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170°

Tomb Raider, Assassin’s Creed and Why No Film Will Ever Break ‘The Curse Of The Video Game Movie’

Tomb Raider and Assassin’s Creed are the perfect examples of why movies will never replicate the feeling of playing a great game.

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fingerguns.net
Garethvk2223d ago

I think the Resident Evil series would have issues with this line of thought.

woodtock2223d ago

Resident evil movies are terrible but profitable. The curse still goes on....

Garethvk2223d ago

The issue is pretty simple. I was on set for Postal and Far Cry. They get to use the name but cannot use the look, stories, and so on from the games as it may impact future stuff so they are so limited going in.

Minute Man 7212222d ago

Mortal Kombat 1 broke the curse but that's it

PhantomS422222d ago

Mortal Kombat was terrible, but it was the special kind of terrible where you could enjoy it because you just made fun of it the whole time...that theme song though.

spicelicka2222d ago

Yes exactly, it was terrible but so much fun.

Hroach6162222d ago

In my opinion the first resident evil movie was great. Not like great great. But I thought it was a genuinely good movie and stayed relatively close to the source material. Not based off any particular game but still felt like it belonged. Every one after that was just straight up terrible.

Possibly the first mortal combat was okay. Especially considering it was made in the 90’s so that’s gotta count for something being as good/bad as it was..

30°

They Hid So Much In The Deadpool & Wolverine Trailer - Looper

The latest "Deadpool & Wolverine" trailer gave us a glimpse at the MCU's golden boys kicking butt and taking names - as well as a whole mess of Easter eggs.

30°

5 Reasons Michael Scott From ‘The Office’ Was Actually An Amazing Leader

Don’t let the cringey awkwardness of The Office fool you: Michael Scott would actually be the perfect boss.

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thoughtcatalog.com
30°

30 Years Later, Where Is ‘The Crow’ Cast Now?

With the new The Crow remake coming soon, we take a look back at the 30-year-old cult classic original–and where the stars are now.

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thoughtcatalog.com