'Atari: Game Over' review
Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 5:11 pm
This one came out a couple three years ago and it took me this long to get around to watching it. It's the story of the urban legend surrounding the E.T. cartridge...Oh, you all know all about it, let's just get to the review part.
There's a documentary technique that I like to call the 'yup yup yup' (after the Sesame Street aliens). I think it started in reality television. You see it a lot on shows like: 'The 100 most shocking moments on prime time' specials.
They show some footage and the narrator tells you what you're looking at. Then they cut to one or more personalities that all agree with what the narrator said. They do this over and over. If it's done sparingly it's not too loathsome. I've been seeing it way too much however and it's grating to me.
The story was good but I wanted to see more hot 1970s Atari action. More behind the scenes goings-on in Silicon Valley. There were a lot of anecdotes in the Microsoft Arcade and Revenge of Arcade packs and I wanted this show to tell me about them in more detail. Granted, it was mainly about the ET game but most everyone knows that story (except that I heard all the carts were under a giant slab of concrete)
One more thing that wasn't covered was the decision to bury the stuff in the first place. Sure, the games weren't worth anything and they weren't about to pay for storage but they could have had a warehouse /garage sale or something.
Theres more when I think of it
BRB
There's a documentary technique that I like to call the 'yup yup yup' (after the Sesame Street aliens). I think it started in reality television. You see it a lot on shows like: 'The 100 most shocking moments on prime time' specials.
They show some footage and the narrator tells you what you're looking at. Then they cut to one or more personalities that all agree with what the narrator said. They do this over and over. If it's done sparingly it's not too loathsome. I've been seeing it way too much however and it's grating to me.
The story was good but I wanted to see more hot 1970s Atari action. More behind the scenes goings-on in Silicon Valley. There were a lot of anecdotes in the Microsoft Arcade and Revenge of Arcade packs and I wanted this show to tell me about them in more detail. Granted, it was mainly about the ET game but most everyone knows that story (except that I heard all the carts were under a giant slab of concrete)
One more thing that wasn't covered was the decision to bury the stuff in the first place. Sure, the games weren't worth anything and they weren't about to pay for storage but they could have had a warehouse /garage sale or something.
Theres more when I think of it
BRB