I could feel a sweet taste in my mouth coming out from the cinema after Ready Player One knowing I’d be coming straight back here, my very own “Oasis”, to write this very review about a movie that I hope will be a landmark for all the other people, who like me live in a world where “pop culture” isn’t just a part of history, but it’s a part of real life… or simply IS real life.
Ready Player One isn’t a movie for everyone. It’s a gem that is only to be understood by the people who it is made for. A hymn bellowing aloud to every single person who struggles in life.
The misunderstood, the shunned… people who don’t know what place they have on this earth, people who don’t know how to start living, people who hide and those who create an invisible shell around themselves separating them from everyone else… people like me… the internet people.
Those of us that live in a world where comic books aren’t just “books with figures for kids”, where videogames aren’t just brainwashing violence, where movies matter and they have to be talked about, where the line between fantasy and what is real and tangible is so thin, that it enables us to expand our minds and so deeply changing every single one of us: the way we talk, the way we look, the way we think, how we interact, how we live!
Those are the people Ready Player One was made for. Me and you reading this.
This is for US.
I feel sorry for those who cannot possibly feel the relevance this movie has. Who did not understand any of the references, the little things this movie was brought up upon, the lingo the characters use, the way they are portraited the way in which it takes them a blink of an eye to feel like family, to trust one another completely and depend on each other, the need they have to feel included and not eclipsed by society.
There is only sadness in that, at least for me writing this, I could not live a life without this, it would be colorless.
Ready Player One is an amalgamation of pop culture concentrated in 2 hours and 20 minutes in the form of a videogame where everything your imagination wants is right in front of you.
The characters will fight against an “EvilCorp” to take control of “Oasis” the virtual reality that is the pinnacle of society’s future by racing to find the ultimate “Easter egg” and ensure the community is safe from exploitation by greedy goblins that do not want you to install “AdBlock” as a mod.
The movie struggles to have a very clear line between real and virtual because of the consistent switches between CGI and “regular” film, this up until the very end where it finds balance and leaves the viewer, who understands what is going on, with a message that to me is most important in all that happens: take a break from the internet.
I shouldn’t need to say this – but render unto Caesar the quality of CGI is out the roof, everything is super-detailed and the animations are PHENOMENAL, which is on-par with the few real-life choreographies that are featured in some of the switches between real and virtual that I mentioned earlier. The colors are so vivid and perfectly placed some of the scenes are dreamy and give a sense of everlasting life to what is happening which further thins the line between you – the viewer and it – the picture.
Steven Spielberg is a master at giving life to what could very well look bland and lifeless and for that, I shall thank him till the day I die.
It’s always a pleasure to see Easter eggs and references inside movies, like we’re used to with the MCU, but I daresay this one is an entire different level.
Let me explain to you why: Everything you see, from the WIRED magazine, to the “Twitch” streaming mention, to the DeLorean to the Iron Giant, Tracer, Halo, Gears of War and also all the Back to the Future tingling sounds that warm my heart, these aren’t just references or Easter eggs, and this is why this movie it SO GOOD, they ARE the movie!
It’s just a facet of our life that is there to remind ourselves that, however sci-fi the movie might look like, if you think deep enough it’s actually a mirror of everyday life (if you’re a nerd, like me).
The story itself isn’t too shallow or a Denis Villeneuve mindfuck, it’s a simple low and high climax with a big reveal and a moral story, so it’s a textbook good story… but it is the way it was shaped to enclose everything that just fucking shoots at your brain so seamlessly that makes it even better.
Besides my personal opinion, I think the cast overall was just spot on. I don’t think I can contribute objectively on this subject, for this particular work.
I rarely enjoy Ben Mendelsohn, especially as a bad guy.
What I can say is that I loved the perpetuating and profusing synergy between Tye Sheridan and Olivia Cooke. I LOVED how bad-ass Lena Waithe looked OOC and how massive her character looked in-game which also showed some soft spots which gave it more depth.
Win Morisaki did one thing near the end of the movie that I won’t spoil but I screamed the name of that thing in the room and everybody was both pissed and annoyed by me (Don’t regret it)
In general, I just loved the crew altogether, bit of a weak villain but honestly, it’s not that bad, it’s really hard giving dignity to someone who you know is going to lose anyway, unless you are Andrew Kevin Walker and like fucking up everyone’s mind.
To end this review I would like to say I almost cried in 10 scenes purely by nerd-gasm, I definitely cried when Win Morisaki did that thing that I cannot speak of without spoiling, with the big purple sword and that bang-bang-bang-bang and those tin-tin-tin from Back to the Future and also all the brum-brum-brum, also cried on the dance swooshy-swoosh scene where they – and so I kept crying and I had to hold my breath when she did that thing with the bike that they mentioned and that was my big “whoa” and then the movie ended and they said that thing and I was like “fuck that I don’t take days off I gotta learn RS6 Siege”.
Peace.
You can find my reviews on real life @WiseMMO on Twitter.
The paradigm of material being cut from a book to fit into the run time of a movie doesn't really apply here because next to nothing from it happens in the film. It bares little resemblance to the book at all and is completely shallow for it. Conservatively I'd put it at 10% of the book translated to the screen in a recognisable form.
It should be "Inspired by" rather than "Based on" however I didn't find it that inspired at all. It's unbelievable to me that Cline himself handled the screenplay, at least in part. People that love the film will be thoroughly disappointed by the book, especially the PG-13 crowd the film brought in.
The Oasis itself was done an utter disservice by portraying it as basically just a game, it was so much more than that.
Disappointing.
Good movie that had the potential to be great if it had followed the book. Instead it took The Hobbit movie route and was more of an "inspired by the book" movie. I thought the challenges in the book were better thought out and had a better ending. And since the main character were aged up a few years, it missed the "high school" start that existed in the book. If the movie existed in a vacuum (not based on a book), it would probably get an 8 from me, but looses some luster compared to the book.
9/10
I was totally engulfed in this film. Everything about it was well done. There was incredible character development, well-executed plot, and honestly an enjoyable world. There were multiple 'Inception' moments and SO many references to pop culture and the gaming world.
