Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie

Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Kevin Finn
James Rolfe
Produced by Sean Keegan
Executive:
April Rolfe
James Rolfe
Written by Kevin Finn
James Rolfe
Based on The Angry Video Game Nerd 
by James Rolfe
Starring James Rolfe
Sarah Glendening
Stephen Mendel
Helena Barrett
Time Winters
Eddie Pepitone
Bobby Charles Reed
Jeremy Suarez
Music by Bear McCreary
Cinematography Jason Brewer
Edited by Paul Fontaine
Michael Licisyn
James Rolfe (final editing)
Production
company
Cinemassacre Productions
Skinny Ugly Pilgrim
Distributed by Devolver Digital[1]
Release dates
  • July 21, 2014 (premiere)
  • July 27, 2014 (FIFF)
  • September 2, 2014 (Vimeo)
  • December 14, 2014 (Blu-Ray)
Running time
115 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $325,327

Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie is a 2014 American independent science fiction comedy film produced, written and directed by James Rolfe. It is based on the web series of the same name, also created by Rolfe, with himself as the title role. The film premiered July 21, 2014 at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood, and was released online via video-on-demand on September 2, 2014. The Blu-Ray version of the film was released on December 14, 2014 through Amazon.com, with the DVD version coming in the future. The film's budget of over US$325,000 came entirely from Internet crowdfunding.[2]

The story centers around the then urban legend of the mass burial of millions copies of the Atari 2600 video game E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, proclaimed as the "worst video game of all time". After a longstanding refusal to address the game in his web series, the Nerd succumbs to pressure by fans to review the video game, embarking on a quest to prove that there is nothing buried there. The crew is pursued by federal authorities, led by the villainous General Dark Onward, who believes he is investigating Area 51 and the crash of an unidentified flying object.

Plot

The film begins with the backstory of the mass burial of 2 million copies of the "worst video game of all time", Eee Tee for the Atari 2600. In the present day, game executive Mandi (Sarah Glendening) of Cockburn Industries, Inc. proposes to her bosses creating an intentionally badly made sequel, "Eee Tee 2". Thanks to the massive popularity and success of the Angry Video Game Nerd, the sales of poorly made video games has increased dramatically, and a review of Eee Tee 2 by the Nerd would cause his fans to buy the game and make profits for Cockburn.

The Nerd (James Rolfe) and Cooper Folly (Jeremy Suarez) are working on the former's latest video game review. The Nerd has become increasingly disheartened over the years, as his fans continue to buy and play the video games he reviews and warns people to stay away from. On top of this, the Nerd is forced to promote and sell bad video games as part of his job at GameCops, and when he discovers marketing for Eee Tee 2, his fans encourage him to review E.T., something the Nerd has stood against for years because the game is so bad that it scarred him as a child. However, after a bad nightmare and some personal thought, the Nerd decides to go to Alamagordo, New Mexico in order to ultimately debunk the conspiracy surrounding the buried cartridges. He is accompanied by Cooper and Mandi, and the trip is completely funded by Cockburn Industries.

While filming their expedition, Cooper reveals that he believes in a super-being known as Death Mwauthzyx, who has the power to collapse all of the dimensions in the universe and destroy all existence. Suddenly, the legless General Dark Onward (Stephen Mendel), thinking the trio is looking for extraterrestrials, brings along Sergeant McButter (Helena Barrett) in an attempt to capture them. In the process, Onward accidentally blows up his right arm with a grenade, giving the trio enough time to escape.

The Nerd, Cooper, and Mandi decide to search for the creator of Eee Tee, Howard Scott Warshaw, for answers. They instead stumble across the home of Dr. Zandor (Time Winters), who tells them that "Eee Tee"'s level design is actually an exact map of Area 51. Dr. Zandor, a worker of Area 51 at the time, gave the code to Warshaw to help him meet the five-week deadline Atari set for "Eee Tee"'s completion, and also to exact revenge on the government for kidnapping and holding hostage an alien he was attempting to free. The government then ordered the burial of the cartridges, supervised by General Onward himself, while Zandor escaped with the metallic material Area 51 was researching at the time in an attempt to reassemble the alien's spaceship. Dr. Zandor manages to keep the trio safe from the government for the night, but Mandi is captured by McButter while outside of the house. The Nerd and Cooper, believing she is a double agent, do not go after her.

