Mindcandy

Direct To DVD, K-O, Documentary, Animation - reviewed on Monday, April 23, 2007 by Rob O'Hara

Mindcandy Volume 2: Amiga DemosMindcandy Volume 1: PC DemosIt might surprise you to learn that some of the most cutting edge graphics, sound and programming created on computers doesn’t appear in off-the-shelf videogames, but rather in the form of computer demos – non-interactive programs coded by gifted artists, who do so for no other reason than to show the world what they (and the machines they love) are capable of.

Computer demos actually got their start in the form of cracking/intro loader screens. In the early days of computing, when programs were “cracked” (had their copy protection removed), crackers would often add an intro (a multimedia page of credits) that displayed each time the program was run. Many early intros were simply comprised of plain text and no graphics; later, intros became more technically advanced, adding graphical logos, music, and scrolling text in which cracking groups boasted about their skills and greeted (and/or taunted) their friends and fellow groups. (more…)

The Odyssey2 DVD

Direct To DVD, K-O, Documentary - reviewed on Monday, February 27, 2006 by Earl Green

The Odyssey2 DVDOrder this DVD In the interests of full disclosure, this may not be fair game for a review because I had a lot to do with the making of this DVD. Released by Packrat Video Games just in time for Christmas 2004, the Odyssey2 DVD compiles quite a bit of rare footage related to that underdog home video game system of the late 70s and early 80s in one place for your viewing pleasure. (more…)

Once Upon Atari

Direct To DVD, K-O, Documentary - reviewed on Monday, October 20, 2003 by Earl Green

Once Upon AtariOrder this DVDIn 1999, former Atari programmer Howard Scott Warshaw (E.T., Yars’ Revenge, Raiders Of The Lost Ark) gathered some of his erstwhile game-making cohorts to embark on a home-made documentary about the pre-crash years at Atari. Warshaw, now an independent filmmaker, still stands by his claim that being an Atari programmer was the most amazing job he’s ever had - and by the end of the first half-hour installment on this disc, it’s hard to not believe him.

The four half-hour episodes on the DVD (paradoxically produced in the order 4, 1, 2, 3 - Mr. Lucas would be proud) detail the working environment at Atari, the perils of dealing with management and huge wads of cash, the difficulty in particular of programming the Atari 2600, and the simple joys of creating games the way Atari
used to (and the way that few companies or programmers do now). (more…)

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