I thoroughly enjoyed the commentary on today's culture, and where we are going, taken to the extreme. It was neat to see the players who met online, meet in person and continue being friends, despite everyone being different in person. I really enjoyed that message as a gamer myself. Also funny to see commentary on corporate culture trying to take over any power available anywhere (in this case, a hobbyist gaming community.) Various good messages and insights on what the world has become/is becoming.
SUPER ENJOYABLE.
Here’s my Quick and Dirty Review of Ready Player One
The movie was good, 6 out of 10 stars. Not great, not amazing, but good. Much of the "real life" parts felt phoned in, and there was so much going on in the digital parts that I'm thinking a lot of the detail is lost in the all the noise. Lots of fun and full of pop culture references, but it made me miss the book, which was better by far. It's a fun ride and dazzling--make sure you see it on the big screen. The bad guy comes off as a little goofy, and the challenges aren't as difficult as in the book, so not sure how book readers will feel about it. Almost feels like a whole different animal.
Of course, it did my heart good to see all the BTTF references--heck, the main character drives a souped up Delorean. Plus the soundtrack's by Alan Silvestri, who also did BTTF and Avengers. I told my wife Samantha she has to go see it with me so I can gauge how it plays with folks who didn't read the book and aren't completely obsessed with '80s pop culture. Best part? The Shining... 7 out of 10, mostly for the BTTF references. Darn you for not leaning more into the Rush like in the book!!!!
Loved the soundtrack, the CGI and the easter eggs but the film itself was merely OK. A case of far too much hype unfortunately.
this was well produced but makes absolutely zero fucking sense, ever.
At 1hr 14 minutes you can see Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un on a billboard
very weak. I did not even finish it. Waste of time.
A true CGI masterpiece! This was a really enjoyable movie that geeks will love for sure.
Cool with future technology game and next world maybe is real.
1 / 2 directing & technical aspect
1 / 1 story
1 / 1 act I
1 / 1 act II
1 / 1 act III
1 / 1 acting
0 / 1 writing
0 / 1 originality
0 / 1 lasting ability to make you think
0 / 1 misc
6 out of 10
Should've been called "I love the 70s, 80s, and 90s."
As someone who read the book some years ago this film was a letdown. All of the key challenges were different and they made less sense. Being a gaming nerd myself I was able to figure out the clues along with the book but the movie they were so abstract it took huge assumptions and leaps in logic to figure out what they were.
The way they used the 1up token especially annoyed me. In the book it was very clear what it was, and that it would be useful but not how or when. In the movie it was a total mulligan and felt pulled out of the ass just for convenience.
The way they conducted IOI's activities as a whole was wrong and the whole movoe I just kept thinking "so where are the f***ing cops in all this?". Yet again, in the book it made sense, but in this film it was just ignored for convenience. They turned an intelligent antagonist into a bumbling shallow one.
It was pretty to watch, and the references were enjoyable. But as someone who originally read (and enjoyed) the book, this is one film I'm fine with not seeing again.
Reviewing Ready Player One is rather easy. If you have grown up with 70/80s video games, movies and music you will love it. If you don’t know you this era very very well you will likely not even notice how good the movie is and will find it mediocre or as millennials say „meh“. The movie is not just about an easteregg hunt, RPO is itself one giant easteregg. Now the whole thing about eastereggs is that you must know they exist in order to find them. If you don‘t know (or care) what the original Batmobile, A-Team van or Akira bike looked like you will not even see them. And there are literally a thousand of those hidden references and cameos packed into RPO. As for gender gap I won‘t deny that there are women who know about all this stuff but they are in the minority. Especially for the video game part which coincidentally makes the biggest part of the movie. I would give this 5 out of 5 stars if not for two things. I thought the third key puzzle was rather weak compared to the first two (especially the second one). And secondly I could have done with out the “morale” at the end about enjoying real life rather than virtuality. That was a bit on the nose and unnecessary.
What a fun movie! As someone who was born in the 80s, i can appreciate all the pop culture references in the movie. Great cast, with lots of laughs. I'll be watching this one again!
Enjoyable and fun watch with alot of wasted potential imo. I feel like this would have made a better show, even if only one of those single season shows. I feel like there was alot of world building and character development that could have been done, but in movie form the pacing of everything just felt very rushed and this interesting world they created didn't get very fleshed out properly.
This movie had so much potential. There were fun moments and i remember enjoying it the first time. But this is a long tiring watch that often falls a little flat. I enjoy it somewhat, but it was longer than needed and not super great.
If only Speilberg did this in parts. Part one, part two, and so on. So much went into this, and it's easy to tell. The soundtrack is awesome, unlike the score. The acting is brilliant, especially from Olivia Cooke. The vfx, sfx, cgi, motion capture, and just everything presented was beautiful. The design was just amazing, and seeing so many different eastereggs, it really is a movie nerds type of movie. The story was great but terribly done. I would allow the one-off, non sense scenes, but a good chunk of this made absolutely no sense, and if it did, then it was the epitome of stupid. Like I said, if this was done in parts, it would have been a lot better. I loved the jokes and the hidden messages, but I hated the creepiness. I don't know if it's Speilberg, but some of the ideas, whether it be visually or story wise, made me feel really uncomfortable. Anyway, long story long, it's both a masterpiece and a brain-dead fever dream. Also, I want a ready player two.
It had a lot of nalstolgic elements.
Surprisingly really good and really fun. I didn't have any expectations so I was extremely surprised with how hooked I was. I loved all the different references to the different franchises. Really enjoyed this one and will watch it again. 10/10
I found this to be such a poorly written script, w/ a ridiculous storyline, bad dialogue, and really unlikeable protagonist. The worst part of the film was the ending, where the main characters are trying to clear a pathway to the last challenge, and the main character stands around watching, while they die, instead of continuing to move forward. This happened on at least three separate occasions. Then, when he receives the last key, he and his friends are under real world attack, and he moves as slowly as possible, looking at the key he receives w/ wonder, instead of moving as quickly as possible to save everyone's life. Aside from this, Tye Sheridan was so awful in this, it was like he had never acted before.
And the prize for most cack-handedly offensive depiction of an autistic character goes to... :trophy:
1st time wearing the X1 suit is understandable.
but why would the CEO of IOI kept wearing it when going into OASIS?
and no one ever thought of going backwards for the whole 5 years? there are many speed-runners in video games nowadays that will try all different things to try and break a video game just to find a potential exploit.
IOI playing the Adventure game, they know about that game having an Easter Egg (the very first video game that has it), and they're looking for an Easter Egg from the creator of OASIS, but they didn't think they should try to see the Easter Egg?
this movie is an unrealistic portrayal of video game and its players.
I rewatched it today.
It's fun, it has some adventure (the searching for the keys) and cool references and even some social criticism. But the story is stereotypical and most of the chafacters are really weakly done.
artemis carried the gam and slayed.
Cool movie about a digital universe, how it can be exploited and how it ought to best be enjoyed.
No idea why I didn't watch this sooner, but it's really fun. The movie is filled with pop culture references and is quite the treat for game/film fans. It can get a little slow at times but is worth the time overall.
In Ready Player One, Steven Spielberg adapts the pop-culture-packed novel by Ernest Cline. Set in the year 2045, the world is plagued by climate change and overpopulation, causing people to seek refuge in the virtual reality world of the OASIS. After its creator, James Halliday, passed away, he hid three Easter eggs within the virtual world, with the prize for finding them being control over the OASIS and a vast fortune. Wade Watts, an 18-year-old "Gunter" (egg hunter) and his allies, as well as the nefarious Innovative Online Industries, led by Nolan Sorrento, compete to find the eggs. The film is filled with pop culture references and CGI, but the story and characters are thin and not particularly engaging. The actors, including Tye Sheridan, Olivia Cooke, and Ben Mendelsohn, give solid performances, but the romance is forced and the villain is cartoonish. The visuals are spectacular at times, but the final battle becomes tedious. The references and nods to pop culture are fun, but ultimately the movie is just an average, CGI-filled adventure with a thin story.
En Ready Player One, Steven Spielberg adapta la novela repleta de cultura pop de Ernest Cline. Ambientada en el año 2045, el mundo está plagado de cambios climáticos y superpoblación, lo que hace que las personas busquen refugio en el mundo de realidad virtual de OASIS. Después de que su creador, James Halliday, falleciera, escondió tres huevos de Pascua dentro del mundo virtual, y el premio por encontrarlos fue el control de OASIS y una gran fortuna. Wade Watts, un "Gunter" (cazador de huevos) de 18 años y sus aliados, así como las infames Innovative Online Industries, dirigidas por Nolan Sorrento, compiten para encontrar los huevos. La película está llena de referencias a la cultura pop y CGI, pero la historia y los personajes son débiles y no particularmente atractivos. Los actores, incluidos Tye Sheridan, Olivia Cooke y Ben Mendelsohn, brindan actuaciones sólidas, pero el romance es forzado y el villano es caricaturesco. Las imágenes son espectaculares por momentos, pero la batalla final se vuelve tediosa. Las referencias y los guiños a la cultura pop son divertidos, pero en última instancia, la película es solo una aventura promedio llena de CGI con una historia delgada.
I sat through the first 45 minutes and turned it off. Completely ridiculous. As a boomer that grew up with the creation/expansion of the video game world, and who spent no telling how many hours and quarters in arcades immersing myself in the video game world, I expected something entirely different. Like so many of the review have already stated, this movie "isn't for everyone" and you can count me among that number. I have no interest at all in watching any more of this. Scratched it from my watchlist and won't bother finishing; it was just silly.
Very well done :clap: nostalgic Movie I highly recommend it :thumbsup:
Well, As I'm a gamer I don't know how i missed thisssss great movie, For real it's so cool and enjoyed every second of it, So big thanks for who made this gaming virtual masterpiece movie!
The movie was really fun.
For me as a gamer there was a lot to discover here.
I really liked the idea of the 3 easter eggs.
These created the entire plot of the film and it didn't feel far-fetched. They were secrets like I imagine them in good games.
The plot in the game world was well thought out. On the other hand, I found the plot in the real world to be a bit overdone.
I can imagine that people will eventually live as shown in the film due to their own mistakes, but I can't imagine that there are no more laws and order, whoever sets them. Throughout the movie I wondered if there weren't any police and how big corporations could just kill and blow up anything. But whatever, in the end it all added to the tension.
I'm already saving my money for a full body suit with a microfiber coating in the crotch.
This movie is awesome!!! Totally based on virtual/Meta/Gaming world. Enjoyed the whole movie. Personal rating 10/10
Wish I’d switched off after 15 mins when I first sensed this was gonna be bad. No story, no acting as mainly computer graphics, in fact this can’t even be classed as a movie, it was an extended commercial. 1/10.
POV: All of the metaverse conversations made you rewatch the movie.
fuuuuuuuck im glad i stopped playing with video games because this is what happens if you are addicted to these games. they gonna suck you in for real.
It is an amazing movie, I love it. You're not allowed to criticize it in any way.
I feel slightly inclined to it, mostly from my love for the book. Overall though it was extremely disappointing, everything I loved about the book is barely present if at all, and all I'm left with is a wisp of the original.
the book is a masterpiece, this movie adaptation gets worse the more I think about it. luckily, I can just reread the book
It is a fun movie as long as you don't think about it for more than a second.
The rules of the Oasis are made up as the movie goes on, so don't try to reason and just enjoy the references.
So so so bad, it's a film with a reading age for fourteen year olds chock full of references for fourty year olds. I was embarrassed to be in the cinema for it.
A quite sensational effort - fantastic effects, excellent plot, brilliant soundtrack. Just full immersion, no sholds barred.
It lacks a little in the final act because it is slightly overlong in getting there.
But Spielberg delivers a winner here, chocked full of Easter eggs for those of a certain generation who remember the 70s/80s/90s pop culture.
As an aside, it looks like the lure of an kactual Oasis is too much to resist and Epic are working on an actual metaverse where we could all meet up and live a virtual life... If it's 10% of how good the Oasis looks, bring it on!
8/10
I started watched the film with 0 expectations and it turned out to be a great movie I personally like the game idea and I thought seeing thought the animation was going to be annoying but I like it
great story, development , its funny and enjoyable movie
A fun and unique watch but not good enough to watch again.
This movie was soo good, I always saw it in my feed in netflix and on hbo max I watched it and it was great. what made it even better is how there was sooooo many references to other games/movies like halo, DC, back to the future, ect.
Pretty good movie.
Probably not worth re-watching ever.
I was positively surprised by this movie. Initially didn't want to watch but turned out so much better. Especially thanks to all the references to existing games, movies, etc.
Some things were obviously cheesy and as always wonder how much better—or rather, different—the book is, but still great,
Once you read the book this movie isn’t as good but I still love it, there’s some bad acting and the story gets a little messy at times but seeing this fantastic novel/ one big 80s reference brought to life was amazing. The music/ vfx :thumbsup_tone1::thumbsup_tone4::thumbsup_tone5::thumbsup:
This is for everyone who played with action figures, played MMOs, or just played make believe. A hodge podge of pop culture from all genres. This was just a fun and gorgeously rendered movie. I geeked out with Chucky going beserk mode.... die hard horror movie fan right here.
This movie was a very pleasant surprise.
What a great movie. I really liked the effects. They were well done but not too over the top. The ending teaches a powerful lesson.
Only wished this was in 3D
Was not what i was expected, i very very bad, it is so bad cause i cant a rewiew about this movie.
this is the last movie I've ever watched in the movie theater and it was mediocre at best
I actually find it cool, though a bit dragged out. But reading through comments here that the book was far better or at least the movie was so different from the book, I made a decision to read the book. Maybe I'm missing out from the real deal. :v:
I struggled trying to watch this on two occasions, both times getting really tired of all the in-your-face whizz bang. It just tries FAR too hard to be something, and in the process, it succeeds in being annoying. I might give it another go after a few cups of coffee, but I did not care for the pace and the lack of connectedness I felt for any of the characters.
The movie is not related to the book at all. I have read the book and I found it amazing, right after finishing the book I went to see the movie and I was totally disappointed on how the movie doesn't reflect the book. The plot in the book is awesome but for some reason a lot was changed, the "dramatization" or "they had to fit in" arguments doesn't apply as a reason to not follow the incredible story line in the book.
Anyways, for someone who didn't read the book it might be a cool movie........
A few years ago, I happened upon the audiobook of an unknown author named Ernest Cline. He had this dystopian novel about how an internet game had become a way of life and the contest that became a quest for all of mankind. The kicker was that because of an obsession of the "Creator," society had re-embraced everything of the 1980s from its tv shows, video games, music and even their wacky fashions. Personally, being a child of the 80s, this was just as much a welcome walk down memory lane that playing GTA: Vice City had been the first time I powered up my PS2 with the game DVD inside. I screamed thru the book and finished it one single driving period across 3 states and then started over to listen to it again the next day. This book quickly became one of my newest favorites and jumped up to become one of my top 5 books of all time.
Fast forward to 2018 and I read on the Interweb that someone had decided to translate my newest favorite book to the silver screen. I honestly felt the same way I had back in my childhood happily unwrapping the best Christmas gift I ever received; My Atari 2600 on December 25th, 1977. Then to put a cherry on the top, I find out that Steven fricking Spielberg will be behind the project. Only George Lucas or John Hughes could even come close to matching Spielberg for his overall influence for the era and for having their finger on the pulse of a generation. No doubt about it, this movie was going to be EPIC! I couldn't wait. This might be the movie to finally get me back into a theater in almost 2 decades.
My attitude started to waver when I saw the first trailer for the film. While everyone was going ga-ga over seeing the Batmobile (even though it was the Batmobile from the 60s) and the A-Team van, along with many other well-known 80s vehicles prepping for the all-out race, I started scratching my head and questioning what I was seeing. Yes, this looked like it would be awesome with so many icons immediately seen, but what was I seeing? This wasn't in the book anywhere, so how were they going to tie this in? Well, that was the point where I decided I'd better wait for the DVD to come out and boy was I glad I did.
Almost NOTHING from this movie matched the novel. Take out the character's names and any reference to the Oasis and I doubt 99 out of 100 viewers would have associated this with RPO. The story starts out in the wrong city, has the characters meet up IRL way before they do in the book, NONE of the challenges are the same and even the fact that the keys allowed you access to a second level of challenges, instead of being a means to the end, were removed from the story completely. How Wade wins the quarter, how and where the main characters fight the final battle and even the fact that not all the main characters live up to the battle, or through it, are misconstrued or completely rewritten. Moreover, most of the epic vehicles that we saw in the preview trailer never made an appearance in the race. Obviously the movie ran into licensing issues and most of the non-Spielberg properties were cut from the film completely.
However, the biggest sin is the complete loss of the vibe of the era that the book radiated. The biggest point for the book was a walk down memory lane while you read it. Every game, song, movie and tv show that were mentioned brought back individual memories of actually sitting down with a bowl of popcorn and watching them for the first time yourself, the emotions the music gave when you danced to songs at the school dance or the victory you felt bringing the Holy Grail back to the Golden Castle with Rhindle hot on your tail. If you take out a couple of songs from RPO's soundtrack, and the Delorean from "Back to the Future," it's just another generic SF adventure, and not a very good one at that.
Honestly, Spielberg has sucked every last drop of life from this property and left its dried husk to blow away in the desert wind. I can't think of any way that he could have made this movie worse, in any possible aspect. Even the special effects are more or less blah and do nothing to get the juices flowing. None of the actors seem really invested in their parts, the dialog is weak and has nothing really to do with the "real"story, the "expert" Gunters know almost nothing about Halliday or the media of the era and even the wrong character ends up indentured by IOI for the wrong reason. Personally I think the 1.5 stars is too generous of a rating, but I can't go any lower with a clear conscious.
If you never read the book, obviously like most of the people who gave this movie gracious scores, I'm sure you'll find it at least a mind diversion from everyday life. All others need to stay away and rewatch a copy of Monty Python and the Holy Grail or War Games instead.
not as good as the book but still ok
worst thing about it : the main actor's acting!
This is a strange hybrid of a modern visual effects heavy mainstream adventure film with the sensibilities of a 1980s production, and not just in the litany of pop culture references and visuals, but also in the tone which seems to be pitched at an audience that doesn’t not exist anymore - actual children and teens from the 80s rather than modern young audiences or nostalgia-fuelled adults. It doesn’t always work - the stakes seem strangely small and at odds with what the filmmakers are trying to get across to the audience and an ending that comes with a message that reality is as important as the virtual world feels tacked on and doesn’t really convince given what the film has shown. There are some fun action sequences, once the film gets past having to explain how the Oasis works in a clunkily put-together voice-over, and there is a lot of fun to be had in spotting the many pop culture references.
Fantastic tech demo to show off your home theater. But that's it.
This is one of the worst movies I've seen in my entire life and I hated every fucking second of it. This was about as nerd culture as a stripper in glasses. Total patronizing badly written, badly acted, terrible looking tee total dog shit. I hated this movie. The porn parody was almost guaranteed better. Hated it.
The biggest relief I can say about Ready Player One is it works, even without the never-ending barrage of pop culture nostalgia. Upset across all social media platforms, a concern I took part in, was the movie had no identity to show for itself, that it relied heavily on better films from the 80's to sell itself. I do not think the comments I made were bad or outdated now, as it is important to criticize art, but I can happily say I did enjoy this movie's core, even without the aid of the surface eye candy. This is the most Spielberg movie that man has made in quite awhile, after such masterpieces like The BFG. It follows the standard hero's journey he's used a number of times, this closely paralleling E.T., which was a welcome return. This is the director I fell in love with, and it seems he knew how to take the disaster of a book this is adapted from, and create an entertaining blockbuster. My bigger hiccups about the picture, are one or two tasteless scenes, specially the haunted house rendition of Stanley Kubrick's The Shining. It's a crowd-pleaser moment, understandably, but something about it's total disregard for the meanings from the original film almost come off as disrespectful. It's the closest the movie touched the "Hey, remember this thing you recognize?!" predicament I was fearing before watching. I think a more shallow movie, hell Grease would've worked much better, could fix this. Any other issues I had could be pointed at it's predictability, and over-reliance on filling the run-time with references, some of which don't advance the story much. I could see what they were doing, showing Wade being smarter than everyone else in the game, but having him list off stuff like it's a references checklist is where it can get half-assed. But most of the callbacks are respectful and work, they did their research, thankfully. No cringe shit like Marvel Studios' Black Panther's, "What're those?!" Just end me. Happy to just say I've seen another blockbuster in four months that I didn't hate. I'm going to remember that opening race, good shit. And, I geeked out like hell when MechaGodzilla was fighting The Iron Giant. It makes no sense, but I understand that's the point.
Following the death of its architect, a reclusive mastermind with an appreciation for easter eggs and pop culture trivia, the virtual denizens of an MMO called OASIS embark upon a high-stakes scavenger hunt. To the victor go the spoils - in this case, untold riches and complete control of the game - which would make a big difference in the outside world, where society stands on the brink of collapse.
That premise does make for an interesting book, where there's plenty of time to elaborate, but in abridged form on the screen it feels more than a little shallow. There, our attention is more focused upon the background noise and blink-to-miss cameo appearances than the plot and central characters. Granted, those little tidbits and surprises are responsible for much of what made the book so unique, and I'm sure they cost a pretty penny to shoulder into the scenery. Are they really more valuable than character development? The main cast is basically a narrow series of templates, plain as can be, and neither the virtual world nor the real one are fleshed out any further than the fight locations in a typical game of Street Fighter.
A few fun ideas do not make for a nourishing film experience. In a couple weeks, the five-minute segment recreating Stanley Kubrick's The Shining will likely be all I can remember.
A highly subjective my rating, but how could it be different for a kid raised in the 80s and familiar with the alleys of video game culture and the entire pop culture of the last 40 years. :)
Definitely a great movie, excellent rythm and outstandings visuals. A lot of '80 reminders.
Too much heavy handed nostalgia. A memories quilt in film form. But not cleverly done. The book, too.
So I finally got around to see 'Ready Player One' and it was a perfectly fine. It's got some cool set pieces and the first race scene at the beginning was a chaotic thrill ride.
I've been hard on Steven Spielberg recently as I'm not always sure why he directs certian movies, and my perspective still hasn't changed yet.
Tye Sheridan is more indie than a leading man in a massive blockbuster. Great actor, but the directors he's been working with don't know what to do with him. Olivia Cooke entire character conflict with her appearance because of a birthmark on her face was laughable. Like she's freaking gorgeous. It's shameful to see The Iron Giant being turned into a killer weapon despite going against the powerful message in his own movie.
It's bloated, but still pretty enjoyable.
Ready Player One is a difficult book to make into a movie, so I was curious to see how they did it. Well... it so happens they didn't.
They based the movie in the book's backcover. You know, where you can read the synopsis in a couple of sentences. That and the character names, is all they took from the book.
That shouldn't be a problem per se, the book wasn't even that great to begin with (brilliant idea but poorly executed). No, the problem with the movie is that they removed 95% of the book, and replaced it with... nothing. There is no story. It's just a lot of CGI stuff poorly mixed together. Don't get me wrong, the CGI is as good as it gets... but they added so much of it that they forgot to include a little bit of story in between.
The major plot is there, it's roughly the same as in the book. But nothing else. There is no history progression at all, it just moves abruptly from an event to the next one. The characters don't struggle to advance in the game, or in life. Sure, bad things happen to them but they don't even react (oh, they killed my family and all my neighbors? Oh well, what can one do... I'll just flirt with Artemis). The bad guys are more moronic than evil. The good guys all happen to live in the same city? Come on. And the quests... seriously, a death race???
At least learned that this style of movie is not my cup of tea.
Best movie of 2018! Love the whole concept of online real feel graphics, with out of the box thinking like this there is no limit. Awesome techy look, it's what a sci-fi future could look like too. Top 5 movie of all time for me and my love of SCI-FI. Time to watch it again. ENJOY!
Plotholes, plotholes, plotholes... everywhere. The more I think of it, the more it falls apart. Does not make sense AT ALL. Plotholes kept on distracting me from the actual movie. Incredibly stupid. 4/10
[6.3/10] I walked away from Ready Player One the movie feeling the same way I did about Ready Player One the book -- that this a stellar premise wasted on a mediocre-at-best story. The idea of a worldwide, all-consuming online gaming sphere, like World of Warcraft or Second Life taken to the extreme, is fertile ground for social commentary and storytelling. Even with middling execution, you can’t get away from the power of themes about identity online, the effects of screen time, what it means to know and connect with someone, and cultural tastes in lieu of personality. You also can’t get away from the thrills of a digital world where anything is possible with the right imagination.
But Ready Player One manages to stumble over these ideas time and time again, when it’s not smacking the audience in the face with them. At base, the movie is fine as a disposable adventure, one to put on while folding laundry and glance up at when something exciting is happening. But its action is flashy yet forgettable, and it seems to think it’s making grand statements about life and friendship when it only offers the most trite, bargain basement observations about humanity and how we relate to and interact with one another.
Some of those flaws come from the source material. The hackneyed “evil corporate guys want to turn our free online playhouse into an ad-scattered cash machine” conflict is right there in the manual. The thinly sketched-characters who are more quirk and wish-fulfillment than fully-realized human beings is a fault on the page as well as on the screen. And the rudimentary, teenage boy view of awesome that colors every choice and development in the story is true of the novel as well. Original author Ernest Cline worked on the screenplay here too, and unfortunately, it shows.
But the film manages to correct a few things from the novel. While there’s still problems of insta-love and barreling through plot points, the script from Cline and superhero screenplay scribe Zak Penn changes the structure of the story for the better. In-person meetings happen earlier. There’s role reversals for certain captures and rescues which makes Parzival less of an all-consuming protagonist. And despite an exhaustingly lengthy and overstuffed third act, many of the quests and story beats are streamlined or reimagined to both make them more suitable for the medium and cut out some of the fat.
Still, even with Spielberg behind the camera, Ready Player One can’t avoid feeling like a missed opportunity. It’s a boatload of characters who are either rote or underdeveloped, of clichés and truisms played as novel and profound, and of nominally thrilling action that ends up feeling static an hour into the film. Spielberg knows how to hold the tension in a scene, and every payoff has a setup, which boosts some of the film’s weaker moments. But between villainous corporate hacks and generic good guy kids, there’s just nothing to latch onto here.
Thankfully, the movie manages to sidestep at least some of the novel’s reference-heavy bent (or relegate it to the background) and fanboy fetishism. And yet, at the end of the day, it’s probably the thing I unexpectedly wanted more of. While the book was overly awash in pop cultural shout outs that clogged the story, the movie only feels alive and different when it’s borrowing the power of seeing The Iron Giant in flight again, or transporting our heroes into a classic horror movie. The latter sequence is the highlight of the film, embracing the crossover fun that the premise promises, but using it to advance the story and the characters. Strip away cameos from Freddy Krueger and Van Halen tunes, and all you have is a standard issue adventure story without much to distinguish it.
Despite the structural changes made by Cline and Penn, Ready Player One still feels overstuffed, rushed, and contrived in several places. The movie wants the viewers to see the “High Five” (its team of heroes) as special and uniquely devoted to the cause of dethroning the evil empire. It shows them understanding the clues and life of their benefactor who set out the film’s great quest in a way that their rigid corporate antagonists don’t. But the solutions to his problems often seem overly simple or too obvious not to have been discovered before by the thousand monkeys at a thousand laptops trying to do so. Heroes succeed and villains stumble more because the plot needs them to than because of any genuine insight or hubris.
There’s also the film’s aesthetic, which is a bit cold and antiseptic, but which can at least be excused for being set in a virtual fantasyland. There’s a certain amount of prequel-itis here with the digital overload, but that’s arguably a bug, not a feature, even if none of the character or world designs are especially memorable. One expects better in a Spielberg joint, but there’s at least some high-intensity thrills to be had, even if they end up feeling fairly empty in the final tally.
That’s my biggest problem with Ready Player One. At the end of the day, it just feels empty. The romantic tension between its two leads is stock and tired. The friendship between Parzival and Aech is underfed, and our heroes’ success in the main adventure seems preordained rather than earned, without enough twists to make the inevitable interesting.
At times, Spielberg & Co. seem to know how deeply silly this whole enterprise is and wink at the audience, occasionally verging into satire in the vein of Starship Trooper. It’s these occasions where the film is its most enjoyable. But in others, it seems painfully sincere about a story, character, and theme that have all the gravity and substance of saltwater taffy. The film’s message of valuing friendship and real world interactions beyond the glow of online escapism is laudable enough, but shallow and dissonant when plastered into the movie’s cinematic theme park ride. Ready Player One is empty calories, and not even especially tasty ones, that are delivered with the message that the viewer should go on a diet. It’s not outright bad by any stretch of the imagination, but you can’t help but wonder how the great ideas bubbling around in this mishmashed bag of Halloween candy could be put to better use.
Der Film hat einfach alles . Action,Gefühl,Kritik an der Gesellschaft und Großkonzernen,Witz,Story,Wendung,Intelligenz und Kultur. Unglaublich ich dachte heutzutage können keine so guten Filme mehr produziert werden.
This was a lot of fun: had a great message on friendship and was FILLED with little Easter eggs aimed squarely at my demographic (nerdy 40-something y.o.). There was some silly cheesiness and more than once I felt like there was no way people wouldn't have figured out some of these clues or tricks before... But suspending disbelief just a little, this was a lot of fun and I'd definitely watch it again.
Having never read the novel and only seen a few reviews of Ready Player One so I went into the film with no idea what to expect.
I’ll say from the start as a slightly dull, fifty-six year old man with a grey beard I find the current trend for nostalgia-porn dull in itself. Naval gazing and eulogising about the glorious past leaves me cold. I was eighteen in 1980 and it was not fantastic nor was it ‘crap’ it was just a time. Some of the music was good, some was awful, some films were great, some were dross – do you know what? Just like now.
The acting in this film is good with Olivia Cooke once again showing why she is getting picked for roles left right and centre, and none of the vocal-fry that irritated me so much in TV’s Vanity Fair. Tyler Sheriden is believable and sympathetic and very ‘normal’ for the role of ‘hero’ likewise the supporting roles – all are believable ‘video gamers’. It would be too easy not to miss the target of the video gamers avatar and what the real person is like and this film hammers that to the hilt – like I said it was too easy a target. The baddy, played with some lovely scenery chewing, by Ben Mendelsohn, seems to exist to be bad, his motive, like so many films, is just to be corporate greedy. I understand this trope and there is some truth in it but it would be nice to see some nuance from time to time.
The film moves along at an exciting pace and certainly has some great visuals of the near future and it was fun for ten minutes, when in the OASIS, to see which ‘characters’ and pieces of nostalgia you can spot but like so many modern blockbusters we do end up with hugely confusing set-pieces of explosions, impossible derring-do escapes and confusing pyrotechnics. This type of action must be for the younger generation because in every film I ever seen featuring these ‘exciting’ battle and set pieces I usually get bored and confused. Near the end of Ready Player One I had no idea what was going on and ended seeing how many repeated place-holder creatures were popping in the scenes – they are there too.
Certainly, as film, I don’t know the book, Ready Player One seems to be a blatant nostalgia-fest with constant references both oblique and obvious but this to me is the real reason for its existence, the story is fairly simple, made to appeal to the video-game generation but nothing that you have not seen here or there. The trouble is when I see Robo Cop for a fleeting second it makes me want to the original Robo Cop and not Ready Player One. For me that is biggest problem of Ready Player One, from time-to-time it reminded me of better films I had not seen for a while.
All in all, it is a well-made film, and well-acted, with some stunning visuals and rip-roaring storyline but on the negative side it is not as original as it thinks it is, it wallows in nostalgia, loves exposition and can be confusing at times, especially near the end with the battles and set pieces.
Ready Player One is okay but I won’t be watching it again in thirty-years time.
This is definitely a Spielberg film which is probably it’s biggest strength. In the 1st act Spielberg shows fantastic understanding of makes an action sequence exiting as well as how how to successfully use the references that are scattered around the film. The 3rd act is “pure Spielberg magic” as the poster reads and it does have the unique feeling of watching Spielberg at his best. My problem however is with the 2nd act, this is a long movie and it feels it length due to some very long scenes of characters talking within the real world. These real world scenes are handled well enough but compared to the incredibly action packed and existing scenes within the OASIS they drag and are honestly quite boring at points. Much like the tone, the performances are also uneven. Stand outs would be Olivia Cooke as one of the players within the OASIS her performance being genuinely charismatic and likeable and Ben Mendelsohn as a the corporate bad guy. The weakest performance in my opinion has to be from T.J. Miller whose performance seems based solely on the fact that you are already supposed to like him and for me his whole thing is getting pretty old. Overall this is an entertaining enough popcorn flick. It’s not one to think too hard over and there are some genuinely entertaining scenes. The references are pretty fun if you like that kind of thing (some personal favourites involved nods to Child’s Play, The Iron Giant and The Shining). It’s definitely uneven but it’s still fun.
So I put off watching this movie for a bit. I remember that I wanted to watch it as soon as it came out, but my friends weren't that excited. Life and work happened so I just didn't watch it. After seeing it at home and alone, I can definitely tell you that I regret not watching it as soon as it came out.
The story was set up incredibly well and it actually builds up very nicely. It portrays the reality we're currently aiming for and what that reality could mean. Obviously there won't be an egg hunt at the end of which you'll become immortal, but there will always be those that want to control everything.
I can't say a lot without adding spoilers. This is definitely a movie you should watch if you're into dystopian stuff. Heck, it's a movie you should watch even if you're not and while you're at it, watch it a few more times
I enjoyed this movie! As a child of the 80s, I can appreciate the pop culture references. Too bad people who hated on this movie couldn't just watch the movie without going in with expectations! There loss on a very enjoyable ride!
So...imagine a huge action set piece where, in the middle of it, one of the protagonists flies into the fight on Serenity, hops off so he can transform into a Gundam to fight MechaGodzilla to protect our other protagonists racing to a destination in a DeLorean. If that sounds entertaining (like it was for my inner 10 year old), you'll get a kick out of this. If you instead rolled your eyes, just stay away. This was a pretty remarkable visual treat, even if the story is so-so (it's one big fetch quest). I had a great time with it, but your mileage will vary depending upon how nerdy and nostalgic you are.
Beautiful & smooth, action-packed & littered with pop culture references; it's a true Spielberg-fest! Simplified & improved story from the novel with an OASIS convincingly brought to life. Acting is all-around great but characters and the world lacks the depth from the book.
So much was left out from the book!
Very basic characters and no description of the post-apocalipse world where they live. This seems to be a dystopic future but none of the central issues - not even the most dystopian ones such as the no-stop connection with Oasis - is tackled from a critical or "adult" point of view: just like a 80's Spielberg's movie.
Too bad... we are in 2018 (a post Black Mirror world) and the public expects these issues to be dealt with more seriously, even in blockbusters.
BTW, too much things happen and too much references to the pop culture: this distracts from the story that at the bottom is... meh
the characters are very predictable and basic and the story does not give much of itself
I hate when people whine about that the movie is totally different from the book, cause' it's really hard to fit everything in 2 hours, but this was so bad! I would say, the book inspired the move and not based on.
I could live with the fact that you changed the challenges, these look way more awesome in the cinemas, okay, fine. Skipping the part that Parzival is only a teenager who is poor and got no friends in the real world? Okay, it's not that relevant either.
BUT
The romantic line between Art3mis and Parzival: why?! You skip the part where Wade suffers and turns his back on the real world to forget about Samantha, and focus on the challenge, but than you add a part where Wade heroicly saves her (???) and add a cheesy ending. Cmon!
Also, what is this bullshit about "wE wAnT pEoPlE rEaLiZe tHaT tHe ReAl wOrLd Is gOoD, So wE cLoSe ThE oAsIs FoR 2 DaYs."?! Is this a move for a 5 year old to teach him something valuable? Geez...
Also had a feeling that if wouldn't read the book, I wouldn't have any clue what is happening. Everything is so fast, many question left without answers, etc. I'm disappointed, however the CGI and some references were pretty nice.
I literally paused the movie at certain points, and recorded my thoughts. I've never done this before, but I somehow felt compelled to do so (which is weird, even I must admit). So, here they are (hiding the spoilers, of course)...
''18:00'' - I want to turn this off
"45:00" - Why am I watching this shit?
"1:01:00" - Am I in high school right now?
"1:17:00" - A little conflict/struggle is doing the movie some good (thankfully)
"1:18:00" - Hearing Lena Waithe's unmodulated voice is so much better
"1:32:00" - The motivating speech got a bit too cheesy
"1:51:00" - The coin was an extra life?? Booooo
"1:52:00" - At least the second time I've seen a cheesy, not-so-subtle product placement for Doritos
"2:06:00" - The movie wasn't great, but I can't say I hated it. (7/10)
It's a fun movie to watch. Yes, I played games on Atari console before.
It can be silly at times, like Olivia Cooke’s character thinking a little birth mark makes her hidious. If she pulled off walking around with an oxygen tank in Bates Motel, a little birth mark hardly makes her undateable.
There’s also plenty of corny or cheesy moments. It can drag at times as well. Still, I love the movie. Due to all the Easter Eggs and plenty of intrigue. Also due to a likeable cast.
I read the book, and listened to the book, way before the movie was announced. When the movie was announced, I was very excited to see the possibilities. There was some weird tie-in with my favorite band, Rush, who only had a minor role in the released movie.
Growing up in the 80s and being a huge video game nerd, this movie hit me on so many levels. My first watch of the movie was in the theater shortly after theatrical release (in some crazy, new fangled 3D technology) and it was great! However, I left the theater thinking that the book was much better than the movie. As others have pointed out, there are significant differences between the two.
[INTERLUDE] - My first computer was a TRS-80 Color Computer and was ecstatic to read about is inclusion in the book. Sad to say, it didn't make it to the big screen.
However, after watching the movie several times at home, I can grow to appreciate WHY the changes were made between the book and the movie. This movie has climbed into my #3 all time movie slot - which #1 and #2 will likely explain why.....
1) The Shining
2) Raiders of the Lost Ark
3) Ready Player One
4) Ronin not applicable to this review
Anyone who lived through the 80s should watch this flick - you'll likely see something you recognize.
I would drop 0.5 points for the differences between the book and the movie, but I cannot justify giving it a 9.
10/10
#665190
It's more expository than it should in some ways, and it ignores others, but it's fun, funny, exciting, nostalgic, works like fiction, dystopia, and action movie. One of the biggest burials of this new generation.
Amazing direction from Steven Spielberg and scenes straight out of video games!
Despite some plot holes, Ready Player One is a sci-fi action movie that anybody who's ever been a gamer will enjoy!
Yeah yeah yeah, book worms, we know its different than the book. The movie is still incredibly well done. Easily one of my top films of the year. The opening race scene is my favorite, and I've rewatched that so many times. The pop culture references were spot on too! Good stuff!
The thing I don't get is why in 2045 they only have pop culture references from 1980 - 2016.
I did not know what I would really think about it when I started to watch this movie. I hoped that I would like it but I was not sure what I would actually get. I used to like Steven Spielberg a lot but later in his career he’s done movies that either was not my kind of movies or that I was simply not that impressed by. However, as it turned out, this one I liked a lot as you can see from my rating.
As a computer nerd and science fiction geek this movie was of course right up my alley. I have thought other movies would be my kind of movies before but been sorely disappointed by ignorant and incompetent screen writers and directors trying to cash in on subjects that they knew absolutely nothing about. Spielberg did a good job of not screwing this one up.
The core of this movie is of course plenty of action and computer generated special effects with a somewhat apocalyptic story to bind everything together. The story works but it is not really anything special and some of the stuff, like the loyalty centers, was frankly a bit silly. But, as I wrote, it works and does not get in the way so that’s good enough for me.
As the previously mentioned nerd and geek I absolutely loved the abundant references to science fiction, fantasy and gaming history and lore. For me those were soo cool. I will probably watch the movie again just to focus on the background and see how much stuff I can spot. Stuff that I missed when watching the movie the first time.
The CGI effects and the action was also pretty awesome. The movie starts off right away with a great and absolutely insanely wild car race and continues to go strong from there. The battle at Doom castle at the end is just epic.
The only thing that made me go WTF was at the end [SPOILER AHEAD] were Mr Asswipe Sorrento finally catches up with the High Five’s van and then he just freezes and looks at Wade with a silly look on his face. What the fuck was that? Just stupid for no good reason.
Well, few are the movies where there’s nothing to gripe about. On the whole though this movie was great in my book. Also, I cannot say how pleased I am to finally watch a Hollywood movie that is not a remake or a sequel or a prequel or some other lame excuse to rehash a movie that has already been made.
3 words: Not that good. Nothing special. Nice soundtrack but if you take that away...you have: Not good.
I didn't read the book but I have a feeling that the book was really interesting but this film...eh. See it or not. Not going to change much for you, IMO. I would give it a 5.5/10 if possible. Rounded up just due to the music.
Actually it is a great movie, but to be honest I've expected much more from steven Spielberg!
Cashes in on the current 80s obsession and gaming. I thought people caring more about the avatar VR world was depressing. Focusing on that would have been more interesting. Instead it just normalises a sad future, which tasteless. The pop culture references annoyed me after a while. It was time that could have been spent developing character, the world or plot instead of making the audience either a) remember the past fondly or b) Get a reference. The characters are also very stereotypical. Spielberg delivers a nice looking low blow.
Shout by sven wynsBlockedParent2020-12-02T04:48:52Z
yes he was good the movie
but tomorrow i will go into my VR world with my new Oculus Quest 2 256GB what this will give ... am very curious about vr and the quality. can someone give me a little tip how it will be in the otherside of VR Oculus Quest 2 256GB ??? someone who also has it of course ...