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Donkey Kong Documentary

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  • batgirl
    Crime fighter
    • Mar 29, 2007
    • 213

    #16
    Oh yeah? what about the old activision tv game with the 2 oblongs as bats and a square for the ball, woohoo cutting edge tennis!(now i feel really old)

    Comment

    • Adam West
      Museum CPA
      • Apr 14, 2003
      • 6822

      #17
      King of Kong documentary just came out on DVD last week. I tried to rent it at a local video store that has the best selection of DVD's around and carries even really obscure stuff that you would never find at a Video Store chain.

      They didn't have it so I decided to buy it.

      I highly, highly recommend this. It is such a well made documentary and as was stated by the other poster who said they had seen the documentary, although the story centers around a guy who makes an attempt at breaking the Donkey Kong world record, the story has a lot of twists and turns and that really transcends the game itself.

      I won't reveal too much and am really not a big follower of video games but have always had a special place in my nostalgic heart for Donkey Kong. I had no idea who this Billy Mitchell was prior to the documentary and the serious cult following of classic video gaming, the rivalries and hatred that exist among various serious gamers and the double standard that was being applied to Steve Weibe as he attempted to break the World Record in Donkey Kong and wasn't part of the cliques that existed inside the gaming world.

      I also never knew that there is a point in a lot of these games, where the game has a definitive end but not as we think of in today's games, but essenitally a part in the game where the computing power ends up running out of memory and the game just ends.

      The story does not end with the Donkey Kong documentary and the saga continues. Yes, Steve Wiebe is in the 2008 Guiness Book of World Records only to have been one upped again...apparently he has been trying to break the record again. With that said, it appears that he and Bill Mitchell are the two best Donkey Kong players in the world and the documentary definitely portrayed one as a good guy and one as a villain. The special features were really good as well and it is the type of movie that I would watch again so I don't regret buying it rather than renting it.
      "The farther we go, the more the ultimate explanation recedes from us, and all we have left is faith."
      ~Vaclav Hlavaty

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      • Sideshow Spock
        valar morghulis
        • Mar 8, 2005
        • 2859

        #18
        I posted a couple days about it:

        The King of Kong: Fistful of Quarters out on DVD - Mego Talk

        ..And I watched the dvd over the weekend. Thoroughly enjoyed it. MegoSteve pointed out that Twin Galaxies has a forum where they list some of the film's inaccuracies:

        Twin Galaxies Forums :: View Forum - The King of Kong - Official Statement

        ..which were certainly interesting, but didn't really take away from the film for me. I still think Billy's a weasel.

        And I don't think I've ever wanted to punch someone in the gut so much as I did Brian Kuh when he was on the phone to Billy when Billy's million-point tape was playing. "Everyone is watching. There's a huge crowd here. We're all transfixed. I don't think there's anything in the world that could distract us all at this point." BLAH BLAH BLAH. Just shut the hell up already, you damn toadie..

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        • Vortigern99
          Scholar/Gentleman/Weirdo
          • Jul 2, 2006
          • 1539

          #19
          This movie came out here in Austin a couple of months ago, and garnered very amused reviews. I'll probably rent it on DVD, as it looks like a laugh and a half.

          I'm pretty good at 80s video games, but always had a super hard time with DK; I could never master its subtle timing and broad jumps! I used to make it to the third screen, and that would be it for me.

          I am a world-class TEMPEST player, though (I've scored over a million points and got to the INVISIBLE level); and my Ms. Pac Man is nothing to sneeze at (I routinely score 60,000 - 80,000 points). Other arcade favorites I've mastered are JOUST, ELEVATOR ACTION and the cartoon-animated BADLANDS.

          I also love DEFENDER and STARGATE, but I'm terrible at them for some reason!

          Comment

          • Sideshow Spock
            valar morghulis
            • Mar 8, 2005
            • 2859

            #20
            There was a tiny family-owned store/deli in my neighborhood that always had a couple video games, and my friends and I stopped in to play most every day on our way home from school in the 80s. I got good at all the predictable games there.. Joust, Tempest, Ms Pac Man, Satan's Hollow, Gyrus.. They had DK Jr. too, and I spent a LOT of time at that machine. Some of the strategies Wiebe talks about in the movie I remember well, particularly about timing and trajectory. I have no idea what scores I ever got, but I know I went thru quite a few levels.

            Comment

            • Wee67
              Museum Correspondent
              • Apr 2, 2002
              • 10603

              #21
              I did end up seeing this a few months ago with another Museum member. I thought it was a pretty well-done documentary. As with most documentaries, the director is limited by what actually happens (rather than staging scenes to promote a certain theme), but he did a very good job if getting his point across.

              It also held many parallels to our little world. It looks at a fringe community, obsessed with somethingfrom their childhood past, there are small groups that develop within the community that can (unfortunately) create tension. Now, I do believe that we have a pretty good little community here, but the film really shows how things can get cult-y. I thorough recommend this film to people here.
              WANTED - Solid-Boxed WGSH's, C.8 or better.

              Comment

              • Adam West
                Museum CPA
                • Apr 14, 2003
                • 6822

                #22
                Originally posted by Vortigern99
                This movie came out here in Austin a couple of months ago, and garnered very amused reviews. I'll probably rent it on DVD, as it looks like a laugh and a half.

                I'm pretty good at 80s video games, but always had a super hard time with DK; I could never master its subtle timing and broad jumps! I used to make it to the third screen, and that would be it for me.

