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Gamer

 
Movies:

Gamer

  • Directors: Mark Neveldine; Brian Taylor
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Science Fiction
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Action, Psychological Sci-Fi
  • Themes: Lone Wolves, Virtual Reality, Future Dystopias
  • Main Cast: Gerard Butler, Amber Valletta, Michael C. Hall, Kyra Sedgwick, Logan Lerman, Alison Lohman
  • Release Year: 2009
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 95 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Reality and video games merge in this high-concept sci-fi action thriller from Crank creators Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor. In the not too distant future, mind-control technology allows humans to control the actions and movements of other humans, allowing reclusive billionaire Ken Castle (Michael C. Hall) to create the ultimate video game. It's called "Slayers," and it's a mass-scale, multiplayer online first-person shooter that's as controversial as it is popular. In the world of gamers, Simon (Logan Lerman) is a rock star; miraculously managing to keep his character alive week after week, he racks up frags like Billy Mitchell jumps barrels. But unlike Mitchell's Mario, Simon's video-game avatar is a living, breathing human being named Kable (Gerard Butler). Defying the odds to keep Kable running and gunning though even the most explosive battles, Simon captures the imagination of a global audience. Torn from his family, thrown into prison, and forced to fight against his will, Kable realizes that his only hope of ever seeing his family again is to somehow escape the game, reclaim his identity, and expose Castle's dehumanizing technology on live television. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Review

The filmmaking team behind the thoroughly over-the-top Crank franchise strikes out hard with their third outing -- a half-cooked cautionary shoot-'em-up tale whose ADD-inspired visuals do little but bash the audience's brains to an uncaring pulp. Devoid of any character development (or a strong plot), Gamer turns out to simply be a vehicle for Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor to go nuts behind the camera when they're not sticking as much T & A on the screen as they can, all the while cowering behind a flimsy excuse for social commentary. This sort of approach might be fine if they put some time into creating a magnetic central character (à la Chev Chelios in the Crank films), but instead, they bore their viewers to death with this far-too-serious dramatic spin on The Running Man, starring Mr. Can't Crack a Smile But Look at My Pecks, Gerard Butler. With warehouse gunfights aplenty, the picture is ruled by a third-rate Demolition Man revolutionary subplot and incoherent action -- that is, when it's not going hyperkinetic in its ugly version of a computer-simulation-addicted world gone horribly wrong.



The picture focuses on Kable, a death row inmate who's been thrown into a new form of international entertainment called "Slayers" -- an interactive game where viewers can control an inmate through violent battles of grit and guns. If a prisoner survives 30 rounds of combat, they get set free. The corporation running it is owned by Ken Castle (Dexter's Michael C. Hall), who apparently is the richest man in the world, thanks to this show and its predecessor, "Society," where humans control other humans for depraved satisfaction. As the undefeatable Kable inches closer to being set free, he and his user, 17-year-old Simon (Logan Lerman), are recruited by the revolutionary group known as "Humanz", to take down Castle and his mind-controlling industry. With the help of a reporter (Kyra Sedgwick) and the "Humanz" leader (rapper/actor Ludacris), Kable battles his way out of the playing field and into the real world, where only Castle holds the key to reuniting with the wife and child that Kable left behind.



The storyline couldn't be simpler. In fact, it's been told in countless other films time and again. What sets this production apart is the unrestrained way in which it was constructed. The gunfights seem to have been mashed together using hundreds of different shots, all captured by Neveldine and Taylor, by means of rollerblades or any other extreme technique they could think of. The end result is one massive headache of a sequence after another, each pummeling the screen with so much movement and editing fury that it's impossible to discern -- or care about -- anything that's going on. The same can be said about the non-action scenes as well, whether it's a rave scene or an in-your-face montage of future street culture. All of this could be more digestible if it weren't for the film's grotesque view of society years down the line, which is filled with fat, sweaty perverts and incredibly unfunny satirical jabs at the media in obnoxious future-land... And the less that's said about the musical dance number leading to the finale, the better.



