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Tony Hawk's American Wasteland

 
Album Review: Tony Hawk's American Wasteland
 

  • Artist: Various Artists
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: October 18, 2005
  • Type: Collection (various artists), Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Soundtrack

Review

Skateboard culture took hold of California in the late '70s and early '80s, where kids in cities like Santa Monica and Los Angeles defined freestyle skating from the ground up. Of course, at the time, music was just exciting. Punk rock was fragmenting, and bands like Black Flag on the West Coast and Minor Threat in the East were forging the new rhythms of hardcore. It's that sound Tony Hawk's American Wasteland taps for its soundtrack. But instead of putting together the usual comp of classic punk and hardcore, contemporary bands have been asked to contribute covers. Naturally the results vary. But for the most part it's a solid set, both for fans of the original songs and the current bands covering them. Buddy Nielsen really nails Mike Muir's apathetic teen intonation on Senses Fail's version of "Institutionalized," "All I wanted was a Pepsi! And she wouldn't give it to me!" My Chemical Romance are a predictable choice for the Misfits' "Astro Zombies," while Dropkick Murphys muscle ably through the Adolescents' "Who Is Who." Most if not all of the contributors are entirely faithful to their source material -- Thrice even go so far as to distort and treble-ize everything in their medley of Minor Threat's "Seeing Red/Screaming at a Wall," just to nail that D.C. 1981 feel. It's also nice to see bands like T.S.O.L., Government Issue, and Gorilla Biscuits get exposure alongside the usual entries from the Stooges and Descendents. (Hot Snakes, in particular, do a great job with GI's "Time to Escape.") Rise Against, who already covered "Nervous Breakdown" for Lords of Dogtown, must be the official stand-ins for Black Flag when it comes to skateboarding and the history of U.S. punk music: they end Tony Hawk's American Wasteland with all 54 sneering seconds of Flag's "Fix Me." ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Institutionalized Louiche Mayorga, Mike Muir Senses Fail (3:49)
Suburban Home/I Like Food Bill Stevenson, Tony Lombardo Taking Back Sunday (1:56)
Astro Zombies Glenn Danzig My Chemical Romance (2:12)
Search and Destroy Iggy Pop Emanuel (3:21)
Sonic Reducer David Thomas, Stiv Bators, Johnny Blitz, Cheetah Chrome, Jeff Magnum, Jimmy Zero Saves the Day (3:02)
Who Is Who The Adolescents, Frank Agnew, Steve Soto Dropkick Murphys (1:21)
Seeing Red/Screaming at the Wall Minor Threat, Ian MacKaye Thrice (2:32)
House of Suffering Earl Hudson, Darryl Jenifer The Bled (2:23)
Time to Escape Government Issue, Marc Alberstadt, Mike Fellows Hot Snakes (1:46)
Start Today Gorilla Biscuits Fall Out Boy (2:03)
Wash Away T.S.O.L. Alkaline Trio (3:28)
Ever Fallen in Love Pete Shelley Thursday (2:52)
Let's Have a War From Autumn to Ashes (2:48)
Fix Me Greg Ginn Rise Against (0:54)

Credits

David Bianco (Engineer), Brett Gurewitz (Producer), Matt Hyde (Mixing), Pete Martinez (Engineer), Eric Stenman (Producer), Bill Stevenson (Producer), Bill Stevenson (Mixing), Gar Wood (Producer), Gar Wood (Engineer), Gar Wood (Mixing), Jim Siegel (Mixing), Dave Collins (Mastering), Jason Livermore (Producer), Jason Livermore (Mixing), Brian McTernan (Producer), Brian McTernan (Engineer), Brian McTernan (Mixing), Chris Cosgrove (Producer), Chris Cosgrove (Engineer), Chris Cosgrove (Mixing), Ben Goetting (Design), Ben Goetting (Layout Design), Kevin Ratterman (Producer), Kevin Ratterman (Engineer), Kevin Ratterman (Mixing), Teppei Teranishi (Producer), Teppei Teranishi (Engineer), Machine (Producer), Machine (Engineer), Machine (Mixing), Mike Sapone (Producer), Mike Sapone (Engineer), Mike Sapone (Mixing), Brandon Young (Music Supervisor), D. James Goodwin (Producer), D. James Goodwin (Engineer), D. James Goodwin (Mixing), Dan Korneff (Mixing), Josh Jakubowski (Engineer), Rich Egan (A&R), Raymond Jeffrey (Engineer), Tony Hawk (Executive Producer), Riotkids (Producer)
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Wikipedia: Tony Hawk's American Wasteland
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Tony Hawk's American Wasteland
North American PS2 cover art
North American PS2 cover art
Developer(s) Neversoft
Publisher(s) Activision, Aspyr
Platform(s) PlayStation 2, Xbox, Xbox 360, GameCube, Windows
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Sports
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer
Rating(s) ESRB: T
PEGI: 16+
Media DVD, Nintendo optical disc

