legitimate form to adapt. Video games could have their stories retold in fresh new ways where people treat the source material with the respect it deserves. A convoluted series like Metal Gear can be retold in ways where the elements which do not work are tweaked to construct a stronger plot. A game with a great story, but weak gameplay can be adapted for the story to be enjoyed. We could get a Smash Bros movie that works with the same type of continuity as The Avengers!

A scenario which I am not sure is likely, I will admit, but so far Sony seems to be on the right track for. Zombies are still popular with the public as well, and combine this with the strong characters, mature story, and unorthodox ending, and the seeds are planted for a potentially great movie. 

Sure, it will probably not be as well told as the video game. But Harry Potter was a better book and that never takes away that the movies (as a whole) are pretty great. The Last of Us working better as a game does not necessarily mean it cannot be a great movie. And imagine for a second that you are talking to a nongamer who mentions loving The Last of Us movie. And you bring up how you thought the game told the story better. Something common with books adapted into games, but unimaginable to people who still have no clue that a video game can tell a great story. This could create new gamers even.

Is this optimistic? Hell yeah! But the purpose is not to salivate over a potential great future. The purpose is to say that this movie could have a reason to exist. And a damn good one at that.


 

Comments

KnightDriver

07/27/2014 at 03:14 AM

Wow! Sam Raimi. Now I am excited. I like his work.

xDarthKiLLx

07/27/2014 at 10:14 AM

I still remember seeing that first Spider Man movie in the theater and being blown away.  Up to that point, I never thought a good comic book based movie would ever come out.

Matt Snee Staff Writer

07/27/2014 at 11:48 AM

yeah I think it is a good sign too.  And there's that Sly Racoon movie coming out too, right?  Or am I confusing that with something else.  

Personally I enjoy the medium of games better than movies, but I do like movies a lot too.  I'd rather play the game, which I haven't yet, but I think Raimi will do a good job as long as the studio doesn't force him to put Venom in it.  Undecided

NSonic79

07/28/2014 at 12:49 PM

While I'm all for a movie being made that is true to the source material, I'm kinda hoping that if this movie gets made it doesn't push game further into the mainstream. Not that it wouldn't be a bad thing for the most part, I just wouldn't care for the other half of the coin where games will suddenly be considered more of an artform and thus have to be seen in an entirely different light. I like my gaming hobby were it is. I saw what happened back in the 90's when games were making their place known in media and I have to say I wasn't really impressed. I'm sure the movie will be decent either way. Hell I still liked Resident Evil 1 and 2 along with the Hitman movie were okay movies despite many finding them to be total garbage. Polarizing and average. Give me that if only to save my gaming hobby from being elevated to the forms of higher art.

Machocruz

07/28/2014 at 03:06 PM

I already saw the Last of Us movie when it was called 28 Days Later and The Road.  One of the issues with adapting games to film will be getting past how so many games are blatantly derivative of movies, to the point where they may only appeal to audiences that enjoy watching the same genre, plot points, and beats over and over. This isn't a problem for Metal Gear which is as idiosyncratic a work as exists in video games, but games like that are few and far between.  

Casey Curran Staff Writer

07/28/2014 at 07:53 PM

I wouldn't say it was that similar to 28 Days Later, but it was a lot alike the Road. Thing is, there was enough to differentiate it IMO that it could become a hit as a movie. And audiences have made movies that fit exactly what you described into megahits before even if it doesn't. But I think a zombie movie that focuses on a surrogate father/daughter  relationship rather than the zombies is just different enough to work as a movie, especially since both are well developed characters. I will say that most video game stories are generic, but there are ones with great original stories and ones with good enough ideas to justify a movie adaptation.

avidacridjam

07/28/2014 at 11:47 PM

I honestly feel indifferent to the idea of TLOU as a film right now. I'm not against the making of it (Raimi is a plus but Druckmann as the writer is even bigger) and yet I'm fine with it never making it past pre-production. What I don't want is a shot-for-shot remake. Cinematics aside, narrative in games and film work differently. Your involvement and input in the game made the experience effective on a level that a film can't. Some smart choices will need to be made and I really don't envy the casting director's job.

As far as the Metal Gear-as-films idea goes: I hate to say it, but the convoluted nature of those stories give the series its charm. Strip that away and what differentiates it from the films that inspired it? And how much crazy do you trim back before the whole house of cards tumbles?

Casey Curran Staff Writer

07/29/2014 at 07:12 PM

You can still have the weirdness that separates Metal Gear from all other series without the stuff that doesn't work. Because MG without Rose, nanomachines, or taking five times as long to explain something than they need to would be an improvement

avidacridjam

08/01/2014 at 06:41 AM

Fair enough, but I don't even the poor bastard who has to write it.

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