While their off-the-wall antics in the Crank films were admired by lovers of wild cinema for putting ludicrous characters in extreme situations, Neveldine and Taylor only amp up the extreme part of that equation in Gamer. Thus, they portray much of the general public as extreme weirdos who are filmed with extreme camera angles in extreme costumes doing extreme things -- none of which registers as anything more than annoying. This filmmaking team needs to step back and reassess what made them interesting in the first place -- and stick to that -- if they want to last beyond this movie. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Terry Crews - Hackman; Ramsey Moore - Gorge; Chris "Ludacris" Bridges - Humanz Brother; Aaron Yoo - Humanz Dude; Jonathan Chase - Geek Leader; Dan Callahan - Backup Geek; Brighid Fleming - Delia; Johnny Whitworth - Scotch; Keith Jardine - Mean Slayer; Michael Weston - Producer; Joe Reitman - Board Op; John deLancie - Chief of Staff; Milo Ventimiglia - Rick Rape; Zoe Bell - Sandra; John Leguizamo - Freek; Noel Gugliemi - Upgrade Guard; Jarvis George - Brown Soldier #1; Jai Stefan - Brown Soldier #2; Richard Machowicz - Blue Soldier #1; Ken Smith - Lifer; Henry Hayashi - Razorblade; Dylan Kenin - Train Guard; Keith David - Agent Keith; Maggie Lawson - Female News Host #1; James Roday - News Co-Host #1; Sam Witwer - Caseworker; Rebekah Tarin - Dale; Kate Mulligan - Sorority Chick; Med Abrous - Pig Face Ron; Ashley Rickards - 2Katchapredator; Nikita Ramsey - Kumdumpsta #1; Jade Ramsey - Kumdumpsta #2; Mimi Michaels - Stikkimuffin; Sadie Alexandru - Society Victim; Ariana Scott - Sissypuss Shelley; Cynthia Robertson - Porn Girl; Antoinette Antonio - Female News Host #2; Donnie Smith - News Co-Host #2; Lloyd Kaufman - Genericon; Stephanie Mace - Geek Girl; Adam Loeb - Ben Richard; Efren Ramirez - DJ; David Scott Rubin - Lab Tech; Fred Loeb - Society Concierge

Credit

James Oberlander - Art Director, Sebastian Schroeder - Art Director, Mary Vernieu - Casting, Jo Edna Boldin - Casting, J.C. Cantu - Casting, Robert Benun - Co-producer, Alix Friedberg - Costume Designer, Jon Mallard - First Assistant Director, Mark Neveldine - Director, Brian Taylor - Director, Peter Amundson - Editor, Fernando Villena - Editor, Doobie White - Editor, Michael Paseornek - Executive Producer, David Scott Rubin - Executive Producer, Mark Neveldine - Executive Producer, Brian Taylor - Executive Producer, Eric Reid - Executive Producer, James McQuade - Executive Producer, Geoff Zanelli - Composer (Music Score), Robert Williamson - Composer (Music Score), Ekkehardt Pollack - Cinematographer, Tom Rosenberg - Producer, Gary Lucchesi - Producer, Richard S. Wright - Producer, Skip Williamson - Producer, Steven M. Saylor - Set Designer, Darrin Prescott - Stunts Coordinator, David Scott Rubin - Unit Production Manager, Ted Gidlow - Unit Production Manager, Mark Neveldine - Screenwriter, Brian Taylor - Screenwriter, Tyler T. Romary - Second Assistant Director, Betty Berbarian - Set Decorator, Cliff Fleming - Pilot, Christien Tinsley - Puppeteer, Jason Hamer - Puppeteer

Similar Movies

eXistenZ; Rollerball; The Running Man; The Matrix; Tron; Demolition Man; Death Race
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Wikipedia: Gamer (film)
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Gamer

Theatrical poster
Directed by Neveldine/Taylor
Produced by Tom Rosenberg
Gary Lucchesi
Richard Wright
Skip Williamson
Written by Neveldine/Taylor
Starring Gerard Butler
Michael C. Hall
Amber Valletta
Logan Lerman
Terry Crews
with Ludacris
and Kyra Sedgwick
Music by Robb Williamson
Geoff Zanelli
Cinematography Ekkehart Pollack
Editing by Fernando Villena
Studio Lakeshore Entertainment
Distributed by Lionsgate
Release date(s) September 4, 2009
Running time 95 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $12,500,000
Gross revenue $30,064,251 [1]

Gamer is a 2009 science fiction thriller film written and directed by Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor. The film stars Gerard Butler as an unwilling participant in an online game in which participants can control human beings as players. Gamer was released in North America and the United Kingdom on September 16, 2009. The film is rated R for strong violence, sexual content, nudity and language.

