Everything GREAT About Ready Player One!

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Published 2020-06-13

All Comments (21)
  • @CinemaWins
    Multiple copyright claims and then a final block, it was time to bring this one back to life! So no, you're not going crazy, this is a re-edit and reupload. Sorry for the delay in the new one, but the copyright claims are out of control right now, even for new stuff.
  • @CyndaReal
    “Ready player 2: the rise of ai” is scarily accurate
  • @noahheide6316
    Having read the sequel, “Ready Player Two”, that came out a few days ago 14:22 isn’t entirely inaccurate
  • @domvbhotmailcom
    I was fortunate enough to be a Sixer in the movie and also Ben Mendelssohn’s stand in. It was the most fun filming in those rigs but the best thing was having Steven Spielberg put his hands on my shoulders and gave me an eyeline for a closeup!! (Standing next to Ben when Parcival gives his speech)
  • @annakrebs1876
    lol, the red vs blue character saying "its a legitimate strategy" killed me!!!
  • @kin6286
    “Pop culture icon battle royale” Literally just Fortnite now
  • @jhort2121
    I love how this movie is set in the late 2000's into the 3000's yet it still surrounds and uses 70', 80's, 90's music a bunch. i like how creators of it show that late 60's-90's music will always be awsome.
  • I always laugh at the password Ben Mendelsohns character uses. The 'Ø' used for a zero is a used by scandinavian languages.. 'boss' is a leader. 'Bøss' means gay. Gets me every time.
  • @beeman2075
    8:26 Aech "I've never seen The Shining, is it really scary?" This clip cuts out Sho's response: "I had to watch it through my fingers". Yep.
  • @lforlight
    One of my big criticisms regarding the movie's changes from the book: The first key was designed to be accessible by everyone, which was Halliday's whole shtick. The dude was a beacon of fairness and equality between the poor and the rich. He didn't punish the rich, but he gave those without resources ample opportunities. The first key, in the book, was hidden in a location literally accessible by everyone. As travel in the virtual world costs currency, the key was hidden where the most basic users - school children - are stuck without the money to leave the area. In the movie? You need to have disposable income to travel to a certain location and buy a RACING CAR and fuel it, then place it in an environment that could destroy said car and require further payments. This is not fair. This does not represent Halliday's good and fair nature. It also doesn't help us perceive the main character as poor. Yes, he lives in a stack, yes, he games from inside a van in a scrapyard, but his virtual lifestyle status is pretty good if he can afford a pimped DeLorean. Only thing they show to hint at his financial situation is him collecting money to refuel, but even then it's not really significant in the face of the other riches. In addition to the point of the movie's Gunt being unfair, the final stage requires a bit of information no one possesses other than Ogden Morrow. Supposedly, if someone didn't physically talk with him and still reached the last level, they'd get actually stuck, gamebreakingly stuck. My other criticism is the depiction of 1:1 movement input. People running in the streets to run in the INTERSTELLAR video game makes no sense. Neither does the 101 employees being grouped in the game as they are grouped in real life, such that a bunch being crushed to death is reflected in a zone being colored red in their workstations. The book said that subtle hand movements moved your avatar around. There is no reason or sense in 1:1 movements. People can easily run into objects in real life that aren't in the game.
  • I’ve always wondered if players went back to the planet, will there be just tons of money laying around to pick up? I think it’ll be cool if so. Someone could spawn in and be a millionaire, possibly a trillionare with that many people that were once on planet Doom.
  • @kidder83
    The Back To The Future jingle when Parzival used the Zemeckis cube honestly gave me chills the first time I saw it
  • @Majoraspersona
    This movie has what I would call the "Super Smash Bros. Effect". There's just something really exciting about seeing some of of the stuff you love interact with some other stuff you love in an official capacity, and all of the other references that come along with it. For instance, no matter your opinions about the quality of the movie, seeing THE Gundam show up in a big budget Hollyywood movie is hype as fuck.
  • @-notmoon-7825
    What's amazing is that the book and the film are completely different from each other so everyone can enjoy everything twice.
  • @magsmoran8782
    The “Ready player two: Rise of A.I.” Thing was... weirdly accurate. Especially since this video came out months before that book was released
  • "I didn't see this movie and I'm here for the spoilers" cliche. Ding.
  • @Zynet_Eseled
    This is literally the best of nerd and online culture. Everything. From Furries, to Gamers, to Movie Buffs, to Stans, to streamers, to let's players, to book nerds, to treasure hunters, to geocache hunters (That's the connection to the literal easter eggs.), to David fan culture, to platformer gods, to speed runners, to comic book fans, to car enthusiasts, to arcade legends, to literally everything that makes this entire network so happy. All we are missing are the pokemon.
  • @Lit-C
    "How does Sonic get into every video game movie and I don't?"