Now, play Starfield and try to wrap your head around the fact that both of these titles were made by the same company.
I mean the tutorial can be seen as the most important part of the game cause if it socks nobody is gonna play the rest
Hence, they brought in Patrick Stewart.
It’s also ostensibly the root of the main plot, hence his character should leave an impression.
Oblivion’s start was so much more memorable than Skyrim’s. Getting taught the basics by escaping prison and then immediately being served the full open world after that was magnificent.
This brought to mind the Mr. Plinkett TNG mistakes video. Many times the mark on the floor indicating where the actors should stand is visible in the HD remasters, and at one point he said something along the lines of “Patrick Stewart’s a consummate professional, always hits his mark.”
This is great! Thank you for sharing it
It was amazing to me how I never noticed a single one of these when watching them in SD back in the day. They did great work for shooting on such a tight schedule!
I’ve now watched in HD like a hundred times, and I’ve still never noticed most of these. Random shapes in the background on a set full of doodads and gadgets? Give me a break. Those hands with the flute, though, I’ll never unsee, lol.
If you think that’s impressive, Jeremy Brett did that on his own!
Brett was approached in February 1982 by Granada Television to play Holmes. The idea was to make a totally authentic and faithful adaptation of the character’s best cases. Eventually Brett accepted the role; he wanted to be the best Sherlock Holmes the world had ever seen.[37] He conducted extensive research on the great detective and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself, and was very attentive to discrepancies between the scripts he had been given and Conan Doyle’s original stories.[38] One of Brett’s dearest possessions on the set was his 77-page “Baker Street File” on everything from Holmes’ mannerisms to his eating and drinking habits. Brett once explained that “some actors are becomers—they try to become their characters. When it works, the actor is like a sponge, squeezing himself dry to remove his own personality, then absorbing the character’s like a liquid”.[39] Brett was focused on bringing more passion to the role of Holmes. He introduced Holmes’s rather eccentric hand gestures and short violent laughter. He would hurl himself on the ground just to look for a footprint, “he would leap over the furniture or jump onto the parapet of a bridge with no regard for his personal safety.”[40]
They went to the trouble and presumably significant expense to hire Patrick Stewart to play a character who doesn’t live past the tutorial?
Yup. But by the gods, does it set the tone.
The cost to have him work longer than the tutorial would probably have been even more significant :)
Exactly - the guy who played Crewman #3 would have done the whole thing for a fraction, and would have made coffee runs.
Makes sense to spend most money on the tutorial. All players see the tutorial. Fewer players see the side quest characters or final boss.
I doubt he cost that much. He’s just a Mirfield lad.
I don’t get it. Is 90 pages supposed to be a lot of text for a professional actor?
90 pages of backstory? Entirely aside from the actual script containing the dialogue he has to read?
I don’t know whether that’s a lot—not having conversed with any professional actors—but I strongly suspect the answer is yes.