                I am a world-class TEMPEST player, though (I've scored over a million points and got to the INVISIBLE level); and my Ms. Pac Man is nothing to sneeze at (I routinely score 60,000 - 80,000 points). Other arcade favorites I've mastered are JOUST, ELEVATOR ACTION and the cartoon-animated BADLANDS.

                I also love DEFENDER and STARGATE, but I'm terrible at them for some reason!

                They did say in the documentary that most people can not get past the 3rd screen. Apparently there are 26 levels and they have what is called a kill screen. Some explain it as a glitch in the game, others say it is the part where the game literally hits its limit with memory and Mario just dies about 5-7 seconds into the last frame. The only way to beat the world record is to accumulate more points until you get to the kill screen and from the documentary they only know of 3 people in the entire world who have ever made it that far.

                The extras in the documentary were interesting. Most of these hardcore gamers who break world records have something wired in their brains that is completely unlike anything normal. In other words, most of us could sit and play Donkey Kong every day for the rest of our lives and never get to the kill screen no matter how many times you play it. Apparently Steve Wiebe has a musical talent and literally hears original music scores play in his head at night that he writes down the next day.

                Like I said, I had no idea who Bill Fisher was prior to the documentary but no doubt this guy has a brain that just thinks and works differently from most people. Apparently, he was the first person to get a perfect score in Pac-Man literally grabbing every prize, ghost, everything, without getting killed.

                The filmmakers talked about how they zeroed in on the Donkey Kong story and that they were looking at a bunch of different stories related to classic arcade games but this particular story was more than just a story about breaking the World Record and as was already stated, an interesting look into a community of players who continue to play classic arcade games, the interesting double standards that were applied to Bill Fisher who apparently is a classic game icon vs. Steve Wiebe who no one had heard of prior to his quest to break the world record.

                I was really interested in seeing how the story behind the story would unfold which is what made it such an interesting movie.
                "The farther we go, the more the ultimate explanation recedes from us, and all we have left is faith."
                ~Vaclav Hlavaty

                Comment

                • MegoSteve
                  Superman's Pal
                  • Jun 17, 2005
                  • 4135

                  #23
                  It's Mitchell, not Fisher.

                  Of the two guys, Wiebe comes off as a nicer, more normal fellow, but I can also imagine someone like Billy Mitchell coming off badly largely as a result of having people like Brian Kuh and Steve Sanders putting their heads up his butt all the time.

                  Comment

                  • Sideshow Spock
                    valar morghulis
                    • Mar 8, 2005
                    • 2859

                    #24
                    And the fact that he's a weasel.

                    Comment

                    • Bo8a_Fett
                      Pat Troughton in disguise
                      • Nov 21, 2007
                      • 3738

                      #25
                      Looks one to look out for ....hated the original space invaders...was always an astoroids man myself...until Star wars came out...there used to be a fair that came to Hampstead Heath every easter that had a sit down cabinet version right up till the 90's and I would always go up there with a pocket full of 10ps. Loved Tempest too and 1942 but that was much later.
                      ENGLISH AND DAMN PROUD OF IT British by birth....English by the grace of God. Yes Jamie...it is big isn't it....

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                      • Sideshow Spock
                        valar morghulis
                        • Mar 8, 2005
                        • 2859

                        #26
                        One of the things that made me in the bonus features was the arcade glossary, which contained "Quarter up" among the arcade terms. "Put your quarter up there!" It was something we used to do all the time and I'd forgotten about. When someone was playing the game you wanted to play, you set your quarter on the ridge at the bottom of the screen, or sometimes along the top nameplate, thus securing you would get next game. Anyone else do that all the time?

                        Comment

                        • Hector
                          el Hombre de Acero
                          • May 19, 2003
                          • 31852

                          #27
                          I love old school arcade games. I really don't care for these new modern ones, I really don't.

                          Donkey Kong, Pac-Man, Asteroids, Defender, Tempest, Joust, Tron, Galaga, Centipede, Space Invaders, etc...they are all equally awesome.

                          sigpic

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                          • VintageMike
                            Permanent Member
                            • Dec 16, 2004
                            • 3385

                            #28
                            If this ever comess out on DVD (wasn't last I checked) I'd definitly pick it up.
                            I love old school games and actually they are the eason I haven't picked a current generation console or portable. PS2 has some awesome complilations of classic games which I have almost all of. I also have tons of old school games for my Gameboy advance. Many of which I haven't seen for the current gen portables.

                            Comment

                            • Sideshow Spock
                              valar morghulis
                              • Mar 8, 2005
                              • 2859

                              #29
                              Mike, it came out last week on dvd.

                              Comment

                              • Adam West
                                Museum CPA
                                • Apr 14, 2003
                                • 6822

                                #30
                                Originally posted by MegoSteve
                                It's Mitchell, not Fisher.

                                Of the two guys, Wiebe comes off as a nicer, more normal fellow, but I can also imagine someone like Billy Mitchell coming off badly largely as a result of having people like Brian Kuh and Steve Sanders putting their heads up his butt all the time.
                                I told you I didn't know his name prior to the movie and still can't remember it afterwards.

                                I did love his Shaun Cassidy hair and USA Flag ties....classy!
                                "The farther we go, the more the ultimate explanation recedes from us, and all we have left is faith."
                                ~Vaclav Hlavaty

                                Comment

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