Yeah, but can Kurt Russell use nanomachines, John? I didn’t think so. When a movie wanted to be a videogame, lol. “ has written me and asked me for my blessing on the game and I wrote him back how about it?” Carpenter told CVG. Escape from New York is better then the sequel but snake surfing down the street has to be one of the best scenes. But according to Escape director (and original Snake creator) John Carpenter, Kojima actually wrote to him asking permission to pay homage to one Snake with another before making Metal Gear Solid. In the first game, when hes talking to Meryl in the bathroom, she sees him as this huge hero, and this quote is what he really thinks of himself. 22 Metal Gear Solid filmmakers are searching like Solid Snake for story. Solid Snake has never bought into his own hype, as he always refutes the idea that hes some legendary figure. Metal Gear creator Hideo Kojima has never tried to hide the inspiration for Solid Snake, even giving the hero the alias “Iroquois Plissken” in MGS2. If the male hostage has escaped, the soldiers will take the female prisoner. But Snake is by no means the first grizzled badass to bear that serpentine moniker: The character was clearly modeled on Snake Plissken, the hard-boiled main character from Escape From New York (as well as its unfortunate sequel, Escape From LA). Solid Snake is a total badass, despite some questionable hair choices in MGS2 and his newfound senior citizen status in MGS4. Before he created Metal Gear Solid, Hideo Kojima sought – and received – the approval of John Carpenter to base his hero on Carpenter’s original badass Snake from Escape From New York. (stylized on-screen as John Carpenter's Escape from L.A.) is a 1996 American post-apocalyptic action film co-written, co-scored, and directed by John Carpenter, co-written and produced by Debra Hill and Kurt Russell, with Russell also starring as Snake Plissken.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |