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Indie Game: The Movie is a 2012 documentary film made by Canadian filmmakers James Swirsky and Lisanne Pajot. The film is about the struggles of independent game developers Edmund McMillen and Tommy Refenes during the development of Super Meat Boy, Phil Fish during the development of Fez, and also Jonathan Blow, who reflects on the success of Braid.
German four-part documentary about the history of video games, simulations, digital adventures and video games as an art form Game Makers: Various directors: 2002–2005: G4: Series on video game industry figures Tetris: From Russia With Love: Magnus Temple: 2004: BBC Four: History of the 1980s Tetris game phenomenon The Video Game Revolution ...
Video games released on Netflix. Pages in category "Netflix games" The following 74 pages are in this category, out of 74 total.
The Super Mario Bros. Movie, based on the Mario game franchise, holds the highest take of any video game adaptation with US$1.36 billion, and was considered the most profitable film of 2023 by Deadline Hollywood, while the six Resident Evil films hold the highest take for a live-action series of US$1.2 billion on an average production budget ...
'The Last of Us,' HBO's new prestige drama based on the video game, stands apart from other zombie fare despite a shared post-apocalyptic premise.
The high-profile and protracted five-year development of the video game Fez led to its status as an "underdog darling of the indie game scene". [1] The 2012 puzzle-platform game built around rotating between four 2D views of a 3D space was developed by indie developer Polytron Corporation and published by Polytron, Trapdoor, and Microsoft Studios.
The games will be playable for free to Netflix subscribers, with the package featuring remakes for mobile formats of Grand Theft Auto 3, Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, and Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.
The film has a score of 40 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 12 reviews. [7] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 18%, based on 17 reviews. [8] IGN awarded it a score of 7.0 out of 10, saying, "The new documentary Video Games: The Movie is an insightful albeit disjointed chronicle of the medium and the industry."