Tony Hawk's American Wasteland, also known as THAW and unofficially as Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 7, is a video game that has been released for the PS2, Xbox, Xbox 360, Nintendo GameCube and PC. Part of the Tony Hawk series, the game was developed by Neversoft and published by Activision. The PC version of the game was ported/published by Aspyr. Tony Hawk's American Wasteland is the first Tony Hawk game to support Xbox Live; online play was previously limited to the PlayStation 2 and PC.

American Wasteland is the sequel to Tony Hawk's Underground 2 and was released on October 18, 2005 for PS2, Xbox, and Nintendo GameCube. It was a launch title for the Xbox 360, being released simultaneously with the console on November 22, 2005.

The Nintendo DS version of this game, Tony Hawk's American Sk8land, features Wi-Fi capabilities. It is the first third-party DS game to have online support. A Game Boy Advance version of the game was released as well under the same name.

Contents

Features / Classic Mode

Tony Hawk's American Wasteland is the first game in the Tony Hawk franchise that allowed players to play in one large level without loading times in between. In the September 2005 edition of Game Informer Magazine, a map was shown displaying THAW's Los Angeles with an insert of an overhead view of the Boston stage from Tony Hawk's Underground 2 for comparison. The Boston level appeared to be about three quarters the size of one THAW area, with the exception of the "Vans Skatepark" and "Casino" areas.

The game also features the return of the Classic Mode, which allows the player to complete a series of goals in certain levels within a two-minute time limit.

Story

This applies to the game when played in story mode.

The game begins with the player choosing one of five pre-designed male skaters to play with. Upon choosing, the player gets on a bus to Los Angeles, where the player meets a blonde-haired girl named Kelly, who says she is going to L.A. to become an actress. He tells her that he is going to get away from friends and family, who have treated him badly.

Upon arrival in Hollywood, he gets punched by punks, who steal the player's bag and tell him to go home, Los Angeles being a locals-only scene. Here he meets Mindy, who tells him that he needs to sort their clothes and hair out, which is making him stand out as an outsider at the moment. He then get changes of his hair and clothes, and meets two local skaters, Ian and Duane, who introduce new tricks to him and advance his skills.

He sees Mindy drawing and finds out that she is a talented artist. Her sketches are going to be featured in her skating zine, named American Wasteland. However, Mindy hasn't gathered enough money to fund the project yet, but the player assures her it will happen. She has sketched something that catches the player's eye. The player proceeds to ask what the place is and Mindy says it is a "sick spot that you would absolutely love," but then tells the player that the spot is exclusive to local skaters. The player then pleads with her to get them in, to which Mindy agrees. However, the skate park is in Beverly Hills, and the passage to Beverly Hills is blocked by a protest against poor treatment of sheep. The player ends the protest by destroying a huge dinosaur head model that is on top of a movie theatre, which smashes into the protest.

He arrives in Beverly Hills and go outside a place called the "Skate Ranch," which is where the place in Mindy's sketchbook is. Mindy's skater friends, Boone, a bald man who goes for extreme jumps and gaps, but usually bails them. Useless Dave, a short man who is "the encyclopedia of useless skateboarding trivia", and Murphy, a tall, sarcastic type who has an endless array of contacts and friends all over L.A., and is always on his cell phone. He won't let him go into the ranch, unless he can keep up with their skating skills. He has to learn their performed tricks and then show them to them to prove himself worthy of going in the ranch.

Gaining their approval, he is let into the ranch, and meet the leader of the group, Iggy Van Zandt, a very rough type guy, who isn't fond of outsiders. He will let him crash at the ranch if you obtain some wood for a half-pipe he is building. When he does, the half-pipe is set-up, which spurs the group to do the ranch up and make it a full-on skatepark. With the help of Murphy's contacts, he and the group embark on obtaining skate-able pieces from all over L.A., the first being the destroyed dinosaur head he made earlier on.

