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i once made a topic about games that should never be a movie and i said tetris and it was a joke how ever i had no idea that 8 years later it would be a very serious possibility
The popular 80s computer game which has sold an astonishing 170 million copies since in release in 1984 is heading to the big screen. According to a Wall Street Journal story, a deal has been struck between Threshold Entertainment and the Tetris Company to develop a live-action version of the puzzle game in which players control a maddening series of blocks that cascade down the screen.
The project lacks a director and cast, but despite what you might be wondering there is indeed a story. (Keep your curiosity in check: No details were revealed just yet.) This isnt a movie with a bunch of lines running around the page, Threshold CEO Larry Kasanoff told the Speakeasy blog. Were not giving feet to the geometric shapes.
Kasanoff is no stranger to game-to-movie adaptations: He was one of the producers of 1995s Mortal Kombat and its 1997 sequel Mortal Kombat: Annihilation, which grossed $70 million and $35 million, respectively. Recent big-screen adaptation of video games include the 2008s Max Payne, the 2010 bomb Prince of Persia (see the trailer below), this years Need for Speed, and the Resident Evil films. In the works right now are a fantasy epic based on the MMORPG Warcraft, and 3D animated version of Angry Birds.
The Threshold exec has rather grand plans for his block-busting property he imagines creating experiences that go beyond the multiplex. Said Kasanoff: What you [will] see in Tetris is the teeny tip of an iceberg that has intergalactic significance.
i once made a topic about games that should never be a movie and i said tetris and it was a joke how ever i had no idea that 8 years later it would be a very serious possibility
The popular 80s computer game which has sold an astonishing 170 million copies since in release in 1984 is heading to the big screen. According to a Wall Street Journal story, a deal has been struck between Threshold Entertainment and the Tetris Company to develop a live-action version of the puzzle game in which players control a maddening series of blocks that cascade down the screen.
The project lacks a director and cast, but despite what you might be wondering there is indeed a story. (Keep your curiosity in check: No details were revealed just yet.) This isnt a movie with a bunch of lines running around the page, Threshold CEO Larry Kasanoff told the Speakeasy blog. Were not giving feet to the geometric shapes.
Kasanoff is no stranger to game-to-movie adaptations: He was one of the producers of 1995s Mortal Kombat and its 1997 sequel Mortal Kombat: Annihilation, which grossed $70 million and $35 million, respectively. Recent big-screen adaptation of video games include the 2008s Max Payne, the 2010 bomb Prince of Persia (see the trailer below), this years Need for Speed, and the Resident Evil films. In the works right now are a fantasy epic based on the MMORPG Warcraft, and 3D animated version of Angry Birds.
The Threshold exec has rather grand plans for his block-busting property he imagines creating experiences that go beyond the multiplex. Said Kasanoff: What you [will] see in Tetris is the teeny tip of an iceberg that has intergalactic significance.
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