Deus Ex movie when?
If it ever happens its going to be Human Revolution dogshit, so who cares
>>64264668
1982
>>64264688
This.
>>64264668
Deus Ex used exploration and background details you had to search for/ read people's books/news terminals/hack people's emails to explain the world and most of the backstory. A movie would have to lose almost all of that and you'd just end up with the main plotline and it would be a disappointment.
>>64264967
this
>>64264668
Why do you need a movie when it's literally unfolding in reality?
>>64264967
>>64264984
>>64266494
>>64266866
I never asked for this
>>64266433
might end up as a counter-terrorism movie
>YOU HAVE TO STOP
>BUT PAUL, I MUST KILL THE TERRORIST
>NO, JC U(natco) ARE THE TERRORIST
>and then JC was the internet
>Making movies based on video games
Why do people think this is a good idea in the first place? There has never been a good movie based on a video game, period. Taking a player driven narrative and bringing it into a more linear cinematic adaption never works out. Even the video games that attempted to capture the 'cinematic' essence of movies end up flawed because of it.
>>64267051
I never asked foryou
I would kindly ask capeshit subhumans to leave anime and videogame franchises the fuck alone. Thank you.
>>64267160
Movie adaptations of games don't work out because the producers don't want to make faithful adaptations and just want the name recognition. It has nothing to do with "player driven narratives," which don't even exist in all games.
>>64267160
>Even the video games that attempted to capture the 'cinematic' essence of movies end up flawed because of it.
Yep. Tbqh those developers might as well just use the game engine to render a feature-lenght animation they can put up on netflix and spare us the interactive movie vidya bullshit.
>>64267160
Indeed, that's another proof that video game is a much superior form of art.
Movie adaptation of games only even occur because there's enough demand for it to be profitable. In what scenario are producers and directors deciding to create a fundamentally unoriginal work out of pure and creative motives? This has been demonstrated to excess in the last decade, and they are almost invariably shit. The people stupid enough to still even want movie adaptations of anything are fucking morons who clap after Marvel capeshit.
>>64264668
>an hour and a half of crawling through an office and hacking into nodes
RoboCop(1987) It already happened,.
>>64267160
The first Resident Evil was alright, it's not like it was going to Cannes but as an action flick it did its job.