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Gamer (2009 film)

Gamer is a 2009 American science fiction action film written and directed by Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor.[3] The film stars Gerard Butler as a participant in an online game in which participants can control human beings as players, and Logan Lerman as the player who controls him. Alongside Butler and Lerman, it also stars Michael C. Hall, Ludacris, Amber Valletta, Terry Crews, Alison Lohman, John Leguizamo, Sam Witwer and Zoë Bell.

Gamer
Theatrical release poster
Directed byNeveldine/Taylor
Written byNeveldine & Taylor
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyEkkehart Pollack
Edited by
  • Peter Amundson
  • Fernando Villena
Music by
Production
companies
Distributed byLionsgate
Release date
  • September 4, 2009 (2009-09-04)
Running time
95 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$50 million[2]
Box office$42 million[2]

Gamer was released in North America on September 4, 2009, receiving generally negative reviews from critics and grossed $43 million worldwide against a production budget of $50 million.

Plot

In 2034, computer programmer Ken Castle (Michael C. Hall) invents self-replicating nanites that replace brain tissue and allow humans to control other humans' actions and see through their eyes. The first application of Castle's "Nanex" technology is a virtual community life simulation game, Society, which allows gamers to manipulate live actors as their avatars. Society becomes a worldwide sensation, making Castle the richest man in the world. He then creates Slayers, a first-person shooter where the "characters" are death-row prisoners using real weapons in specially created arenas. Unlike Society actors, Slayers participants are not paid; instead, they volunteer in exchange for the promise that any Slayer who survives 30 matches will earn his freedom (though no one ever has).

John "Kable" Tillman (Butler) is the crowd's favorite, having survived a record 27 matches (no inmate before him has managed to last more than ten). He is exclusively controlled by Simon (Lerman), a seventeen-year-old superstar gamer from a wealthy family.

An activist organization called the "Humanz" hacks a talk-show interview with Castle and claims that his technology will one day be used to control people against their will. The Humanz also disrupt Society play, but Castle sees both these actions as trivial. However, Castle feels threatened by Kable's winning streak, and introduces a new inmate into Slayers, Hackman (Crews), specifically to kill Kable. Unknown to anyone else, Hackman will not be controlled by a player, and thus not be handicapped by the "ping" that causes a small but dangerous delay between the player's command and the Slayer's action.

Kable/Tillman's wife, Angie (Valletta), works as a Society character, but in spite of her earnings, she is refused custody of their daughter Delia, who has been placed with a wealthy family.

The Humanz contact Kable and Simon separately, warning them that Castle has no intention of letting Kable survive, and offer to create a mod that will let him escape, but only if Simon relinquishes control during the game. The escape is successful, and news outlets report that Kable has been fragged, which puts Simon in a difficult position: he is labeled a "cheater", locked out of his bank account, and investigated by the FBI for helping Kable escape.

Tillman is brought to the Humanz' hideout; he refuses to help their fight against Castle, but learns of Angie's current location in Society. He rescues her, escaping from both Hackman and Castle's security forces. They are met by Gina (Sedgwick), the talk show host, secretly assisting the Humanz. The Humanz deactivate the nanites in Angie and Tillman's brains, and Tillman remembers that the original nanites were tested on him while he was still in the military. Under Castle's control, Tillman shot and killed his best friend, and was imprisoned.

Upon learning that Castle is the wealthy father who adopted Delia, Tillman infiltrates his mansion to get her back. He locates Castle, who reveals that his henchmen have already tracked down the Humanz' lair and killed all of them. He also reveals that 98% of his own brain has been replaced with nanites, but this allows him to control others, rather than be controlled. He plans to release air-borne nanites which will infect the entire United States within six months, giving him ultimate control. Hackman attacks Tillman, who easily kills him. Tillman then attacks Castle, but is frozen in place, as Castle explains that his men have reactivated his and Angie's nanites.

Unknown to Castle, Gina and Trace (Lohman) escaped the murder of the Humanz, and patch into the Nanex, revealing the confrontation to the world and exposing Castle's plans, much to the disgust of the people worldwide. It also unblocks Simon's account and restores his control of Tillman.

Castle tries to manipulate Tillman into killing his own daughter, but he resists, and then Simon's control allows him to attack Castle. He and Simon wrestle for control over Tillman, but Tillman tells Castle to imagine Tillman's knife stabbing him. Castle unconsciously does so, allowing Tillman to kill him and removing his control over everyone. With Castle dead, the world population cheers for the demise of their potential slaver and dictator, Tillman convinces his technicians to deactivate the Nanex, freeing all the "characters" in Society and Slayers.

The film closes with the Tillman family taking a trip down a country road, ending with the words "Game Over".

Cast

  • Gerard Butler as John "Kable" Tillman, the highest-ranked warrior in the game Slayers.
  • Amber Valletta as Angie "Nika" Roth Tillman, Kable's wife, an avatar in Society.
  • Michael C. Hall as Ken Castle, the wealthy manipulative, ruthless and famous creator of Society and Slayers, and a top genius professional computer programmer.
  • Kyra Sedgwick as Gina Parker Smith, a famous talk show host who meets the Humanz and investigates them.
  • Logan Lerman as Simon Silverton, the 17-year-old gamer "playing" Kable.
  • Ariana Scott as Shelley Silverton aka SISSYPUSS, the sister of Simon
  • Terry Crews as Hackman, a psychopathic inmate sent to murder Kable.
  • Alison Lohman as Trace, a member of the Humanz.
  • Ludacris as Brother, the spokesperson and leader of the Humanz.
  • Aaron Yoo as Dude, a member of the Humanz and a hacker.
  • John Leguizamo as Freek, an inmate who befriends Kable.
  • Zoë Bell as Sandra, an inmate.
  • Mimi Michaels as Stikkimuffin, another teenage gamer. A fan of Simon.
  • Ashley Rickards as 2KATCHAPREDATOR (a girl dating an inmate)
  • Jade Ramsey and Nikita Ramsey as the KUMDUMPSTAZ (British twins)
  • Milo Ventimiglia as Rick Rape
  • Jonathan Chase as Geek Leader, the head of Castle's technical team.
  • Keith David as Agent Keith, a CIA agent.

Joseph D. Reitman and John de Lancie appear as senior members of Castle’s company. Lloyd Kaufman appears as Genericon. James Roday Rodriguez and Maggie Lawson cameo as news anchors.

Production

Development

In May 2007, Lakeshore Entertainment re-teamed with Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, the creators of Crank (2006), to produce a "high-concept futuristic thriller" called Game. Neveldine and Taylor wrote the script for Game and were slated to direct the film, while actor Gerard Butler was cast into the lead role.[4]

Filming

Principal photography took place in Albuquerque, New Mexico for a 53-day shoot. Filming was at the Albuquerque Studios and on location around Albuquerque. Multistory sets were built on parking lots in downtown Albuquerque to depict buildings that were blown up in the film, and other sets were built on the back lots near the studios.[5] The crew used special hand-held Red One digital cameras, which allowed the special effects team to begin work normally done in post-production after each day's shooting.[6]

Title

In March 2009, the film's working title was changed from Game to Citizen Game.[7][8] In May 2009, another name change was announced, the new name being Gamer.[9][10][11]

Release

Box office

Gamer had an opening day gross of $3.3 million and ranked fourth at the box office. In total, the film earned $9.2 million in its opening weekend. Overall, the film grossed $21.5 million in the United States and Canada, and $20.7 million in other territories for worldwide cumulative of $42 million, against its $50 million budget.[2]

Critical reception

Metacritic rated Gamer 27/100 based on 13 reviews, which it terms "generally unfavorable reviews".[12] The film holds a 30% rating from 80 reviews on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes and an average rating of 4.25/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "With all of the hyperkinetic action and none of the flair of Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor's earlier work, Gamer has little replay value."[13] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade "C" on scale of A to F.[14]

Critic Joe Neumaier of The New York Daily News called it a "Xerox of a Xerox" and cited a number of films it supposedly takes elements from, including The Matrix and Rollerball.[15] RVA Magazine wrote that Gamer's plot was overly similar to The Condemned and commented that Gamer "hates its primary audience" and "tries to criticize the commercialization of violence, even though it itself is commercialized violence".[16]

Cultural critic Steven Shaviro authored a 10,000 word defense and analysis of the film that he posted online, and eventually re-worked into the penultimate chapter of his book, Post-Cinematic Affect (Zer0 Books, 2010).[17]

References

  1. ^ "GAMER (18)". British Board of Film Classification. August 14, 2009. Retrieved February 6, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c "Gamer (2009)". The Numbers. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  3. ^ "Exclusive Behind-the-Scenes Clip - Gamer". DreadCentral. January 20, 2010. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  4. ^ Guider, Elizabeth (May 16, 2007). "Lakeshore, Butler to play Game". Variety. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  5. ^ Kamerick, Megan (August 31, 2007). "New film production fills Albuquerque Studios". New Mexico Business Weekly. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  6. ^ Douglas, Edward (November 19, 2007). "On the Set of Gerard Butler's New Sci-Fi Action Flick!". ComingSoon. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  7. ^ . IGN. Archived from the original on April 22, 2009. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
  8. ^ . Lionsgate Publicity. Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
  9. ^ . Gamerthemovie.com. Archived from the original on March 13, 2010. Retrieved May 9, 2009.
  10. ^ . Movieblog.ugo.com. Archived from the original on May 11, 2009. Retrieved May 9, 2009.
  11. ^ . Quietearth.us. Archived from the original on March 9, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2009.
  12. ^ "Gamer (2009)". Metacritic. Retrieved January 13, 2021.
  13. ^ "Gamer". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  14. ^ . CinemaScore. Archived from the original on 2018-12-20.
  15. ^ Neumaier, Joe (September 4, 2009). "New York Daily News reviewed negatively of Gamer". Daily News. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  16. ^ "RVA's review of Gamer". RVA Magazine. September 4, 2009. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  17. ^ "Gamer". Steven Shaviro. Retrieved January 2, 2010.

External links

gamer, 2009, film, gamer, 2009, american, science, fiction, action, film, written, directed, mark, neveldine, brian, taylor, film, stars, gerard, butler, participant, online, game, which, participants, control, human, beings, players, logan, lerman, player, co. Gamer is a 2009 American science fiction action film written and directed by Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor 3 The film stars Gerard Butler as a participant in an online game in which participants can control human beings as players and Logan Lerman as the player who controls him Alongside Butler and Lerman it also stars Michael C Hall Ludacris Amber Valletta Terry Crews Alison Lohman John Leguizamo Sam Witwer and Zoe Bell GamerTheatrical release posterDirected byNeveldine TaylorWritten byNeveldine amp TaylorProduced byTom Rosenberg Gary Lucchesi Skip Williamson Richard WrightStarringGerard Butler Michael C Hall Amber Valletta Logan Lerman Terry Crews Chris Ludacris Bridges Kyra SedgwickCinematographyEkkehart PollackEdited byPeter Amundson Fernando VillenaMusic byRobert Williamson Geoff ZanelliProductioncompaniesLionsgate Lakeshore EntertainmentDistributed byLionsgateRelease dateSeptember 4 2009 2009 09 04 Running time95 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 50 million 2 Box office 42 million 2 Gamer was released in North America on September 4 2009 receiving generally negative reviews from critics and grossed 43 million worldwide against a production budget of 50 million Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Filming 3 3 Title 4 Release 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical reception 5 References 6 External linksPlot EditIn 2034 computer programmer Ken Castle Michael C Hall invents self replicating nanites that replace brain tissue and allow humans to control other humans actions and see through their eyes The first application of Castle s Nanex technology is a virtual community life simulation game Society which allows gamers to manipulate live actors as their avatars Society becomes a worldwide sensation making Castle the richest man in the world He then creates Slayers a first person shooter where the characters are death row prisoners using real weapons in specially created arenas Unlike Society actors Slayers participants are not paid instead they volunteer in exchange for the promise that any Slayer who survives 30 matches will earn his freedom though no one ever has John Kable Tillman Butler is the crowd s favorite having survived a record 27 matches no inmate before him has managed to last more than ten He is exclusively controlled by Simon Lerman a seventeen year old superstar gamer from a wealthy family An activist organization called the Humanz hacks a talk show interview with Castle and claims that his technology will one day be used to control people against their will The Humanz also disrupt Society play but Castle sees both these actions as trivial However Castle feels threatened by Kable s winning streak and introduces a new inmate into Slayers Hackman Crews specifically to kill Kable Unknown to anyone else Hackman will not be controlled by a player and thus not be handicapped by the ping that causes a small but dangerous delay between the player s command and the Slayer s action Kable Tillman s wife Angie Valletta works as a Society character but in spite of her earnings she is refused custody of their daughter Delia who has been placed with a wealthy family The Humanz contact Kable and Simon separately warning them that Castle has no intention of letting Kable survive and offer to create a mod that will let him escape but only if Simon relinquishes control during the game The escape is successful and news outlets report that Kable has been fragged which puts Simon in a difficult position he is labeled a cheater locked out of his bank account and investigated by the FBI for helping Kable escape Tillman is brought to the Humanz hideout he refuses to help their fight against Castle but learns of Angie s current location in Society He rescues her escaping from both Hackman and Castle s security forces They are met by Gina Sedgwick the talk show host secretly assisting the Humanz The Humanz deactivate the nanites in Angie and Tillman s brains and Tillman remembers that the original nanites were tested on him while he was still in the military Under Castle s control Tillman shot and killed his best friend and was imprisoned Upon learning that Castle is the wealthy father who adopted Delia Tillman infiltrates his mansion to get her back He locates Castle who reveals that his henchmen have already tracked down the Humanz lair and killed all of them He also reveals that 98 of his own brain has been replaced with nanites but this allows him to control others rather than be controlled He plans to release air borne nanites which will infect the entire United States within six months giving him ultimate control Hackman attacks Tillman who easily kills him Tillman then attacks Castle but is frozen in place as Castle explains that his men have reactivated his and Angie s nanites Unknown to Castle Gina and Trace Lohman escaped the murder of the Humanz and patch into the Nanex revealing the confrontation to the world and exposing Castle s plans much to the disgust of the people worldwide It also unblocks Simon s account and restores his control of Tillman Castle tries to manipulate Tillman into killing his own daughter but he resists and then Simon s control allows him to attack Castle He and Simon wrestle for control over Tillman but Tillman tells Castle to imagine Tillman s knife stabbing him Castle unconsciously does so allowing Tillman to kill him and removing his control over everyone With Castle dead the world population cheers for the demise of their potential slaver and dictator Tillman convinces his technicians to deactivate the Nanex freeing all the characters in Society and Slayers The film closes with the Tillman family taking a trip down a country road ending with the words Game Over Cast EditGerard Butler as John Kable Tillman the highest ranked warrior in the game Slayers Amber Valletta as Angie Nika Roth Tillman Kable s wife an avatar in Society Michael C Hall as Ken Castle the wealthy manipulative ruthless and famous creator of Society and Slayers and a top genius professional computer programmer Kyra Sedgwick as Gina Parker Smith a famous talk show host who meets the Humanz and investigates them Logan Lerman as Simon Silverton the 17 year old gamer playing Kable Ariana Scott as Shelley Silverton aka SISSYPUSS the sister of Simon Terry Crews as Hackman a psychopathic inmate sent to murder Kable Alison Lohman as Trace a member of the Humanz Ludacris as Brother the spokesperson and leader of the Humanz Aaron Yoo as Dude a member of the Humanz and a hacker John Leguizamo as Freek an inmate who befriends Kable Zoe Bell as Sandra an inmate Mimi Michaels as Stikkimuffin another teenage gamer A fan of Simon Ashley Rickards as 2KATCHAPREDATOR a girl dating an inmate Jade Ramsey and Nikita Ramsey as the KUMDUMPSTAZ British twins Milo Ventimiglia as Rick Rape Jonathan Chase as Geek Leader the head of Castle s technical team Keith David as Agent Keith a CIA agent Joseph D Reitman and John de Lancie appear as senior members of Castle s company Lloyd Kaufman appears as Genericon James Roday Rodriguez and Maggie Lawson cameo as news anchors Production EditDevelopment Edit In May 2007 Lakeshore Entertainment re teamed with Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor the creators of Crank 2006 to produce a high concept futuristic thriller called Game Neveldine and Taylor wrote the script for Game and were slated to direct the film while actor Gerard Butler was cast into the lead role 4 Filming Edit Principal photography took place in Albuquerque New Mexico for a 53 day shoot Filming was at the Albuquerque Studios and on location around Albuquerque Multistory sets were built on parking lots in downtown Albuquerque to depict buildings that were blown up in the film and other sets were built on the back lots near the studios 5 The crew used special hand held Red One digital cameras which allowed the special effects team to begin work normally done in post production after each day s shooting 6 Title Edit In March 2009 the film s working title was changed from Game to Citizen Game 7 8 In May 2009 another name change was announced the new name being Gamer 9 10 11 Release EditBox office Edit Gamer had an opening day gross of 3 3 million and ranked fourth at the box office In total the film earned 9 2 million in its opening weekend Overall the film grossed 21 5 million in the United States and Canada and 20 7 million in other territories for worldwide cumulative of 42 million against its 50 million budget 2 Critical reception Edit Metacritic rated Gamer 27 100 based on 13 reviews which it terms generally unfavorable reviews 12 The film holds a 30 rating from 80 reviews on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes and an average rating of 4 25 10 The site s critical consensus reads With all of the hyperkinetic action and none of the flair of Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor s earlier work Gamer has little replay value 13 Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade C on scale of A to F 14 Critic Joe Neumaier of The New York Daily News called it a Xerox of a Xerox and cited a number of films it supposedly takes elements from including The Matrix and Rollerball 15 RVA Magazine wrote that Gamer s plot was overly similar to The Condemned and commented that Gamer hates its primary audience and tries to criticize the commercialization of violence even though it itself is commercialized violence 16 Cultural critic Steven Shaviro authored a 10 000 word defense and analysis of the film that he posted online and eventually re worked into the penultimate chapter of his book Post Cinematic Affect Zer0 Books 2010 17 References Edit GAMER 18 British Board of Film Classification August 14 2009 Retrieved February 6 2016 a b c Gamer 2009 The Numbers Retrieved January 8 2011 Exclusive Behind the Scenes Clip Gamer DreadCentral January 20 2010 Retrieved January 8 2011 Guider Elizabeth May 16 2007 Lakeshore Butler to play Game Variety Retrieved December 9 2007 Kamerick Megan August 31 2007 New film production fills Albuquerque Studios New Mexico Business Weekly Retrieved December 9 2007 Douglas Edward November 19 2007 On the Set of Gerard Butler s New Sci Fi Action Flick ComingSoon Retrieved December 9 2007 IGN Citizen Game Trailer Wallpaper Pictures Soundtrack and More IGN Archived from the original on April 22 2009 Retrieved April 5 2009 Lionsgate Publicity Lionsgate Publicity Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved April 5 2009 Gamer In Theaters September 4 Gamerthemovie com Archived from the original on March 13 2010 Retrieved May 9 2009 Exclusive Poster Premiere Gamer UGO com Movieblog ugo com Archived from the original on May 11 2009 Retrieved May 9 2009 Updated Another name change for Game new motion poster Trailer on Xbox live Quietearth us Archived from the original on March 9 2012 Retrieved May 9 2009 Gamer 2009 Metacritic Retrieved January 13 2021 Gamer Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved January 8 2011 GAMER 2009 C CinemaScore Archived from the original on 2018 12 20 Neumaier Joe September 4 2009 New York Daily News reviewed negatively of Gamer Daily News Retrieved January 8 2011 RVA s review of Gamer RVA Magazine September 4 2009 Retrieved January 8 2011 Gamer Steven Shaviro Retrieved January 2 2010 External links EditOfficial website dead link Gamer at IMDb Gamer at Box Office Mojo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gamer 2009 film amp oldid 1127875815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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