Product Description
Imagine
you could make any movie you wanted to. Imagine you could pluck someone
from obscurity and turn them into a superstar. Imagine you had control
of an entire movie studio, competing with other studios to create box
office hits and predicting what audiences want—from epic action films to
campy B-movies. With The Movies, you can make it big in Hollywood by
building the ultimate movie studio and shooting the ultimate picture.
Choose a script and turn it into a major release. Pick or create actors
and locations. Control budgets, build sets, hire and fire at will,
settle into the director’s chair and film a hit. Customize unique movies
within the game, then watch and review them, adding your very own
voiceover or sound effects and saving them to your hard drive. E-mail
your masterpieces to friends, upload them to the web or post them on The
Movies’ official site for the world to see and vote on in online awards
ceremonies. Just as you can create or modify unique films, you can
create or modify actors, customizing their look and renaming them to
resemble anyone you wish. You can even replicate every movie star
currently in Hollywood and remake all your favorite films with them.
Anything you’ve ever read about Hollywood—from starlet scandals to
broken box office records—is right here in The Movies.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales
Rank: #3373 in Video Games
- Brand: ACTIVISION
- Model:
47875325876
- Released on: 2005-11-08
- ESRB Rating: Teen
- Platform: Windows XP
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions:
1.25" h x 5.25" w x 7.50" l, .50 pounds
Features
- Design
your own studio and run it from the early days of cinema through
present day and beyond in Story Mode by managing studio resources,
investing in RD and maximizing box office success
- Make your own
movies - Make movies that appeal to the masses in Story Mode or in
Sandbox Mode you can jump into any era and create your dream movie.
- Control the destiny of your cast and crew - Fire and hire them,
turn unknowns into movie stars, and take full creative control over
script selection and the content of the movies you'll create.
- More
than 30 hours of continuous gameplay, thousands of exciting movie
characters, and limitless options allow you to vary just about
everything
- Show the world your talents - Post your movies to
the web for all to see.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Product
Description
Imagine you could make any movie you wanted
to. Imagine you could pluck someone from obscurity and make him or her
the hottest star in Tinseltown. Imagine that you had control of an
entire movie studio, competing with others to create a string of box
office smashes. Imagine being able to use your judgement alone, deciding
whether success lies with epic action pictures or lots of low budget,
hammy 'B' movies.
Will the stars you've so lovingly groomed
develop monstrous egos - refusing to accept that they are now too old to
play the romantic leads that made them famous? You can help, but there
are only so many times you can send them to fat farms and plastic
surgeons.
Will you watch your movies being shot or do you want to
direct the action yourself? Will you decide to innovate and introduce
the talkies, color or digital sound before any of your rivals? Or will
you let the other studios make the investments, leaving you to jump on
the bandwagon if the new technology becomes popular?
Many of the
things you've ever read or heard about Hollywood are right here in
The
Movies - from stars having affairs and hitting the bottle to teams
of genius filmmakers creating the box office hit of the year. Movie
mogul, talent spotter or film director. You can be one or you can be all
three. That's the magic of
The Movies.
Customer Reviews
Good but Flawed
So Activision decided to jump
in on the Sim gaming community and create their own version of the Sims
-- Hollywood style. Not bad, but heavily flawed.
The premise of
the game is to run a movie studio. It acts quite a bit like the Sims but
concentrating more on the community rather than the stars that you
create; your goal is to make movies as best and with as much star power
as possible.
The Pros:
This game can be fun. You place
specific buildings such as scriptwriting, sets, entertainment areas,
trailers for your stars and map out a studio lot. You have control over
all the decor and can put down grass and flowers to make it look nicer.
Apparently if you plant a lot of flowers next to your stars' trailers,
it keeps them from throwing tantrums.
The game goes over a
timeline. You can start right from the beginning if you want -- I
created a "Clara Bow" in the 20s and had fun watching her progress. You
pick from a line of hopefuls in order to create actors, extras and
directors. All of them learn through being in specific movie genres and
practicing on sets. Example: A director who has worked on a lot of
Action movie sets is not necessarily good in the beginning but results
in a great director in the end.
Stars are picked out of
obscurity. (However, when you get popular you can find stars from
"other" studios anxiously waiting at your casting door) and you try to
mold them from the beginning. Concentrate on making them over during the
correct time period (you don't want a star in 50s outfits by the 60s)
and you can eventually give them plastic surgery. Nip and tuck is
popular in the 50s, but implants and lipo isn't really available till
later in your timeline -- but be careful! Give a starlette a big rack
too early in the timeline and they might get negative reviews (remember
-- buxom wasn't always popular.)
Recruit scriptwriters, janitors,
crew and researchers in order to help your studio progress and keep up
with the times. Also, they will make "suggestions" by leading a trail of
stars. What I mean is, you pick up a screenwriter to drop them into the
studio to write, a trail of stars will lead to the genre that is most
popular at that time. At my last game, it was the late 50s and according
to my news report "the communists" sent a ship into space -- which
fuels the want of Action and Sci-Fi from audiences. Get it? If you're
filming during the depression, no one wants to see a drama -- they'll
want comedy.
But you have to make sure that your stars are
trained for those genres. When you're placing people into their correct
casting areas, the one thing you need to remember is that an actor good
in comedy, might not be good in drama. It will tell you as well. Same
with the director.
Sets become available over time. There's whole
sections dedicated to say, Sci-Fi, Romance, Action, Westerns -- you
name it, they've covered it.
Now the more detailed fun is that
you can literally have a hand in the movies. You can custom-write a
script (which takes longer to do, of course) and add scenes, backdrops,
props and sets. Not only can you do this, but you can also finish them
and email them to your friends, complete with your "studio's name" on
them, which, quite frankly, I found to be fun.
Now the
bad:
The tutorial is an absolute joke. I've literally had to
figure out how to do a number of things including deleting old sets (can
you believe there's no instructions whatsoever to tell you how to do
this?) and I still don't know how to turn the buildings. Their
tutortials are so basic that if you know how to run the Sims -- you
don't need to run their tutorials.
Interaction between the
characters is limited. You want chemistry between stars? Probably a good
idea to simply put them in more movies together. Other than that, there
isn't any real detail of emotions.
These Sims are just plain
UGLY. They're not pretty and for some bizarre reason, they're kinda
a-sexual. The women from the 20-s kinda look like guys in drag. Not only
that, but if you custom make over any of them and change hairstyles,
you're going to get ALL the hairstyles regardless of sex. Why would I
pick a balding comb-over for my female lead? Kinda stupid that they
didn't distinguish. You can spruce them up with a makeover but it seems
that they don't actually look like men or women until you get to the
lipo/implant option in the 60s. I mean, were all women built like
hulking men in the 40s? Not really.
Movement is also awkward with
these sims and there seems to be some crude humor. It'll say when a
star is busy and what they're doing and for some reason, most of the
time they're always "pinching one off" in the bathroom. Yeah, it's funny
the first time, after reading it 40 times you wonder if the programmers
are prepubescent kids with a bad sense of humor or if your sims just
have serious bowel problems.
You really have to play with this to
get the gist -- fortunately, there's a Sandbox option which allows you
to really use some liberties -- I'd recommend trying that one first
before challenging yourself.
The DVD version is only different
from the CD version because it includes a "Load of Extras." What that
means is, your female star gets a few more hairdo's... that's pretty
much it.
This is an EXPENSIVE game, I will say that. I don't
think it's really worth over $40 -- I'd say it should be marked at
$29.99. It's just not that high tech nor is it that "fantastic" of a
game. I'd recommend a price reduction before buying it.
Otherwise,
okay. Interesting but complicated, Ugly yet entertaining. Three out of
five stars.
Pretty good! Although it
may not be what you expect.
This game is actually pretty
good. A lot of people seem to have been let down by Black and White 2,
which I can understand. Black and White 2 becomes tedious.
The
Movies is more about producing movies and making money. You can make
movies, but you do not have complete freedom. Instead, you have a ton of
sets, and like 100 different scenes for every set that you can put
actors into. This actually works out pretty well as you can create a ton
of different interesting scenes in interesting ways by using tiny
pre-built scenes. If you don't want to create movies, you can have
script writers do it. There are seemingly billions of movies they can
write. I get eager to see what kind of movie they are making when I see
interesting titles and such.
You create stars, cast the movie,
then shoot it. During the shoot you can alter the screenwriter's movies
slightly. Or, you can let the director shoot it himself and manage your
huge studio lot. You unlock more stuff as you progress, and every 5
years there are awards. The awards are hard to get, and I get excited
whenever I see my name nominated.
As you progress, your stars
start to want things, and eventually they become big. It's really
awesome to see one of my stars become such a huge success after doing so
many crappy movies. You can give your star plastic surgery and treat
him like royalty by giving him an entourage. It works out pretty well,
but the only downside to this is that sometimes other stars might get
jealous.
There is even an online feature where you can post
movies and earn more game stuff.
I would reccomend this movie to
anyone who likes The Sims.
Completly
Additctive!
I am a big Sims 2 fan and fan
of simulation games in general (I hate to destroy anything). I had been
waiting a while for this game and was a bit dissapointed when I read
the reviews. Playing the first 30 min, I am inclined to agree with a lot
of what is said here.
The animation is pretty bad. All the
characters are hideously ugly unlike those adotrable Sims and even when
you dress them up, it's kinda like putting lipstick on a gorilla.
But
then, watch out.
Like a junkie you will be glued to your computer
screen.
It slowly and insidiously takes you over.
You begin to
build sets only to get new sets. You make movies that after a while, you
don't even watch because you are too busy trying to please all your
actors as much as you can to reap the rewards you will get at the "award
ceremony" every five year mark. I actually cheered when my studio was
nominated. I was alone. In front of my laptop. Unshaven in sweats with a
sink full of unwashed dishes. Yes, "The Movies" has turned me into a
junkie loser.
Even though the graphics are terrible, the 3-D effects
are top notch. You can actually go deep inside any sound stage or studio
to watch your movie being filmed first hand. Amazing.
I got this
version not knowing there was a "deluxe" version available. Damn.
There
are still a few kinks, like basic studio dressing like trees, chairs
and garbage cans not being redily available and not findind a quick
stress-relever for your overworked stars (dropping them into rehab is
just a waste of time) other than that and the hideous looks of your
actors, this is an amazing game.
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