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Tilt: The Battle to Save Pinball

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Tilt: The Battle to Save Pinball

THE SITUATION facing the pinball designers at Williams Electronic Games in 1998: come up with something new, or see the world's largest pinball manufacturer be shut down forever. And Williams' designers did come up with something amazing: a brand new kind of pinball machine—"Pinball 2000"—that fused video with classic pinball gameplay, preserving what was great about pinball yet opening up all-ne

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Release : 2006
Rating : 6.9
Studio :
Crew : Director,  Producer, 
Cast :
Genre : Documentary

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Reviews

Pacionsbo
2018/08/30

Absolutely Fantastic

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Brainsbell
2018/08/30

The story-telling is good with flashbacks.The film is both funny and heartbreaking. You smile in a scene and get a soulcrushing revelation in the next.

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Janae Milner
2018/08/30

Easily the biggest piece of Right wing non sense propaganda I ever saw.

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Kayden
2018/08/30

This is a dark and sometimes deeply uncomfortable drama

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jbonner71
2014/02/06

Tilt: The Battle to Save Pinball is a fantastic new documentary by filmmaker Greg Maletic, which chronicles the rise and fall of the pinball industry as seen through the eyes of Williams Electronics (who held a staggering 70% of the pinball market in its prime) and their enormously talented staff of engineers and designers.As one would expect, the film starts off with a brief history of pinball, its up's and down's throughout the years, etc., but the real focus of this documentary is on the creation and implementation of the supposed savior of the industry, Pinball 2000.After historical successes in the early to mid '90s with machines like Terminator 2, The Addams' Family, and Twilight Zone, Williams' pinball sales hit a major slump in the latter part of the decade and they were seriously looking to move into the more lucrative slot machine business. The guys on the Williams Pinball team (headed up by Larry DeMar, George Gomez and Pat Lawlor, each video game/pinball creative legends in their own right) are challenged to come up with something, anything that will "save" pinball. Their response was to create the awesome, Pinball 2000 machine, Revenge from Mars. The genius of the Pinball 2000 machines was that they ingeniously melded (through the use of "trick" 3-D/hologram technology reflected onto the playfield from the monitor above) the best of what video games and pinball machines had to offer in terms of entertainment value.To make a long story a bit shorter, the machines are a success technologically, creatively and commercially, but Williams still decided to shut down all pinball operations shortly after this "victory," thus pretty much sounding the death knell for pinball as we know it.To quote the late, great Kurt Vonnegut, "So it goes."The two-disc set that I reviewed came with the film itself on the first disc along with two, informative commentary tracks. The second disc contains a literal TON (6 hours and 45 minutes) of extra material. While the majority of this bonus material is good stuff that is worth watching, there is a portion of it that is repeated or just extended versions of edited scenes seen in the film itself.In terms of video and audio, the film is presented solely in 4:3 aspect ratio, which is kind of disappointing in today's day and age, and the sound options are 5.1 Surround or Dolby Digital 2.0. Nothing that's going to seriously test your tricked-out home theater set-up, but it gets the job done and that's all a documentary needs to do, really.In my mind, Tilt: The Battle to Save Pinball is about as good as documentary filmmaking gets. And I'm not usually big on documentaries as a whole, especially when the topic is as near and dear to my heart as Tilt's is. I grew up in the late '70s, early '80s as arcade rat that could never get enough electronic stimulation, whether it was through pinball machines or video games. I fondly remember my friends and I walking or riding our bikes for miles just to play the latest and greatest new games, like Black Knight, Gorgar, Dragon's Lair or Defender. Tilt gleefully brings me back to that era, to those warm and fuzzy memories…and you cannot put a price on that, I think...

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exit38
2007/11/02

Although eerily similar to some of Stewart Rattingboo's early efforts, this film manages to stand apart and alone from the usual documentary fare. The production values are quite meritorious and the soundtrack an aural feast. Shot in a melange of styles that include cinema verite' and film noir, the viewer is treated to the cinematic equivalent of a one-two punch. Duncan Brown really steals the show with his incisive comments , pithy sayings and overall bonhomie when addressing what is really a rather sad subject. The viewpoints expressed by the lesser figures featured in the film, while notable for their candor, are mere window dressing when compared to Mr. Brown's overall grasp of the big picture. A highly enjoyable film!

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