Hollywood pushes the reset button on video game adaptations - Action News
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Entertainment

Hollywood pushes the reset button on video game adaptations

With four films based on popular video game series set for release in 2016, could this finally be the year video game movies win over filmgoers?

Ratchet & Clank, Warcraft, Assassin's Creed and Angry Birds movies all due out in 2016

Four films based on popular video games are scheduled for release in 2016, hoping to shake off the stink from poor films like Super Mario Bros,. and Pixels. (Sony/Universal Pictures/20th Century Fox)

At long last, it seems Hollywood has pushed the reset button on its approach to video game adaptations.

From the reviled 1993 live-action rendition of Super Mario Bros.,to last year's loathed arcade-inspired Pixels,big-screen interpretations of games have almost always failed to score with critics and audiences. With four films based on popular interactive series set for release in 2016, could this finally be the year video game movies win over filmgoers?

After decades of commercial and critical pitfalls when attempting to turn games into movies, Hollywood is trying out a few bold new strategies in an effort to tap the interactive medium for the latest hit movie franchise, including hiring A-list talent and collaborating more closely with game makers to rework their immersive creations for movie theatres.

Ratcher & Clank a game-film collaboration

The first to launch is Ratchet & Clank,an animated film out Friday based on Insomniac Games' zany platforming series for Sony's PlayStation systems, starring wise-cracking alien tinkerer Ratchet and his witty robot sidekick Clank. The game creators didn't simply foist their 14-year-old franchise onto filmmakers. They insisted on joining forces.

Ratchet & Clankfeatures several of the interactive series' original voice actors with a story by former Insomniac Games senior writer T.J. Fixman. The game studio also outsourced a few of their own artists to work with the film's animators to guarantee their intergalactic romp looked and stayed true to what made the game franchise a victory.

Insomniac Games collaborated closely with filmmakers to ensure the Ratchet & Clank animated film, out this Friday, adhered visually and thematically with the latest games in the popular franchise. (Gramercy Pictures/AP)

"It's crucial for anyone who works with the worlds and characters that we created to fully understand them," said Ted Price, CEO of Insomniac Games. "We had lots of open conversations with everyone working on the project. As game creators, we always want to tell more stories. This was just another way to do that for an audience that's hungry for it."

Over the past 20 years, game publishers have typically handed over movie rights to Hollywood with little to no creative control. While the results have sometimes hit the mark (Tomb Raider,Resident Evil), they're usually unsuccessful undertakings that veer way off course from the originals (Doom,Double Dragon).

Shawn Layden, president of Sony Interactive Entertainment America, said he's been working in tandem with his colleagues at Sony Pictures to faithfully adapt Ratchet & Clankand silly stealth series Sly Cooperinto animated films, as well as craft live-action versions of treasure-hunting adventure Unchartedand post-apocalyptic saga The Last of Us.

"I'm old enough to remember a time when people thought it was crazy to make movies out of comic books," said Layden. "That's certainly changed over the last decade. The really great games now have narratives featuring all sorts of age-old storytelling tropes. It's become another great fountain of content that can be applied across other media."

Warcraft, Angry Birds films on the way

The largest leap for a game-based film this year will be from smartphones to multiplexes. Columbia Pictures, a division of Sony, will spread its wings May 20 with The Angry Birds Movie.The full-length animated film features Jason Sudeikis, Josh Gad and Danny McBride voicing a trio of feathered characters inspired by Rovio's mobile gaming sensation.

After Disney's mediocre Prince of Persia: Sands of Time, Ubisoft launched its own film division and will oversee the upcoming Assassin's Creed movie. (Kerry Brown/20th Century Fox via AP)
For a live-action version of the role-playing odyssey Warcraft,Legendary Entertainment and series creator Blizzard Entertainment turned to Moonand Source Codedirector Duncan Jones, who's actually logged countless hours playing games from the 21-year-old fantasy series. The film starring Travis Fimmel is scheduled to debut June 10.

"It's not unlike adapting a novel or a comic book," said Jones. "I believe I'm a serious filmmaker. I know what it is I want to do with this movie. The source material is not what's going to decide whether a movie I make is good or bad. It's how I treat it and what I do with it."

Ubisoftheads Assassin's Creed film

After losing its footing with the Disney film Prince of Persia: Sands of Timestarring Jake Gyllenhaal in 2010, game publisher Ubisoft launched a film division in 2011 to independently transform its own game franchises into movies. The first is Assassin's Creed,which is scheduled for release Dec. 21 and stars Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard.

Few video game adaptations enjoyed the same success as the two Tomb Raider films starring Angelina Jolie, which together earned more than $400 million worldwide. (Shizuo Kambayashi/AP)
"I think we've done something pretty original," said Fassbender. "All of the stunt work, when we were out in Malta, was happening on site in real locations with stunt teams that are absolutely amazing. They were jumping from building to building in Mdina, the old town in Malta."

Ubisoft's dive into filmmaking will continue in the coming years with a Splinter Celladaptation starring Tom Hardy as protagonist Sam Fisher, as well as a Ghost Reconmovie produced by Transformersfilmmaker Michael Bay. The game maker is also working to turn its hacker adventure Watch Dogsinto a film.

With movie studios having already mined many comics and books for inspiration, comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian believes the time is right for the interactive medium to spawn a hit that outpaces Lara Croft: Tomb Raider,the most successful game adaptation in box office history.

"This is a genre waiting to erupt," said Dergarabedian. "It's a huge untapped resource that's yet to be fully realized on the big screen and grab a huge audience."