Dig it yourself by Davide Masato
Dig it yourself is a board game based on the Atari video game burial event happened in 1983 and the related documentary called Atari: Game Over made in 2014 by Microsoft.

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Dig it yourself by Davide Masato
Dig it yourself is a board game based on the Atari video game burial event happened in 1983 and the related documentary called Atari: Game Over made in 2014 by Microsoft.
Atari: Game Over (2014) Zak Penn.
A simple answer that is clear and precise will always have more power in the world than a complex one that is true.
Nolan Bushnell
Movie-a-Day #167: Atari: Game Over (2014)
A brief history of the Atari company’s meteoric rise to fame and power as well as its demise at the supposed hands of E.T. (the game) and the archeological dig to uncover the urban legend that over 1 million copies were secretly buried in a California Landfill.
+ Finding out Atari Headquarters was a palace of hot tub weed nerds + Howard Warshaw is the man, leave him the fuck alone + ET isn’t even that bad of a game and u plebs prob havent even played it
- I was born the same MONTH the Atari 5200 came out - I’m still a fucking idiot playing video games - Thanks, Atari
7 Yar-style revenges out of 10
55. Atari: Game Over (2014)
Myths persist to give us something to talk about, something to make sense of our world. They gather momentum when they bring a sense of wonder to an event, a mundane activity steeped in coincidence or hidden secrets. When the world sees a secret in the average, a myth can take hold and run around the world.
"What persisted was the monster in the dark, buried in an Arizona landfill, the thing that slayed the mighty king of gaming: E.T. The Game."
The story of Atari mirrors many other tech companies throughout history. A small company that, with luck and timing, becomes a juggernaut. Then it died, a quick blip and shudder that went game over like many of the products they sold. What persisted was the monster in the dark, buried in an Arizona landfill, the thing that slayed the mighty king of gaming: E.T. The Game.
At just over an hour, the documentary captures the rise and fall of Atari as well as the myth of E.T. The Game. Interesting interviews and footage capture the love of gaming and the wonder behind what might be found if we dig just a little deeper. In the end, the satisfying conclusion and answer to one of gamings most enduring urban legends is given and we can all rest a little easier knowing.
Grade: B plus because I let myself get away with reviewing a short doc about a subject I love.
Atari: Game Over
Several years back Microsoft announced the formation of Xbox Entertainment Studios (XES). The original plan with XES was to host a wealthy amount of original entertainment programs for Xbox platforms, kind of like how Netflix and Hulu have their own original TV series and how Sony is doing with the Playstation Store exclusive TV series, Powers that was a hit last year. Everything did not go according to plan however, and in 2014, aside from staying the course on a couple of surefire hit Halo projects, Microsoft announced it was shutting down XES. One other project, Atari: Game Over (trailer), survived because it already wrapped production and was just several weeks away from release. Atari: Game Over is a documentary about an infamous game many say caused the videogame “crash” of 1983. Hollywood script writer Zak Penn (Last Action Hero, X-Men: The Last Stand, The Avengers) is the director of this documentary. His goal of this project is to debunk the legend of Atari burying millions of unsold copies of the noteworthy disastrous 2600 game E.T. as a myth and prove it exists by tracking down the landfill and excavating Atari’s buried treasure. While breaking down the process on making this excavation happen, Penn also spends the duration of this feature giving a cliff notes version of the rise and fall of Atari, breaks down the career of E.T. programmer Howard Scott Warshaw and Penn makes his case if E.T. was really the catalyst of the 1983 videogame crash in Americ a or not.
For the record, I have played E.T. on the 2600. My dad had a mammoth collection of 2600 games he rounded up at rummage sales on the cheap since he could not afford the then-modern NES. I would spend many weekends back then pouring over mostly cruddy 2600 games, and yes he did have E.T. I vividly recall playing it back when I was about 8 or 9 and remember having no idea with what I was doing and being terrified of the FBI agent that always captured me. I did not spend too much time with it before dismissing it as crap and moving onto something else. There is a great opening montage in Atari: Game Over of YouTubers berating E.T. as they attempt to play to set up what this documentary is all about. Penn does a great job at tracking down local enthusiasts of the dig site in Alamogordo, New Mexico and how they laid out their theories on how they knew exactly where Atari buried the product in the landfill, which is interesting since Atari left no records of the exact spot they buried it at. It was quite unique watching them dissect their theories and how they eventually wound up being right. Penn interviews other locals and politicians on the challenges he faces on his project with concerned citizens wanting to make sure everything is deemed safe before moving ahead.
Penn wisely takes breaks from the dream dig project analysis with history lessons on E.T.’s publisher, Atari and programmer, Howard Scott Warshaw. I dug the brief rundown of the rise and fall of Atari. Penn interviewed a few former Atari bigwigs including former boss man, Nolan Bushnell to give the quick tale on Atari’s early success and how they were bought by Warner. It is not an in depth look at Atari by any means, but does a good job at covering just enough ground to let you know how big videogames first got in America. Warshaw is a fantastic interview for this piece, he paints a detailed picture on his early success at Atari with Yar’s Revenge and Raiders of the Lost Ark being million sellers and sharing a few entertaining stories of the party atmosphere at Atari. Hearing Warshaw tell the tale on how he wound up becoming the guy to make E.T. and how he embraced the challenge of making it in five weeks was incredibly fascinating. I definitely felt for Howard as he went in depth on how hard he took the poor reception on the quality of his game and how it took him 25 years to recover from the release of E.T. while witnessing Atari crumble around him in the following year as Atari laid off 80% of its employees. Atari: Game Over comes to a boil on the big excavation day when hundreds of gamers show up to the event hoping to take home a piece of history. Eventually the excavators discover the buried copies of E.T. along with countless other unsold Atari products. One of the most impactful moments of the feature is watching an emotional Howard Scott Warshaw being interviewed by local newscasters moments after they found the first E.T. cartridges. That scene helps justify this project from being far more than a publicity stunt, and really helped solidify it as being a moment in gaming history and I could not help but feel this provided a sense of closure for Warshaw the documentary perfectly captures in this touching moment from Warshaw.
I am on board with the stance the documentary takes in the closing scenes. After interviewing several gaming enthusiasts, they all agree that E.T. is a bad game, but far from being the worst game of all time that many label it as today. I also agree with the interviewees when they go on to say that E.T. is not responsible for the videogame crash and the fall of Atari as Atari was already well on its way going downhill by the time E.T. hit stores. There is a very fitting and well crafted final shot in the feature where you see what happens to the excavated remains of the unsold Atari product. Atari: Game Over is a brisk watch at just over an hour, which makes it a bummer there are no extras on the home video release as I want to give you a reason to buy this from Amazon. I imagined it could not have been that difficult to tack on some unused interviews and I would have loved to have seen some bonus stories from Bushnell and Warshaw that did not make the main feature. This is a fun mini-history lesson on the early days of videogames, and tells a great story of going on one the most extraordinary of treasure hunts. I highly recommend watching it for free online through your Xbox or the Microsoft Store first before deciding if you want a tangible copy for your movie rack at home. Other Random Backlog Movie Blogs 3 12 Angry Men (1957) 21 Jump Street Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie Batman: Mask of the Phantasm Bounty Hunters Cabin in the Woods Captain America: The First Avenger Captain America: The Winter Soldier Clash of the Titans (1981) Clint Eastwood 11-pack Special Dirty Work Faster Field of Dreams Fight Club The Fighter For Love of the Game Good Will Hunting Hercules: Reborn Hitman Ink Marine 3: Homefront Marine 4: Moving Target Mortal Kombat The Replacements Rocky I-VI Running Films Part 1 Running Films Part 2 ScoobyDoo Wrestlemania Mystery The Secret Life of Walter Mitty Source Code Star Trek I-XII TMNT The Tooth Fairy The Tooth Fairy 2 Veronica Mars The Wrestler (2008)
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Buried E.T. Cartridges Sold For $108,000
Hundreds of unearthed #ET cartridges just sold on eBay for $108,000.
E.T. is a great movie but a terrible game. In fact, it was so terrible that Atari dumped a large number of the unsold cartridges (along with a few others) in a landfill. Last year, they were unearthed. This month, they were sold for $108,000 on eBay.
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