In real life Keifer Sutherland had been injured in a car accident and wasn't able to fully work for an episode or two. So the writers came up with this episode in which a stuntman portrayed Jack wearing a facemask.
In real life Keifer Sutherland had been injured in a car accident and wasn't able to fully work for an episode or two. So the writers came up with this episode in which a stuntman portrayed Jack wearing a facemask.
The head is from the Kre-o Optimus.
Obviously LEGO can't officially produce this. Instead, it would be great of Mr. Jones could produce building plans, so that people could assemble the necessary pieces and build it themselves.
I wonder if there's an article about Ark Music and this guy. Too lazy to Google right now.
Over for convenience. Under if you want to lessen the amount of toilet paper people will use. Was told this by a friend who maintained the restrooms in an office building.
This bears repeating: If you want to make a fan film based on a video game (or any other media) property, DON'T ASK FOR CROWD-SOURCED MONEY TO FUND IT. This implies that you are asking to be personally paid for your work, and THIS is the problem the IP owners will have with you, because you will be PROFITING from…
Exactly. Fan filmmakers should take inspiration from the fact that the guy who created MegaMan managed to conceive a better version of that character for his next proposed game. For example, I personally love the concept of Metroid's Samus. But if I were itching to do a fan film, and I wanted to seek Kickstarter…
Gotta say, this guy sounds genuine and cool.
It's interesting how many big media companies have indeed looked the other way when it comes to fan productions. Consider the glut of Batman/DC superheroes, Star Wars, Star Trek, and Marvel fan films. And there are also several examples of fan films based on video game properties.
I think the general unwritten rule is…
If they had simply made this fan film with their own money, without asking for money publicly on Kickstarter, and put the finished film on YouTube, Nintendo probably wouldn't have cared. They were essentially asking the public to pay them to make this film.
Sorry but this guy's voice kind of adds to the creepy factor. He sounds a little unhinged.
It isn't?
Because these Metroid fan-filmmakers are asking for money through Kickstarter. That's the no-no. If they simply made this film short on their own without publicly asking for funds, and released it for free, Nintendo would probably let it slide.
I'd love to see this continue as a regular series, but that probably won't happen considering most of these comic tie-ins exist mainly to promote the game.
I predict Android 5.0 could actually look similar to this.
"The Touch" was also sung by Mark Wahlberg in Boogie Nights.
As a Donkey Kong fan and one who grew up obsessed with my Atari 2600, I've been playing this almost every day since I discovered it a month ago. It's addictive, a lot of fun, and quite challenging (especially the rivets level — the foxfires are hard to jump over, or avoid). It doesn't play exactly like the original…
I totally got a Pris from Blade Runner vibe from this female redo of Copperhead. I approve!
This is incredible. It has all four levels, and is actually challenging to play. Fans of Donkey Kong and Atari should definitely check this out and try it. It absolutely blows my mind what homebrew programmers are doing today with the old Atari game system!
It's mostly a fun programming challenge for the homebrewers, and a fun "alternate video gaming history" what-if for fans of the old game systems.