Contents

Plot

In 2034, mind-control technology has taken society by storm. Ken Castle (Michael C. Hall) has revolutionized the gaming industry with his invention of self-replicating nanites. The nanites colonize in the brain, gradually taking over the existing brain cells and allowing full control of all motor functions by a third party. The first off-shoot of this technology was Society, an online community in which gamers pay to control a real person in a pseudo community, much like current simulated worlds such as Second Life. Those who work as characters in Society are paid for their participation, unlike Castle's latest creation, Slayers. A multiplayer, first-person shooter game, Slayers allows gamers to control death row prisoners in mass-scale death matches. Any inmate who lives through 30 matches wins his freedom. Simon, a 17-year old trust fund baby (Logan Lerman), controls Kable (Gerard Butler), the online champion of the game, having won 27 matches and lived through them all. Slayers and Society are hugely popular, making Castle the richest man in America within a matter of weeks. However, Castle's organization is the target of a activist group called Humanz, who claim the nanite technology has a more ominous purpose. When a virus hacks into the video mainstreams broadcasting a message from the elusive rebel group, Simon is offered the chance to communicate with Kable while in-game, which is not allowed. After a stranger gives Kable a warning that the game's mastermind plans to kill him, Kable asks Simon to relinquish control and uses the opportunity to escape.

Kable is taken to the rebels' leader (Ludacris) who explains that the mind control technology used on Kable and the other Slayers can potentially be used without discretion on anyone, leading to the extinction of independent thought. He also gives Kable directions to where he can break his wife out of Society, where she has been working as a character since his incarceration. Kable arrives, and, after a brief shootout with security, manages to escape with his wife. While the rebels attempt to deactivate the cells from his wife's mind that make the mind control possible, Kable is taken into another room. The leader reveals that Kable was once a soldier, working on a future cellular control project. His friend was the first to receive the cell transplant. However, Castle decided to discover the true limits of the mind control and force Kable to kill his friend, leading to his conviction for first-degree murder and subsequent death row sentence.

Some four years later, the game Slayers came out, with Kable as one of the leading stars. Kable is then informed that his daughter has been placed with a foster family...Castle himself. Kable infiltrates Castles' mansion, but is confronted by Castle who is singing and dancing to music, all the while forcing other death row inmates to dance along with him. After a brief fight between Kable and the inmates, Castle leads him into a room with a large basketball court. Castle reveals that he also received the transplant, however, the cellular structure in him allows him to control anyone else who has the cells. This is proven when, having obtained a knife, Kable attempts to kill Castle only to find himself frozen still. Castle then savagely beats Kable and brings in his wife and daughter. Meanwhile, rebel members manage to broadcast their confrontation all over the world.

Kable is forced to crawl to his family, and Castle then attempts to force him to kill his own daughter. After a brief struggle of wills, Kable manages to move the knife away. Simon then returns in control of Kable and, using his controller software that he uses to control Kable in-game, Kable tricks Castle into using his controlling cells to stab himself in the stomach. After Castle dies, Kable requests for Castles' employees, who have been watching, to release the family from their control. They do this, and, with the words "Well played, Kable", depart. The movie then ends with Kable driving through a tunnel in Glacier National Park with his daughter and wife in the car.[2]

Cast

  • Gerard Butler as John "Kable" Tillman, the highest-ranked warrior in the game Slayers
  • Amber Valletta as Angie Tillman, Kable's wife, a controlled avatar in Society
  • Michael C. Hall as Ken Castle, creator of the games Society and Slayers
  • Logan Lerman as Simon Silverton, the 17-year-old gamer playing Kable
  • Kyra Sedgwick as Gina Parker Smith, famous talk show host
  • Ludacris as Humanz Brother, spokesperson and leader of the Humanz
  • Aaron Yoo as Humanz Dude, a member of the Humanz
  • Alison Lohman as Trace, a member of the Humanz
  • Jonathan Chase as Geek Leader, leader of Castle's technical team
  • John Leguizamo as Freek, an inmate who befriends Kable
  • Terry Crews as Hackman, an inmate sent to kill Kable
  • Zoë Bell as Sandra, an inmate
  • Ramsey Moore as Gorge, the gamer playing Angie
  • Keith David as Agent Keith, a CIA-agent
  • Johnny Whitworth as Scotch, the first person to receive a Nanex-implant
  • Milo Ventimiglia as Rick Rape, described as "Moonraker, silver grill, with a latex outfit making him look like a bumblebee."[3]
  • Sam Witwer as the Caseworker on Angie's custody case

Production

In May 2007, Lakeshore Entertainment re-teamed with Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, the creators of Crank (2006), to produce a "high-concept futuristic thriller" called Game. Neveldine and Taylor wrote the script for Game and were slated to direct the film, while actor Gerard Butler was cast into the lead role.[4]

Production took place in Albuquerque, New Mexico for a 53-day shoot. Filming was at the Albuquerque Studios and on location around Albuquerque. Multistory sets were built on parking lots in downtown Albuquerque to depict buildings that were blown up in the film, and other sets were built on the backlots near the studios.[5] The crew used special hand-held Red One digital cameras, which allowed the special effects team to begin work normally done in post-production after each day's shooting.[6]

In March 2009, the film's working title was changed from "Game" to "Citizen Game".[7][8] In May 2009 another name change was announced, the new name being "Gamer".[9][10][11]

Inspirations

The film begins with some sequences from the 1992 experimental documentary Baraka.

Reception

Critic reception has been primarily negative. The website Dread Central awarded Gamer four out of five, saying "Gamer is a top of the line action/terror trip with more exploding carcasses than the latest installment of Rambo."[12] The Film Stage gave the film a score of 8/10, calling it "a look at the dangers of a media-infested world, of nonstop advertisement and of the future of youth in a world with ever expanding interactive technology".[13] The New York Daily News, however, disagrees; the reviewer marked the film off with one star out of five, calling it a "Xerox of a Xerox" and citing a number of films it takes elements from, including The Matrix and Rollerball.[14] RVA Magazine reasoned that Gamer's plot is overly similar to The Condemned and commented that Gamer "hates its primary audience" and "tries to criticize the commercialization of violence, even though it itself is commercialized violence".[15] IGN gave the film a 4/10, calling it "a frustrating film". The film currently holds a 29% "Rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with the consensus "With all of the hyperkinetic action and none of the flair of Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor's earlier work, Gamer has little replay value."

Box office

Gamer opened with $3.3 million on its opening day, ranking at #4 at the box office. In total, the film earned $9,156,057 on its first weekend. Overall the film closed at the box office on October 8, 2009 so its total came up with $20,534,907 in the domestic box office and another $8,517,547 in foreign box offices making a worldwide total of $29,052,454.

References

  1. ^ http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=game09.htm
  2. ^ "Game (2009) - Movie Info - Yahoo! Movies". Movies.yahoo.com. http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1810002635/info. Retrieved 2009-04-02. 
  3. ^ Jen Yamato (April 17, 2008). Milo Ventimiglia Gets Dark in Pathology, Talks Role In Neveldine & Taylor's Game Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved April 18, 2008.
  4. ^ Elizabeth Guider (May 16, 2007). Lakeshore, Butler to play 'Game' Variety. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  5. ^ Megan Kamerick (August 31, 2007). New film production fills Albuquerque Studios New Mexico Business Weekly. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  6. ^ Edward Douglas (November 19, 2007). On the Set of Gerard Butler's New Sci-Fi Action Flick! ComingSoon. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  7. ^ "IGN: Citizen Game Trailer, Wallpaper, Pictures, Soundtrack and More". Uk.movies.ign.com. http://uk.movies.ign.com/objects/907/907044.html. Retrieved 2009-04-05. 
  8. ^ "Lionsgate Publicity". Lionsgate Publicity. http://www.lionsgatepublicity.com/epk/citizengame/. Retrieved 2009-04-05. 
  9. ^ "GAMER – In Theaters September 4". Gamerthemovie.com. http://gamerthemovie.com. Retrieved 2009-05-09. 
  10. ^ "Exclusive Poster Premiere: Gamer - UGO.com". Movieblog.ugo.com. http://movieblog.ugo.com/movies/gamer-poster. Retrieved 2009-05-09. 
  11. ^ "UPDATED: Another name change for GAME + new motion poster + Trailer on Xbox live". Quietearth.us. http://www.quietearth.us/articles/2009/05/08/Yet-another-name-change-for-GAME--new-motion-poster. Retrieved 2009-05-09. 
  12. ^ Dread Central's review of Gamer
  13. ^ The filmstage.com
  14. ^ New York Daily News review of Gamer
  15. ^ RVA's review of Gamer

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