The Game Film Breakdown
The game (Starring Michael Douglas and Sean Penn) is a film about a very successful
investment banker called Nicolas Van Horton. Through Nicolas's success he has
unfortunately been introduced to a lot of grief. He is almost absent from his
ex-wife’s life and his younger brother Conrad (Sean Penn). He is almost in his
own world that has quite a repetitive form. By this I mean every day to day
activity that takes place in Nicolas's life is very dull and very over repetitive
in a sense that he does these activities every single day in the same time
frame. Overall Nicolas's life is very dull and does not have much of a meaning.
The whole reason why Nicolas finds life so dull and meaningless throughout the
film is mainly because he is haunted by the death of his father. He committed
suicide on his birthday. In the film it is Nicolas’s birthday. He meets with
his brother Conrad who gives him a gift voucher to a company called CRS
(Consumer Recreational Services). In this scene Conrad explains that the
company 'makes your life fun'. Nicolas later find out that his world has gone
from bad to worse when he signs up for this 'game' and that is only the beginning.
The film definitely represents the genre thriller because there is a large
amount of suspense and excitement throughout because the audience would want to
understand why this is all happening to the protagonist (Nicolas Van Horton).
The Setting is very urban. This adds a big sense of insecurity from the audience’s
perspective and adds a sense of anticipation but not so much that the audience
know what is going to happen to the protagonist but that we know something will
happen that will affect him throughout the story.
The investigation is always based around a puzzle or an enigma which in this
case is CRS. Which again adds to the whole mystery side of the film.
In a thriller the hero (Nicolas Van Horton) is the only one who can reveal
the truth and solve the enigma. Which in this case is shown quite well
throughout the film because everyone is playing the game everyone he knows in
the film is playing 'the game'.
Like the game all narrative will be solved by the end of the film. In the
viewers perspective Nicolas finds out it really is just a game right at the
end. He hints throughout the film that he knows it’s a game but not an actual
game in the way it is presented in the end.
overall the game thoroughly relates to the conventions of a thriller. very good film.
Max Kelly