Part 1 was actually one of the most positive reviews of it I've seen so far.
Part 1 was actually one of the most positive reviews of it I've seen so far.
I did think about it, and I can find games with a narrative focus from the mid 90s. A lot of classic RPGs would not be considered as classic as they are if not for the narrative (Final Fantasy 6, Baldur's Gate, Planescape: Torment) so narrative led games are not a recent thing, not at all.
Werewolf movies are always neglected. :(
This site has a really good defense of the Resident Evil films. Long story short, they have a unique and unified style, along with legitimately well done action scenes for a Hollywood action film. They're a solid example of b-movie auteurism in a way.
I don't think that's entirely true at all, but I do see how that could very well be how a lot of people view the situation. A lot of great games do prioritize narrative though, and a lot of anime is enjoyable on a primarily visual basis (No one is watching Redline for the story). I've also seen a lot of gamers who say…
I am soooo fucking excited for this. I picked up the first one last Thursday and have been playing it non-stop since. Everything about it just clicks for me and I adapted to the controls really quickly, even managed to platinum last night.
There's a delicious irony to gamers complaining about anime being too cliche or shallow.
It's just a weirdly negative way to title your article after the first one is so positive, I think that's all.
I didn't really pay attention to that until this site did a Run the Series for them. It opened my eyes a bit, they definitely deserve a bit more respect.
For similar reasons, the Dead or Alive movie is also good. It's knowingly cheesy, there's no pretense.
Totally. I really wish he would get behind the camera more too. Dude's got some chops when it comes to action filmmaking.
I thought it was well established that Keanu is immortal?
He also directed Man of Tai Chi and played the villain in it.
It doesn't ruin it, but holy crap is it an annoying word.
Few days late, but I've got a few films that would fit the description: The Signal (It has three different directors), Mike Flanagan's Absentia, Adam Wingard's You're Next, Leigh Janiak's Honeymoon, Ben Wheatley's Kill List, Karyn Kusama's The Invitation, and Jeremy Saulnier's Green Room (Although this is probably the…
Yeah, I love pop and dance music, and I'm about as much of an awkward shut in as they come.
I think that's also the point.
Am I the only one who finds this kinda creepy?
My bad, I thought you were poking fun at me for mistakenly mentioning the useless mouse, cuz it was literally useless with my set up. >_>
That was Iike, Redditor levels of nitpick