*** Welcome to piglix ***

Atari: Game Over

Atari: Game Over
Directed by Zak Penn
Starring Zak Penn
Howard Scott Warshaw
Ernest Cline
George R. R. Martin
Nolan Bushnell
Music by Stephen Endelman
Cinematography Eric Zimmerman
Edited by Andrew Seklir
Release date
  • November 20, 2014 (2014-11-20)
Running time
66 minutes

Atari: Game Over is a 2014 documentary film directed by Zak Penn about the North American video game crash of 1983, using the Atari video game burial excavation as a starting point.

The documentary was first announced on December 19, 2013.

For the documentary, the filmmakers excavated the landfill site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, where many E.T. game cartridges were buried. The excavation dig took several months of preparation, and was finally carried out on April 26, 2014. Although the digging had only been planned to go as deep as 18 feet, it actually went to 30 feet. Around 1,300 of the approximately 700,000 games buried were unearthed.

The dig lasted for approximately three hours. Only a small number of games could be recovered, because the local authority of Alamogordo only allowed the dig to last for one day, and ordered the site to be closed by April 27.

700 of the 1,300 games unearthed during the excavation will be sold by the Alamogordo City Commission, and 100 will be given to the film's development companies, Lightbox and Fuel Entertainment. Alamogordo mayor Susie Galea now hopes to turn the dig site into a tourist attraction.

The remaining 500 games were given to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC and local New Mexico museums to be displayed.

Geekwire criticized the way that the film oversimplified Atari's downfall, but awarded it an overall positive review, saying "It’s still a great story, and definitely worth watching."

The film was released by Microsoft via its Xbox Video store on November 20, 2014. In April 2015, it was made available on Netflix and had a broadcast on Showtime.

It received mostly positive reviews.

The A.V. Club awarded it a score of C+, saying "Warshaw deserves recognition for pushing the limits of early ’80s technology, but the exhumation of his final work makes a garbage mountain out of a molehill."


...
Wikipedia

...