Tetris movie

2023 - 4 - 1

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Image courtesy of "Bloomberg"

Tetris Movie Shows Apple's Ambition to Crack the Hollywood Puzzle (Bloomberg)

The film is part of Apple Inc.'s increasing presence in Hollywood. The smartphone maker is ramping up to spend over $1 billion a year on films for theaters and ...

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Image courtesy of "Decider"

'Tetris' Movie True Story: How Accurate Is the Taron Egerton Movie? (Decider)

Dutch video game designer Henk Rogers purchased the Japanese rights to Tetris in 1988, after playing a demo of the game at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las ...

The company was founded in 1996 and handles all of the Tetris rights. Specifically, the Tetris movie is based on the messy legal battle for the rights to Tetris. The Tetris movie is more or less accurate, but it definitely exaggerates key details for the sake of a more exciting movie. For example, the pretty young blonde woman, Sasha (Sofia Lebedeva), who serves as Rogers’ interpreter and ally in Russia is revealed to be a KGB agent, and this is meant to be a big moment of betrayal. Stein agreed to sign a contract to give Nintendo handheld rights but then began to give Rogers the run-around. The Tetris movie is based on the true story of the popular block-building video game. (There is even home video footage of him dozing on the plane in the BBC documentary.) In fact, most of the KGB drama seems to be largely exaggerated. Read on to learn about the Tetris movie true story, and find out how accurate the Tetris movie is. Belikov accused Rogers of selling the game illegally, and secretly met with Maxwell and Stein, confronting them about the so-called broken contract. But Nintendo needed the handheld rights to the game. Because Tetris was designed by a Russian programmer at the height of the Soviet Union, the forces of capitalism had to work extra hard to make as much money as possible. [Tetris](https://decider.com/movie/tetris/) movie, which began streaming on [Apple TV+](https://tv.apple.com/us/movie/tetris/umc.cmc.4evmgcam356pzgxs2l7a18d7b) today, takes on the difficult task of transforming the Tetris true story—a legal battle over intellectual property rights—into a compelling, watchable movie.

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Image courtesy of "TIME"

The Complicated True Story Behind Apple TV+'s <em>Tetris</em ... (TIME)

'Tetris' explores the true story behind the late 1980s legal battle that led to the classic video game becoming an international phenomenon.

Rogers also cemented a friendship with Pajitnov during his time in Moscow and eventually helped him to profit from the game he had invented. A tense three-way battle over the rights to the game ensued between Rogers, Stein, and Mirrorsoft owner Robert Maxwell (played by Richard Allam) and his son Kevin Maxwell (Anthony Boyle). Rogers’ arrival in Moscow with the Nintendo Famicon version of Tetris led to the revelation that Stein had been trading rights he did not own. Like in the movie, after Tetris was ported to the IBM PC in 1985 and began to spread throughout the Soviet Union, Hungarian businessman Robert Stein (played by Toby Jones) made an attempt to secure the computer rights to the game for his company, Andromeda Software. You’re not allowed to speak to anyone.’ And I said, ‘Well, I didn’t come all this way to stand in front of the door and go back to Tokyo to get a visa. Rogers went on to land a deal with Nintendo via his company Bullet-Proof Software, and Tetris for the Nintendo Famicon console was released in late 1988. “I am about to walk in the door and my interpreter says, ‘You can’t go in there,'” Rogers told Baird and written by Noah Pink, follows Henk Rogers ( [Taron Egerton](https://time.com/5591284/rocketman-elton-john-movie-review/)), a Dutch game designer who, after learning about Tetris at a 1988 Las Vegas tradeshow, traveled to Moscow to secure the game’s licensing rights from behind the Iron Curtain. [Apple TV+](https://time.com/6262001/extrapolations-review/) movie streaming March 31, explores the true story behind the late 1980s legal battle that led to the classic video game becoming an international phenomenon. It was in Moscow that Rogers met Alexey Pajitnov (played by Nikita Efremov), a software engineer at the Soviet Academy of Sciences who created the original Tetris on a rudimentary Electronika 60 computer. However, the contract expressly forbid Stein from licensing the rights to the arcade and handheld versions of the game, as well as any other mediums The puzzle game—which requires players to fit together geometric shapes composed of four squares to form horizontal lines—skyrocketed to popularity so quickly that in 1994, writer Jeffrey Goldsmith coined the term the [Tetris Effect](https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20121022-the-psychology-of-tetris) to explain the psychological phenomenon that occurs when people devote so much time and attention to something that it begins to pattern their thoughts, mental images, and dreams.

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Image courtesy of "Screen Rant"

Why The Tetris Movie Is Rated R (Screen Rant)

Despite being based on one of the most inoffensive and family-friendly games of all time, the Tetris movie is rated R. Starring Taron Egerton, ...

However, in the case of Tetris, the decision may have an unexpected silver lining. The MPA's decision regarding Tetris rating is reflected in rating agencies around the world. This explained why Tetris is rated R, in spite of its more family-friendly branding. Likewise, Canadian regulators have marked the movie as an 18A, although this age limit is self-applied. As demonstrated by [the Tetris trailer](https://screenrant.com/tetris-movie-trailer/), the story is much more frenetic and action-packed than many viewers might expect from a biographical legal drama. As a result of this historical angle, Tetris is about much more than brightly colored blocks slotting neatly on top of one another – going some way towards explaining its slightly surprising rating.

