276°
Posted 20 hours ago

The Game Limited Edition [Blu-ray]

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

Co-writer John Brancatovery is refreshingly honest in his interview. He said he wasn’t happy with how the end turned out on camera, for instance, though he grew more comfortable with it over time. What will be at this year’s Game Awards? In terms of new reveals, organizers haven’t started teasing which games (or video game-adjacent TV shows or movies) might have reveals. But the 2022 Game Awards was a big one, with announcements and reveals from Death Stranding 2, Hades 2, Star Wars Jedi: Survivor, Judas, Final Fantasy 16, and The Super Mario Bros. Movie. There were other surprises, including appearances from Al Pacino and The Last Of Us stars Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey.

The full list of The Game Awards nominees for 2023 was revealed in mid-November. Six games are up for the Game of the Year award, which typically closes out the show: A grumpy banker receives a birthday present from his brother for an experience with Consumer Recreation Services (CRS) which promise him a tailored gaming experience that will make his life fun. However, as the lines blur between thrill and threat, suspicions rise as to whether this is actually a game at all and if he’s being played more than just for fun, but for his life. Please note, there may be spoilers contained in this review, but I’ve tried to highlight obvious ones. Made in between Seven and Fight Club, David Fincher’s edge-of-your-seat thriller The Game remains arguably his most underappreciated film, bolstered by an exceptional star performance by Michael Douglas. Audio commentary with director David Fincher, actor Michael Douglas, screenwriters John Brancato and Michael Ferris, director of photography Harris Savides, production designer Jeffrey Beecroft and visual effects supervisor Kevin HaugWelcome to the Game is a puzzle horror game by Reflect Studios, famous for previously developing Rides with Strangers. On the default mode, elimination takes two shots through the heart. You can adjust the vitality level in settings to buff or debuff the players. There are also a few other settings to make the game more (or less) difficult. Game Modes On Location featurettes – Exterior Parking Lot: Blue Screen Shot, Exterior Fioli Mansion: Father’s Death, Interior CRS Lobby and Offices, Interior Fioli Mansion: Vandalism, Exterior Mexican Cemetary (with optional commentary by Fincher, Savides, Beecroft and Haug)

Apple Shooter is a fun archery game where you have to shoot an apple off the head of a friend. This online shooting game was clearly inspired by the legendary archery champ Wilhelm Tell and developed by Wolf Games. To become a marksman takes strength, poise, power and grace. As Apple Shooter will show, it also takes an endless list of volunteers willing to balance an apple on top of their head. Because if you should miss, there's a reasonable chance your arrow will cause some awfully fatal damage. Read more .. Alternatively-framed 4:3 version prepared for home video (SD only), with a new introduction discussing Fincher's use of the Super 35 shooting format Arrow Academy Blu-ray including new bonus features and UK home video premiere of director-approved 2K restoration Presented in a director-approved remaster available for the first time in the UK, the twisty mysteries of Fincher’s pulse-pounding paranoiac puzzle are explored in an exciting array of new and archive bonus features. When Arrow Academy announced they were releasing my favourite David Fincher film, THE GAME, on Blu-Ray, I screamed with joy. THE GAME, starring Michael Douglas, Sean Penn and Deborah Kara Unger, is one of the finest films I’ve ever seen, and, whilst not a perfect movie, it’s one of the most original stories that I’ve ever come across. I remember first catching it on TV years after its release, and had turned it on partway through the movie, purely by accident when channel-hopping, so I wasn’t 100% of the storyline. All I saw was Michael Douglas and Sean Penn on-screen and the series of unnerving events that followed and I was hooked. It was nothing like I’d ever seen before and it excited me because of that… and also because of Michael Douglas who, in my eyes, is one of the greatest actors on screen.

We meet him on his 48th birthday, significant in that his father was that age when he died. Due to this and his usual indifference to trivial social events, Nicholas isn’t happily celebrating. Instead, it’s business as usual, until his wayward brother Conrad (Sean Penn) appears. The pair take lunch together and Conrad gives his brother a mysterious gift, a certificate for an exclusive entertainment experience, run by Consumer Recreation Services (CRS). Curious, particularly after overhearing some of his fellow health club members talk highly of it, Nicholas heads to the CRS offices and signs up. Also making it over (after many feared it wouldn’t) is the Psychological Test Film, which is the film played for Douglas’ character during his series of tests in the film. Though in the movie this film is supposed to last an extraordinary amount of time it only runs just over a minute here. It’s presented in 1080i but since most of it looks to be video footage it doesn’t make too big of a difference.

Screenplay: John Brancato, Michael Ferris, Andrew Kevin Walker (uncredited), Larry Gross (uncredited) Neil Young’s essay is interesting, focussing largely on the humour that is often missed when discussing the film, as well as some thought-provoking observations about it.To hit your opponent you must carefully consider the trajectory of your arrow. Adjust the firing angle and force applied to the projectile to find the sweet spot. You have unlimited arrows, but make sure you get them before they get you! Settings Eventually, the film did get made though, after numerous cast and script changes. Unfortunately, given all the time spent developing The Game, it didn’t perform quite as well as those behind it likely hoped. It was hardly a flop, but its box-office return and critical acclaim were a little luke-warm when compared to Fincher’s previous release, Se7en. The shows typically run 3.5 hours, including a 30-minute pre-show. The Game Awards organizers have not announced how long the 2023 event will be, but expect something between three and four hours long. What are The Game Awards Game of the Year nominees?

Though I’m happy all of the supplements made it from the LaserDisc I was hoping for some newer stuff. This aspect does disappoint but nothing else about the disc does. The video and audio for the film are both stunning, and for those two reasons alone the disc comes as a very high recommendation for those wanting to own the film on Blu-ray. This is without a doubt the best I’ve seen the film in a very long time. You can invite your friends to join your squad and sign up to save all the loot you acquire in Narrow.One. There are extensive settings to create a comfortable playing experience, and a detailed character customization menu where you can fine-tune your player’s appearance. More Online FPS games The supplements then conclude with a collection of material about the trailers for the film. First is a teaser trailer, which involved a CGI marionette, and it’s accompanied by an optional commentary featuring digital animation supervisor Richard “Dr.” Baily. There’s also a “Teaser Render Test” which presents the rough wire frame model for the animation with Baily again talking about it. There’s also the final theatrical trailer with an optional commentary by Fincher, who talks about how difficult it was dealing with the marketing people and his desire to not spoil the whole movie in it. Usually trailer sections are fairly uninteresting but the added commentaries yet again add some more value. And that’s unfortunately it. I’m happy Criterion carried over all of their material from the LaserDisc, but even for their LaserDisc days the supplements are fairly slim. Since 15 years have passed it would have been great to have some scholarly material, maybe even material featuring admirers and detractors of the film, and maybe even some more insight into Fincher’s career. But of course this could have been out of Criterion’s hands and this is all Fincher wants included for the film. Disappointing but again everything looks to be here, and the material is at least fairly strong. Closing Starting with The Most Dangerous Game (1978), easily the most violent entry, our protagonist finds himself in the crosshairs of big business, Yakuza and the police as their lies and corruption escalate and threaten to capture Shohei in a web of lies.Welcome to the Game was meant to be a small side project of Reflect Studios to their much bigger upcoming title, Rides with Strangers. Development, mostly behind Reflect Studios' Adam Flatau, happened throughout early 2016, and a small roster of popular YouTubers were sent demos of the game to record their first impressions and spread the word of the game's development throughout late May 2016. Another of the features I enjoyed, which is essentially video clips accompanied by captions, is the video essay by Neil Young. It highlights bits you may have missed about the film as well as providing details on some of the actors who’s performances and roles helped make the film what it is. The two discs don’t step on each other’s toes too much either. The original DVD is more focussed on contributions from the filmmakers, with Fincher, Douglas, Savides, Beecroft and Haug providing a feature-length commentary as well as commentaries on some behind the scenes footage and featurettes. Released between 1978 and 1979, each film in the trilogy gives a different look and feel to the assignment. Each follow the exploits of the notorious assassin Shohei Narumi, what starts as quite formulaic soon turns to chaotic carnage as bloody violence is served like hors d’oeuvres at a party. The release then comes with a booklet featuring an essay on the film by David Sterritt. Though I am again very fond of the film and do agree with the comments on how the film could be in some ways be seen as a film about making movies (CRS uses the same techniques as many effects people) I have to say I found the essay a little much, with Sterritt possibly reading too much into the film in a few cases. But then again maybe I’m just not giving the film enough credit.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment