I don’t care for Death Stranding. Like many, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:I bounced off it almost violently, giving it multiple chances but ultimately ending up glaring at my television, feeling frustrated and angry because I wanted to know what I was missing. It disappointe🎶d me how much I disliked it, because its “Strand Game” concept is undeniabl🃏y interesting. A lot of the game’s ideas are compelling to me: its setting, visual metaphors, and cast all speak to my identity as a sci-fi lover. But so much of it doesn’t – its gameplay is a slog, its writing is heavy-handed and unsubtle, and it takes what feels like an eternity to pick up to a pace that’s tolerable.
A big part of this disconnect is the moment-to-moment gameplay, but it’s also thanks to Kojima’s writing. He’s the closest thing to an auteur we have in video games, but his writing is also often pinpointed by critics f🔯or being especially weak. It’s not hard to 🐎see why. His characters dump exposition, more often seem to talk at each other than with each other, and his stories are often convoluted and obtuse. . I do not want to see a movie directed by Hideo Kojima – I’d probably find it insufferable. But a movie based on Kojima’s work? I’m down, sure.

168澳洲幸运5开奖网: Could Big Walk Be A 🍃Stra🥂nd Game?
House Houses Untit🤡led Goose Game follow up, Big Walk, has some of the hallmarks of the blossoming strand game genre
Thankfully, the Death Stranding film we are getting is in partnership with A24, a studio that produces and distributes films seemingly tailor-made to my interests and preferences. Many of my favourite films of the last decade have been by A24 (Hereditary, Everything Everywhere All at Once, The Witch, etꦇc.), and the directors the company has championed in the past often beco𒀰me rising stars. I have no reason to believe that just because it’s taking on a larger IP, it’ll lose that eye for talent and good stories, and A24 is already known for more offbeat, surreal fare. It’s a great match.
As I began to wonder who will write and direct the Death Stranding movie, it became extremely clear to me ♈that it simply cannot be Kojima. It would ✅not be a good movie, to put it bluntly, and the film would be better off in the hands of a more experienced director. Preferably one who admires Kojima’s work, has a good working relationship with him, and who has experience leaning into horror and creating compelling stories in strange worlds. Obviously, Jordan Peele is the frontrunner here.
Tell me those creepy babies aren't horror movie fodder.
We know that Death Stranding won’t be a direct adaptation of the game, which is ideal, since watching Norman Reedus deliver packages for ages would suck. But I love Peele’s films, and he’s already collaborating with Kojima on his newest announced game OD. They even went on stage at The Game Awards and talked for a very long time about how much they both admire each other. Peele doesn’t make blockbusters, he makes smaller, deftly-directed films – just like Kojima said he wanted in this interview with IGN, where he said, “There were a lot of pitches to make a large-scale movie with famous actors and flashy explosions, but what good would explosions be in Death Stranding? Making money isn't something I'm focused on at all, either. I'm aiming for a more arthouse approach.”
Peele directing the Death Stranding movie is a win-win for everybody. His sharp directorial skills, great writing talent, and penchant for horror would serve an adaptation of the game well, and most🍷 importantly, Kojima would have a gu🔯iding hand in the work without actually being overly involved. The universe in which Peele makes the Death Stranding movie is one I’d love to live in.

If Death Stranding Is The Kind Of IP A24 Is Interested I꧑n, We ♏May Not Need To Worry
H🉐ideo Kojima, like many of the filmmakers behind A24 films, is a🏅 singular artist.