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Image courtesy of "CNN"

'Tetris' plays like a Cold War thriller built around the game's origins (CNN)

As fact-based movies go, "Tetris" plays like a Cold War espionage thriller, which merely underscores the crazy amount of globetrotting intrigue that ...

The business aspect and the ’80s framing in some respects mirrors another movie arriving soon, Add to that Russia’s current war in Ukraine and the film possesses a timeliness that goes beyond just another Egerton helps hold it all together as a believable everyman, straddling the line between nerve and pigheaded foolishness. Rogers at first seems blissfully unaware of the danger to which he’s exposing himself, or the watchful eyes that could cause trouble for Pajitnov. Starring Taron Egerton, this Apple TV+ movie, like the game, is colorful and engaging enough that it’s hard to take your eyes off the screen. A P.T.

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Image courtesy of "Collider.com"

Taron Egerton on the Unbelievable True Story of 'Tetris,' Why He ... (Collider.com)

Tetris star Taron Egerton discusses what appealed to him most about the script, what made filming difficult, & talks directing & upcoming projects.

I have my own idea that I would like to pitch to Matthew, and I think that will be happening soon but he has the wheels in motion on a big idea of his own. It's the role that made my name, so I suppose, in a way, I just want it to be absolutely right if we do it again, and I want the story to do justice to the part that really changed my life. It's the worst thing in the world,” and it's– I mean, look, First World problems, but it's just very uncomfortable and itchy, and there's just something about having something in the front-middle of your face that really puts you in a bad mood. So, I can't believe that in the years between Eddie the Eagle and Tetris, which was probably about five or six years in terms of production dates, that I forgot how uncomfortable it is and deigned to wear one for an entire shoot. I found it was so interesting that you filmed this movie in Scotland in, I believe, Aberdeen, which had the architecture for Russia. Even down to the fact that Henk [Rogers], Robert Stein, and Maxwell, the younger Evan Maxwell, all turned up a log on the same day, is true So, yeah, I mean, if you were to put a crude percentage on it, I think 85, 95% of it it's true. EGERTON: I mean, I was insistent on doing that because I don't grow a very strong mustache, so I had to wear a fake one, but… It was the scene in the first Kingsman where I am strapped to the track in one of the Kingsman test exercises, and he is stood over me in a parka directing me, but he's directing me in quite an emphatic way. You know, it was divided up into chapters that were sort of crude representations of the process of engaging in a game. And whilst I can't say anything about it because it's – well, least of all because it's in the process of being created – it's a completely different role for me, and a very fresh challenge, and I think in some respects, I think it could feel like a kind of sister piece to Black Bird, which is cool. I know it's so generic, but how much did you know, and how much were you surprised it was actually real? EGERTON: I ain't buying a bottle of whiskey that Matthew is going to enjoy.

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Image courtesy of "Yahoo News"

Apple TV+'s 'Tetris' movie tells a true story about friendship, love and ... (Yahoo News)

Apple TV+'s spy-thriller “Tetris” delves into the incredible true story behind the creation of the iconic strategy game. The film depicts the risk-taking ...

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Image courtesy of "UH System Current News"

The story of Tetris is now a movie, UH Mānoa grads heard it in 2011 ... (UH System Current News)

It's the perfect game,” proclaims entrepreneur Henk Rogers in 1988, in the movie Tetris about the addictive, ubiquitous video game. Apple TV+ said the film was, ...

[University of Hawaiʻi Mānoa](https://manoa.hawaii.edu/) in the 1970s, and studied computer science. It’s the perfect game,” proclaims entrepreneur Henk Rogers in 1988, in the movie Tetris about the addictive, ubiquitous video game. Apple TV+ said the film was, “inspired by the true story of how [Rogers] risked his life to outsmart the KGB and turn

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Image courtesy of "Newsweek"

'Tetris' Movie Creators Glad They Didn't Go the 'Lego Movie' Route (Newsweek)

The film is a biographical drama about the origins of the puzzle video game, but earlier plans were for a fantastical adventure with magical elements.

"I'm sure there's a lot of things in there that they think, Oh, it's not quite right. "We couldn't get them across to the U.K. And then people watch the movie and they'll say, 'Wow this has nothing to do with the game that I fell in love with,' and then so they even p***** those people off." He continued, "We don't get to talk to those kids. The perestroika spirit and dark time of this communist era. "We had a lot of fun. Yeah, it's a game, but it's a movie about people. Tetris started shooting in late 2020, when strict COVID-19 rules were in place, meaning Pajitnov and Rogers couldn't be present during the shoot. That's according to both the creator of the game and the man who helped spread it globally: Tetris Co. Over the decades since the game's release, there have been a number of near-misses for a Tetris movie, with wildly different tones. "I've seen a lot of computer game [movies] go very strange," Rogers told Newsweek. They are the executive producers of Tetris, now available to watch on Apple TV+.

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