Going Cardboard: A Board Game Documentary

2012
6| 1h16m| en
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A film about the new board gaming, a phenomenon going on right under your nose, probably in your very community. This film will take you into that world to meet the players and designers responsible for this radical departure from technology. And you just might discover it's the hobby for you.

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Reviews

EssenceStory Well Deserved Praise
CrawlerChunky In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
Nicole I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.
Freeman This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
pscamp01 I feel kind of bad applying critical standards to this movie. I'm sure it was never the film maker's intent to make a documentary in the same league of The Thin Blue Line or Bowling For Columbine. It is simply the work of an amateur film maker who loves board games and who wanted document the scene for fellow fans. Most Americans think of Monopoly or Clue when they think of board games, but there has been a quiet revolution brewing in the world of gaming for over a decade now. Small companies have been putting out a new style of games that are richer and more complex than the ones that the general public are familiar with. The games are gaining in popularity every year (in America anyway--they've been big in Europe for a while), and they have reached the point where there are web pages, local groups and large national conventions showcasing them. This movie covers all of that with interviews of fans, business owners and game designers like Alan Moon, Klaus Teuber and Reiner Knizia. Fans of these new games will especially enjoy seeing those three men on film, but if those names mean nothing to you, you are not likely to enjoy this film much. The only way to truly understand the appeal of these games is to play them. Watching people talk about them if you are not familiar with them is not particularly enjoyable. The film is pretty scatter shot in its approach, jumping from subject to subject with seemingly little logic, and no real insights are given and very few facts. Plus, most of the interviews were done at crowded, and noisy, conventions. As a result, the video and sound quality make the movie seem like a 75 minute YouTube video. Overall, the movie is basically an hour plus look at a bunch of people talking about games--which to be fair, most gamers will probably enjoy, since that is what they do when they get together anyway. Rating 5 stars (but add 2 if you're a gamer.)

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