Virtually Heroes Explained

Virtually Heroes
Director:G.J. Echternkamp
Producer:Roger Corman
G.J. Echternkamp
Dwjuan F. Fox
Starring:Robert Baker
Mark Hamill
Brent Chase
Katie Savoy
Cinematography:James Mann
Studio:New Horizons Picture Corp.
Distributor:Screen Media
Language:English
Country:United States

Virtually Heroes is a 2013 American low-budget gamer film directed by G.J. Echternkamp and starring Robert Baker and Mark Hamill.[1] Produced by Roger Corman, it made its world premiere at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival.[2]

Plot

Two self-aware characters in a Call of Duty-inspired video game battle endless supplies of Vietcong, absurdly powerful level bosses and their own existential crises. With the help of Mark Hamill's Yoda-like monk, they attempt to win the game and get the girl.[3]

Production

Virtually Heroes evolved from Roger Corman's desire to utilize his extensive library of stock footage to create a modern war film.[4] Since the 1970s, Corman produced over 20 war films with Filipino director Cirio H. Santiago. Writers G.J. Echternkamp and Matt Yamashita drew heavily on Corman's library to write their script, developing a video game world to justify the repurposed stock footage.[5]

"I thought if I could find a way to use the big battle scenes from all of these pictures and put it together in a new picture and shoot just a short period of time to tie them all together, I could get a big-looking picture for very little money," Corman said in an interview.[6]

Because of the shoestring-budget, most of the film had to be block-shot. Most of the takes were done only twice.[7]

Release

Virtually Heroes was Roger Corman's first submission to enter the Sundance Film Festival.[8] It remained unavailable for nearly a decade until Screen Media announced that it had acquired the film for release on August 19, 2022, and would give the film a limited theatrical and digital release in December 2022, followed by a release on the Crackle Plus platform Popcornflix.[9] It was released on VOD on January 17, 2023.

Films featured

Virtually Heroes uses footage from the following Corman pictures:

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.geekscape.net/geekscapes-sundance-2013-review-virtually-heroes "Geekscape’s Sundance 2013 Review: ‘Virtually Heroes’"
  2. http://filmguide.sundance.org/film/13074/virtually_heroes Film Guide
  3. http://www.indiewire.com/article/meet-the-2013-sundance-filmmakers-3-g-j-echternkamp-enters-a-video-game-to-deal-with-big-existential-stuff-in-virtually-heroes "Meet the 2013 Sundance Filmmakers"
  4. http://www.screendaily.com/reports/one-on-one/roger-corman-gj-echternkamp-virtually-heroes/5050789.article "Roger Corman, G.J. Echternkamp on Virtually Heroes"
  5. https://variety.com/2013/film/reviews/virtually-heroes-1117949148/ "Review: ‘Virtually Heroes’"
  6. News: . Roger Corman: Making Sundance bow . The Berkshire Eagle . Pittsfield, Mass . 24 January 2013 .
  7. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/virtually-heroes-sundance-review-414769 "G.J. Echternkamp's debut feature embraces the Roger Corman ethic by reusing footage from anonymous '80s war films."
  8. http://bigstory.ap.org/article/corman-has-sundance-debut-virtually-heroes "Corman has Sundance Debut"
  9. News: Screen Media Buys Lost Roger Corman Film ‘Virtually Heroes’ (EXCLUSIVE) . Variety . Brent Lang . August 19, 2022.