From here on in, the overall task is to obtain pieces for the skate ranch, unlocking new places in L.A., the first being Downtown, where Master Zen is, who teaches you Special and Focus, which you need to participate in the Tony Hawk AmJam, an amateur skating contest taking place in the Vans Skatepark in Downtown.

He wins the AmJam, however, while making a short speech, he tells Tony Hawk that the last trick you performed was taught to you by Iggy Van Zandt, who, unknown to the player, is living in total secrecy in the ranch, as Iggy's crime rate is somewhat extensive according to Mindy causing him to be arrested by the police.

Mindy then suggest he talks to the Z-Boys, the only other group Iggy has hung out with, about what to do. He then gets slapped by a little Iggy fan and is warned by Mindy that she might have friends. So you then meet skating legend Tony Alva, from who you find out that Iggy's skate ranch is actually "Green Pipes Point," a legendary snake run that got levelled many years ago. He decides it has to be dug up, and befriends Alva's friend Mega, who runs an oil rig just off Santa Monica.

While Mega is digging up Green Pipes Point, Mindy tells him that Boone was in the local street gang known as the "Black Widows". Boone recently dropped out of the gang but was jumped and is now missing in East L.A.. He joins the Widows by impressing them with his spraypainting, skating and BMX skills to get to East L.A. and save Boone, who was trapped in a sewer pipe.

After some time, the player gets a phone call from Iggy in jail, who explains his bail will be with him shortly. You tell him you found out about Green Pipes Point and that it is being dug up, expecting an ecstatic response from Iggy. However, Iggy hates what you have done, because he didn't own the land, and if "the owner finds out what a badass skatepark he has, he'll cash in on the place." Iggy threatens violence and hangs up.

Shortly after, he receives a text message from Mega saying that stuff is happening at the ranch. Upon arriving in Beverly Hills, the game cuts to a news report, which is about the revival of Green Pipes Point, showing pros and locals being very happy. Outside the ranch, he sees the owner, Shapiro, in an expensive car, and ask why he sold it, being so legendary. The soon-to-be-ex owner doesn't care, and rides off with a snobbish attitude, pleased of his new money.

Iggy arrives with a baseball bat, and starts hitting the ranch's gate in rage. The player tries to apologize, but it doesn't matter to Iggy. Iggy says that it'll never be his place thanks to him. The player seems to shout and tell him that "It could've been if you hadn't been sitting on your ass all these years waiting for someone else to bail you out!" Instantly, Iggy drops his bat and punches him in the face, saying that there's "some things [he has] waited too long to do." You also snap at Mindy, blaming it on her because of her suggestion to do up the ranch, and insult her drawings, which deeply offends her and she storms off.

The player, Murphy, Dave and Boone decide to start a project to save the ranch, by making a skate video featuring famous pros, with all the proceeds going to Green Pipes Point. He then rounds up many pros, including pro BMX rider Matt Hoffman.

Ready to demo, film at and snake pieces for the ranch from a bust casino, Iggy arrives, and the two (Iggy and the player) make up. He also says that he will feature himself in the video, which the guys predict will make the fans go crazy.

Eventually, the buzz of the video has become so big that the ranch can be bought simply with the money from the pre-orders. The group leaves the casino, but confronted with a vast array of police cars and helicopters. The player's task is to get to the ranch from East L.A., without using any public transport or cars.

When the player arrives at the ranch successfully, everyone is completely overjoyed, with Iggy saying that the ranch is now his, and to celebrate, he is going to throw a party at the ranch, with everyone in town invited. Mindy comes over to the player on the half-pipe, and he apologizes. She accepts the apology, and shows off her first edition of her Magazine, American Wasteland, which she was talking about at the start of the game. The player is on the cover. Iggy comes over and spills the beans that the player was the one who gave her the money to get American Wasteland published. Mindy seems flattered, and the two eventually kiss and presumably become lovers.

At the end of the game, the American Wasteland is complete with various items such as the dug-up snake run, a crane, and the world famous Hollywood sign reading "Wasteland." The player has the respect of all the pro skaters for creating an amazing Skatepark, and Mindy becomes his lover.

The game received increased reviews from the previous games in the Tony Hawk Pro line. American Wasteland is said to have much better handling on the skater and levels that are much more realistically plotted.

Soundtrack

Reception

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tony Hawk's American Wasteland" Read more