Going back to the Alamagordo site, the Nerd and Cooper discover a large crowd of fans and the head of Cockburn Industries promoting the release of Eee Tee 2 with the promise of digging out a copy of the original Eee Tee from the site itself. The Nerd tells his fans that there are no cartridges buried out there, but Howard Scott Warshaw himself appears and tells fans the opposite. Annoyed, the Nerd decides to break into Area 51. He successfully does so, but is captured by General Onward. Having discovered who the Nerd really is, Onward attempts to force him to play E.T., but that fails, and the Nerd tells him that when Zandor escaped with the spaceship metal, he replaced it with tin foil. Onward launches a missile at Mount Fuji, the basis for the Atari logo design, and while angrily leaving the room, gets his left arm cut off in the door, thus leaving him with no arms. During the launch countdown, an alien resembling the one in E.T. grabs the Nerd and pulls him to safety.

The destruction of Mount Fuji releases Death Mwauthzyx, who was real all along and trapped inside the mountain. Meanwhile, Mandi manages to keep McButter away from the Nerd and Cooper's location altogether, eventually leading them to a confrontation on the Eiffel Tower in Las Vegas.

The Nerd and the alien escape in a fighter jet similar to one in the NES Top Gun video game, while the alien reveals Death Mwauthzyx's can collapse the dimensions and destroy all existence by completely turning the satellite dish on his head. Cooper is captured by Death Mwauthzyx and brought to Las Vegas, where Mandi manages to knock McButter off the Eiffel Tower to her death. Mandi is also captured by Death Mwauthzyx. The Nerd and the alien crash-land at the Alamagordo site, where a captured Dr. Zandor shouts to them that he hid the alien spaceship metal inside the millions of E.T. game cartridges. The alien summons every single copy of the game to form the spaceship. The Nerd and the alien leave for Las Vegas to stop Death Mwauthzyx, and the armless General Onward is killed when attempting to stop them.

In Las Vegas, the Nerd and the alien save Cooper and Mandi. The Nerd then fires a laser at Death Mwauthzyx's satellite dish, causing Death Mwauthzys to fly away and disappear forever. They return to the Alamagordo site and reunite with Dr. Zandor and the Nerd's fans. Cooper and Mandi share a kiss, while the Nerd decides to finally review E.T. for his fans before the alien leaves for good though he reviews the sequel first declaring that while it is worse, true wretchedness was too unique to duplicate and that the original stood the test of infamy. Everyone, including Mandi, throw the copies of the sequel into the landfill and the Nerd finally reviews E.T.

During the credits, the Nerd declares that E.T. is not the worst game that he has ever played, calling it cryptic and challenging as well as addicting, although it is still a bad game.

Cast

Cameos
  • Andre Meadows as Himself (store customer)
  • Howard Scott Warshaw as Himself
  • Kyle Justin as Guitar Guy
  • Mike Matei as Himself
  • Pat Contri as Disappointed Gamer #1
  • Malcolm Critchell as British Guy
  • Bear McCreary as Zombie
  • Doug Walker as the Nostalgia Critic
  • Lloyd Kaufman as Himself
  • Jason Janes as Misc. Role / Extra
  • Justin Carmical as Misc. Role / Extra

Development

James Rolfe had spent much of his life aspiring to be a professional feature filmmaker, and saw popularity of the AVGN web series the opportunity to fulfill this ambition.[3] Development of the film began in late 2006, following the popularity of The Angry Video Game Nerd web series, with the completion of the screenplay by 2008.[4] E.T. game designer Howard Scott Warshaw hinted in an article in GamesTM magazine that he would be playing himself in the movie.[5] Production of the film was delayed for several years due to the busy production schedule of Rolfe's AVGN web series, wherein Rolfe was continuously filming two episodes per month.

The story centers around the mass burial of over 2 million copies of the proclaimed "worst video game of all time", E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial for the Atari 2600, named Eee Tee in the film itself. Finally rescinding his longstanding refusal to address the game in the web series, the Nerd succumbs to pressure by fans to review the video game, embarking on a quest to prove that there is nothing buried there. The crew is pursued by federal authorities, led by the villainous General Dark Onward, who believes he is investigating Area 51 and the crash of an unidentified flying object.[6] The film was said to be in the vein of Wayne's World in the sense that it will be a movie about a person that reviews games, rather than a feature length review or multiple reviews adding up to a feature length.[3]

The film's budget of more than US$325,000 was secured entirely via Internet crowdfunding, Indiegogo. Filming in California started April 1, 2012, and wrapped on May 11, 2012. Additional scenes were being filmed in the actors' spare time, mainly in Philadelphia. Production officially ended December 2013.

Rolfe consistently utilized online articles and videos to document the movie's development and to solicit talent for casting and crew. Open casting calls were held, including one hosted by Channel Awesome held in Chicago, with live auditions held by one of the film's actors, Douglas Walker, also the actor of the Nostalgia Critic.[7] Rolfe asked for his fanbase to provide fictional webcam footage of themselves reacting to the Nerd's webseries to be used in a sequence at the beginning of the film which introduces the Angry Video Game Nerd character.[8]

Using the Panasonic AG-AF100 camera,[9] James Rolfe chose to use mostly practical special effects for the film's 942 visual effects shots,[10] creating the majority by filming miniatures in front of a green screen which were then later digitally composited into the film. Though this process was more time consuming than using CGI, Rolfe believed that the use of scale models would help add to the film’s B movie feel.[11]

Soundtrack

The film's score was composed by Bear McCreary, who had previously worked with Rolfe on the webseries Christmas special "How The Nerd Stole Christmas". McCreary utilized rock-and-roll music, heavy metal music, a symphonic orchestra, and synthesized elements from NES, SNES, and SEGA Genesis hardware to compose the score.[12] The album features two remixes by McCreary, as well as two songs written by Brendan McCreary and performed by the band Young Beautiful in a Hurry. The album was released on the iTunes Store on September 2, 2014.[13]

All music was composed by McCreary, except where otherwise noted.

Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Film score by Bear McCreary
Released September 2, 2014
Recorded 2014
Genre Various
Length 1:19:00
No. TitlePerformer Length
1. "Theme from Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie"    4:41
2. "Nerds Before Birds"  Young Beautiful in a Hurry 3:55
3. "Nerd Nightmares"    3:42
4. "The Landfill"    1:54
5. "Humvee Chase"    2:43
6. "Barcade"  Young Beautiful in a Hurry 2:44
7. "The Story of Death Mwauthzyx"    1:54
8. "Save the Fans"    3:31
9. "Zandor's Tale"    4:07
10. "Howard Scott Warshaw"    4:43
11. "Sacred Ground of the Golden Turd (Bear McCreary Remix)"  Kyle Justin 2:16
12. "General Dark Onward"    5:50
13. "Unidentified Flying Nerd"    2:56
14. "Killer Robots"    2:25
15. "Death Mwauthzyx Rises"    5:44
16. "The Nerdy Hero"    10:15
17. "Birds Before Nerds"    2:28
18. "Source Music Medley"    5:31
19. "Maverick Regeneration"    4:11
20. "The Angry Video Game Nerd Theme Song (Bear McCreary Remix)"  Kyle Justin 2:54
Total length:
1:19:00

Reception

The Hollywood Reporter called it an "overly long and almost obsessively self-indulgent" and "aspiring cult film" with production value which "hovers above home-video quality by a few admirable notches", noting that the "filmmakers manage to capably anchor these disparate storylines to their central plot concerning crusading gamers".[14]

The Michigan Daily student newspaper of the University of Michigan gave this film a mostly negative review, describing it as unfunny, poorly edited, badly paced, and too long. This review argued that the soundtrack by Bear McCreary was good and the best aspect of the film. The reviewer noted that The Angry Video Game Nerd was "the pioneering internet 'gamer' show", which he had enjoyed greatly, so the film was a "disappointing failure".[15]

References

  1. "Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie". Devolver Digital. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  2. Vales, Jay (July 23, 2014). "First Look! The Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie Review!". Nuke the Fridge. Retrieved August 4, 2014.
  3. 3.0 3.1 James Rolfe (September 23, 2010). "Future Plans – AVGN: The Movie". Cinemassacre.
  4. James Rolfe (September 19, 2013). "AVGN Movie Timeline". Cinemassacre.
  5. James Rolfe (January 24, 2012). "Howard Scott Warshaw, programmer of Atari E.T. mentions AVGN: The Movie". Cinemassacre.
  6. "Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie".
  7. James Rolfe (September 26, 2011). "AVGN Movie – Chicago live auditions". Cinemassacre.
  8. James Rolfe (October 13, 2013). "AVGN Movie Update – October 2013". Cinemassacre.
  9. James Rolfe (January 9, 2013). "AVGN MOVIE – Miniatures, Model makers wanted". Cinemassacre.
  10. "AVGN Movie update – January 2014 – VFX HALFWAY DONE". cinemassacre.com.
  11. James Rolfe (April 18, 2013). "AVGN Movie Update April 2013". Cinemassacre.
  12. "'Bear McCreary's 'Angry Video Game Nerd' to be Released'". August 27, 2014. Retrieved September 3, 2014.
  13. "Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)". September 2, 2014. Retrieved September 3, 2014.
  14. Lowe, Justin (July 25, 2014). "'Angry Video Game Nerd': Fantasia Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 4, 2014.
  15. "'Angry Video Game Nerd' a disappointing failure". The Michigan Daily.

Further reading

External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie