Gore Verbinski Gets Into Games

Andy Chalk

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Nov 12, 2002
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Gore Verbinski Gets Into Games


The BioShock [http://www.bioshockgame.com/] movie might be on ice but director Gore Verbinski still sees big potential in videogames and now wants to try his hand at producing them.

Production on the BioShock movie has Will Stahl [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/91240] to work at his production company Blind Wink and has a "first look" deal with Universal that includes videogames. But he's also very aware that Hollywood's record in the game industry is not one to be particularly proud of.

"It's a mistake for Hollywood to impose themselves on the gaming space. Not only is it arrogant, but it hasn't really worked," he said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times [http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/entertainmentnewsbuzz/2009/06/why-gore-verbinski-is-developing-video-games-and-likely-not-directing-bioshock.html]. "The presumption that we have a better understanding of narrative that we can bring to gaming is flawed at its core because interactive entertainment is a completely different way to navigate and explore what compels you in that world."

"As a filmmaker, I'm absolutely fascinated with the idea that the protagonist is the audience. That mandates a new form of narrative at its core. So you can't really take the skill sets we have for making movies and impose them upon games. Hollywood has made a mistake to think they can enter this space and somehow provide better storytelling," he said.

Blind Wink is currently developing five different game projects, with one in the prototype stage. Verbinski described them as "wildly diverse," saying his company is "taking a conventional [first person shooter] experience and tweaking it in a way that hasn't been thought of before. We looked at it from a different angle and changed the experience."

"All the way on the other side, we're doing big epic narratives that are four quadrant experiences," he continued. "And then we're doing some really radical thinking. That's more difficult to fund immediately, but we're think-tanking it because we feel like there's tremendous potential."

As for the future of the BioShock movie, Verbinski sounded doubtful about its future. He reiterated the need to shoot the movie overseas but said his "prohibitive" schedule might make it impossible. "It really comes down to the financial model now. Big movies are just not being shot in the States," he said. "I'm weighing whether I can physically go the U.K. or Australia or one of those other places with a tax rebate for a year-and-a-half."


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randommaster

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Sep 10, 2008
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Good to see that at least one person get it.

Looking forward to the games. They mat end up horrible, but they should be different, which I'm happy to see.
 

Sixties Spidey

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Jan 24, 2008
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Bioshock isn't really good movie material anyway. The plot's great and everything, but if they pull off a movie based on it, it's going to be a new Silent Hill movie.
 

T'Generalissimo

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Nov 9, 2008
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I think a Bioshock movie could be done, but only if it was a prequel, set prior to and during Rapture's collapse, and even then it would be risky. Still, looks like Gore might actually have some understanding of what makes games and films different.

On a related note, how much of an awesome name is Gore? Seriously, why are there no grizzled, muscle-bound, space marine, protaganists named Gore?
 

scotth266

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Jan 10, 2009
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Who exactly is Gore Verbinski? Is he terribly important? I mean, I've heard his name before, but I can't put my finger on it.

Ah well: at least he gets that movie people need to stop trying to "IMPROVE" game stories when they're already pretty decent.
 

bue519

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scotth266 said:
Who exactly is Gore Verbinski? Is he terribly important? I mean, I've heard his name before, but I can't put my finger on it.

Ah well: at least he gets that movie people need to stop trying to "IMPROVE" game stories when they're already pretty decent.
Pirates of the Caribbean dude. He sort of directed them, so hopefully his games are more like the first one and less like the awful sequels.
 

9of9

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Feb 14, 2008
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Hmm, interesting trend of decent film directors (I'm talking about Verbinski, del Torro, Spielberg) delving into game development. It'll be rather interesting to see what comes out of this wave - I'm particularly looking forward to see what del Torro will do after he's done with the Hobbit =)
 

shadow_pirate22

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Aug 25, 2008
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Finally,a good first step: Knowing where one problem lies.

This doesn't mean the games he makes will be good, but these I might actually look at, so bravo, Gore Verbinski.
 

Florion

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Dec 7, 2008
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"All the way on the other side, we're doing big epic narratives that are four quadrant experiences."

Kudos to Verbinski for realizing that what moviemakers have been doing with video games hasn't been working, but wtf is a four quadrant experience, Gore? Are you sure you not just spitting out vague statements and you don't know what changes actually need to be made?
 

not a zaar

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Dec 16, 2008
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Well it seems he's got the right attitude, let's see what comes out of his studio though, instead of his mouth.