Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Console Wars (film)

2020 documentary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Console Wars (film)
Remove ads

Console Wars is a 2020 documentary film directed by Jonah Tulis and Blake J. Harris. The film is about the 1990s console wars between Nintendo and Sega in the 16-bit era and the rise and fall of Sega in the home console market. It is based on Harris's 2014 book and is the first original film for CBS All Access, now Paramount+.[1]

Quick facts Directed by, Based on ...
Remove ads

Premise

Console Wars covers the console war that occurred during the late 1980s and early 1990s. The documentary explores the histories of gaming giants Sega and Nintendo and how they competed in the 1990s. It focuses on Sega's strategies and campaigns against Nintendo, building up to Sega's eventual decline at the end of the decade.[citation needed]

Development

Summarize
Perspective

The idea for the development of Console Wars first came about in 2010, when author Blake J Harris was gifted a retro Sega Genesis console.[2] He found great sense of nostalgia playing the retro console, and renewed curiosity about the iconic console wars between Sega and Nintendo in the 90s.[2] He was surprised by how little movies and books existed about the console wars between Sega and Nintendo, so he decided to conduct his own research.[2] Harris was still deciding upon the exact story he wanted to talk about for Sega and Nintendo, and ideas started to come to fruition when he and his business partner, Jacob Tulis, managed to get a meeting with producers and game enthusiasts Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg in 2012.[3] Rogen and Goldberg loved the idea so much that they agreed to help get a book published and a documentary made.[3] Producer Scott Rudin also wanted in and helped with financing the documentary through a book auction to HarperCollins Publishing Company and was able to influence Sony to gain rights to the documentary.[3]

In 2014, a hack tied to North Korea saw millions of Sony emails and media get leaked, including Sony's plans to bring Spider-Man into the Marvel Cinematic Universe.[4] The attack was thought to be in response to Kim Jong Un's depiction in Seth Rogen's comedy, The Interview.[4] This incident threatened The Console Wars documentary's development.[3] In the end, Sony switched the rights to the documentary over to Legendary studios in 2018, and it was released as a CBS All Access Documentary in 2020.[3]

Archival footage, showing the dynamic between Nintendo and Sega, was obtained through Harris' VHD-to-DVD converter.[5]

Remove ads

Reception

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 85% of 13 critics' reviews are positive.[6] The documentary's structure has been contested, with some critics believing that Nintendo's introduction came too late.[7] Some feel that it is unfocused, and while intriguing, focuses too heavily on Sega.[8] Others feel that the interviews in the film do proper justice to showcasing the idea that the employees at Sega America were a part of something special.[9] The documentary has been perceived as a "nostalgic trip" telling a David and Goliath-type story.[10]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads