Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Ceremony of Innocence

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Release date(s)
  
1997

Developer
  
Real World Multimedia

Genre
  
Adventure game

4.4/5
Goodreads

Initial release date
  
1997

Publisher
  
Real World Multimedia

Mode
  
Single-player video game

Ceremony of Innocence httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbb

Platforms
  
Microsoft Windows, Macintosh operating systems

Ceremony of innocence gameplay


Ceremony of Innocence was a Windows CD-ROM-based game created in 1997. It used a mystery narrative based on the Griffin and Sabine novel by Nick Bantock. The title was taken from the poem "The Second Coming" by Irish poet William Butler Yeats.

Contents

Ceremony of Innocence used an elaborate mystery game format with over 100 different artists, animators and musicians involved in its production. The core team of animators from Realworld Multimedia, Dan Blore, Brian Short and Karolyn Pike, all of whom had previously worked on Peter Gabriel's EVE CD-ROM, joined forces with Realworld's programmers Michael Dean, Darren Umney, Sam Deane, Matt Thurling, Peter Fierlinger, Joshua Portway, Chris Wright, Sam Clegg, Andy Lovelock, David Bateman and Robert Mettler.

The game featured voice acting by Paul McGann, Isabella Rossellini and Ben Kingsley. It used animation to tell the story of Griffin, a young English artist, and Sabine, his South Sea Island muse. The game takes the form of a series of postcards sent between the two, which the player must explore to continue.

The work was produced by Peter Gabriel's Real World label by a team led by producer Gerrie Villon and creative director/chief designer Alex Mayhew.Joining them was a team of internationally renowned artists specialising in 3D character models, clay-modelling, precision metalwork, pastel painting, and pencil drawings, plus computer-generated imagery; among them were Joan Ashworth, Ruth Lingford, Bedric Glaser, Jeff de Boer, and Jonathan Hodgson.

Ceremony of Innocence won over 17 international awards after its release, including the EUROPRIX 98 Overall Winner, and two BAFTAs in 1998 for Best Moving Image and Best Sound.

Ceremony of innocence they are few ninth will remain


References

Ceremony of Innocence Wikipedia