3.6 /10 1 Votes
Initial release date 5 November 2010 Writer J. Allen Williams | 36% Metacritic Genre Interactive movie | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Composer(s) J. Allen Williams, Jimmy Pitts, Bill Bruce Release date(s) Mac OS XNA: November 5, 2010Microsoft WindowsNA: November 8, 2010EU: December 16, 2011 Similar DarkStar One, The Daedalus Encounter, Darkness Within 2: The Dark, Dark Fall, DeathSpank: Thongs of Virtue |
Darkstar the interactive movie 1st hour part 1 wakened from cryogenic sleep
Darkstar: The Interactive Movie is an interactive movie video game written, produced, edited, animated, and directed by J. Allen Williams, owner of the American animation studio Parallax Studio. It starred the actor Clive Robertson and the original cast of the comedy series Mystery Science Theater 3000 (Trace Beaulieu, Frank Conniff, Joel Hodgson, Mary Jo Pehl, and J. Elvis Weinstein). The game also featured animations by the comic book artist Richard Corben and was the final work of actor Peter Graves, who narrated the game. Darkstar was released online on November 5, 2010 through the company website and as a downloadable through Strategy First. It was re-released in stores December 9, 2011 in the United Kingdom and Ireland through Lace Mamba Global.
Contents
- Darkstar the interactive movie 1st hour part 1 wakened from cryogenic sleep
- Darkstar the interactive movie 1st hour part 3 emergency lockdown mode
- Interactive movie
- Plot
- Cast
- Production
- Soundtrack
- Disk One
- Disk Two
- Reception
- References

Darkstar the interactive movie 1st hour part 3 emergency lockdown mode
Interactive movie

Darkstar differs from the standard game format in that it contains over thirteen hours of live action cinema–far more than any previous full motion video game. Creator and Parallax Studio CEO J. Allen Williams gave a brief description of the project to the website Slightly Deranged saying:
Plot

The player is Captain John O'Neil of the Westwick. You awaken from a cryogenic sleep that has spanned a period of over 300 years. As a result of the abnormally long hibernation, you have no memory as to who you are, where you are, or why you are there. Beside you are three other sleep chambers. One is empty, the other is occupied by a beautiful woman, and in the final chamber lies the body of a man–300 years dead and missing his left hand.

Your ship is damaged and helplessly adrift in the orbit of the ominous Theta Alpha III. An unknown crew member has deleted any data that provides an explanation as to why this is.
You know, despite the emptiness and desolation, that someone is in the cold silence waiting for you.
And, as if the day isn't bad enough, the Earth has been destroyed for three centuries.
Cast

Darkstar has roughly thirteen hours of live-action cinema including a cast of all real actors. It stars Clive Robertson as Westwick Captain John O'Neil. It also features the entire original cast of Mystery Science Theater 3000 including its creator Joel Hodgson as Scythe Commander Kane Cooper, Trace Beaulieu as Westwick First Officer Ross Perryman, Frank Conniff as both Westwick Navigator Alan Burk and the voice of the quirky robot SIMON (Semi Intelligent Motorized Observation Network), Mary Jo Pehl as both Bridgebuilder Captain Beth Ingram and the voice of the computer Westwick Main, and J. Elvis Weinstein as Galactic Discovery II Captain Cedrick Stone. Also from MST3K is Beth "Beez" McKeever as the Westwick Pilot Paige Palmer who stars across from Clive Robertson. Darkstar was also the final work of the actor Peter Graves.
In addition to Clive Robertson and the Mystery Science Theater 3000 players, the production has a cast of nearly fifty actors, almost all of whom are local to Springfield, Missouri and the surrounding area.
Production
Darkstar was written, produced, animated, edited, and directed by J. Allen Williams over the course of nearly a decade. Though most of the credit goes to Williams alone, a number of others contributed to the enormous production. Additional animations for Darkstar were done by the prolific American illustrator and comic book artist Richard Corben who is best known for his "Den" character featured in the 1981 film Heavy Metal and for his comics featured in the magazine of the same name. Other noteworthy crew members include cinematographer Roger Jared, co-producer Mark L. Walters, electronic media producer Dahlia Clark, and composers Jimmy Pitts, Bill Bruce, and J. Allen Williams.
Soundtrack
The soundtrack to Darkstar was composed and performed by Jimmy Pitts (keyboards and pianos), Bill Bruce (guitars and percussion), and J. Allen Williams (bass guitar) under the moniker "Progressive Sound And MetalWorx". Two other performers include Brent Frazier (guitars) and James Lee Dillard (percussion). Additional music for was composed by Ruell Chappell, an original member of the Ozark Mountain Daredevils. Though the soundtrack was originally intended to feature over an hour of music by the rock band Rush, negotiations with Universal Music eventually dissolved and Williams was forced to replace much of the footage with an entirely original score.
The soundtrack was released in tandem with the game and features 38 tracks of music on a 2-disk set.
Disk One
- "Surfing the Velvet Abyss" (3:17) - by Bill Bruce
- "Mindscape" (3:15) - by Jimmy Pitts, Ruell Chappell
- "Mirrors Tell a Different Tale" (3:05) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "Systematic Overload" (3:50) - by Bill Bruce
- "Solar Wind Chimes" (1:58) - by Jimmy Pitts, Ruell Chappell
- "Lost in Eternity (Paige's Theme)" (4:05) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "An Insignificant, Distant Nova" (2:17) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "FDS2" (1:49) - by Bill Bruce
- "Dementia in Absentia" (3:52) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "Deceptive & Dangerous" (4:15)- by Bill Bruce
- "Noir in A Minor" (3:11) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "Considered Gone" (1:34) - by Bill Bruce
- "Light Years of Darkness" (2:11) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "Requiem for a Blue Dot" (3:44) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "147" (4:10) - by Bill Bruce
- "Winds of Fate" (1:42) - by Jimmy Pitts, Ruell Chappell
- "Theoretical Paranoia" (2:18) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "Falling Down Stairs" (4:22) - by Bill Bruce
- "A Little Dream All My Own" (3:32) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "Winds of Fate (Reprise)" (4:41) - by Jimmy Pitts, Ruell Chappell
- "Underneath" (4:06) - by Bill Bruce
- "Light Years of Darkness (Reprise)" (2:14) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "Another Time and Place" (3:06) - by Bill Bruce
Disk Two
- "Bonechipper" (5:21) - by Bill Bruce
- "Eternal Twilight" (6:23) - by J. Allen Williams
- "Day of Darkness" (3:46) - by J. Allen Williams
- "Tomorrows Children" (6:00) - by J. Allen Williams
- "Corridors of Time" (3:16) - by J. Allen Williams
- "The Edge of Insanity" (4:36) - by J. Allen Williams
- "Knights of Vengeance" (5:14) - by J. Allen Williams
- "One Two One" (4:11) - by J. Allen Williams
- "Guardian" (7:35) - by J. Allen Williams
- "A Trinity of Sons" (4:36) - by J. Allen Williams
- "The Edge of Nowhere" (2:52) - by Jimmy Pitts
- "Holy War" (5:04) - by J. Allen Williams
- "The Secret Sign" (4:53) - by J. Allen Williams
- "Psychic Pilgrims" (4:42) - by J. Allen Williams
- "Lasting Memory" (4:12) - by Bill Bruce
Reception for the soundtrack has been positive. In a review of Darkstar at diehardgamefan.com, Alex Lucard rated the soundtrack as "Unparalleled" and wrote, "This is without a doubt one of the the [sic] best scores I have heard all year."
Reception
Darkstar: The Interactive Movie received a negative response from game critics. On the review aggregator Metacritic, the game has a weighted average of 36% indicating "generally unfavorable reviews.". Reviewers criticised the acting, story, appearance and technology.
Games TM gave the game 1/10, saying simply "It's not a game." PC PowerPlay also reviewed it negatively, with their 2/10 review calling Darkstar "A crime. Send this one to the colonies." XGN gave it 1/10, saying "Whatever you do, don't go out and buy Darkstar: The Interactive Movie. It's one of the worst games we ever played.".
Conversely, Drummond Doroski of Adventure Gamers gave it 3 out of 5 stars, writing, "It's not a game for everyone, as some are sure to be turned off by the rarity and simplicity of its puzzles, while others may not relish a return to the infamous days of live actors as their game characters, particularly when some of the acting reminds us why this isn't always a good idea."