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Tuesday, August 20, 2013

The 15 Greatest Performances in a Video Game.

 Parts 1-3
Danny Wallace and his BAFTA for Thomas was Alone... but I didn't play it so he's not on the list.

Film and video games have so much in common it's easy to compare them side by side. But you really shouldn't, there are vast, vast, differences between the two just in production alone to where they are completely different creative endeavors.

But they both tell stories and they both hire actors. Because of this, its tempting to look at something like Mad Men and then at God of War and think the interactive art form is doomed to languish in over acted melodrama. Not that GOW is "poorly" acted, but that Mad Men is just so much more subtle and character driven. The comparison is bullsh*t, but plenty of film critics make it.

Can I come up with a performance in the interactive setting that could rival something like the years long arc of Don "Dick Whittman" Draper? Of course not, almost the entire production of that show is there to serve his growth as a character as well as the rest of it's ensemble. A TV production has never had to spend a fourth of it's budget on bug testing, is what I'm saying. A great role in a video game isn't impossible, but its almost never the focal point of a project.

Even so, there are several I've come across over the years that stand out to me as strides in the right direction. Great acting is possible in a video game and here are several examples to prove it, 15 of the best performances I've ever seen in a game.



15. Barry Dennen as Dean Domino (New Vegas)

"Stye's not something you just change friend."
Unknown Artist.
I love New Vegas, that's old news, but you'd be surprised to know how close I came to keeping this game off the list. It's one of the best written games I've ever played, but no actor ever stands out. Danny Trejo and Felicia Day play great characters... but the performances never overly impress. That is, except a zombified 50's lounge singer, jealously clinging to a centuries old revenge plot with a passion for explosives and murder.

The material Dennen reads is interesting, mainly because it feels like it was made with a different approach in mind. Random bits of era slang sound like they were made for a more American, Dean Martin, persona (wonder where I got that idea). Instead, Dennen plays him like an plotting, serpentine, David Niven.

I don't have to tell anyone who saw Jesus Christ: Superstar how much fun this guy has with villains, he's clearly having a good time. And the enthusiasm shows in the reams and reams of dialogue even a supporting character has to speak in this game. But the best aspect of his performance is how if the player chooses to help the guy out, IE, not abandon him while you use him as a distraction. Then listen to his long winded stories, you can soften him up into a kinder and more repentant man in the end. I was devastated I couldn't take him back with me to the Mojave.


14. Sydney Unseth as Little Eleanore Lamb (Bioshock 2)


 It's true you rarely find many children in video games, and its even rarer to see them asked to play a character that has any dimension other than, "hey, look, we made child character models!" Bioshock 2 filled that void while answering the only question I had left about Rapture, who were the little sisters?

Doomed as a pawn in her mother's dangerous political master plan; you follow her life in audio logs and hear a charmed performance by Sydney Unseth as she playfully rebels against her mother, and is eventually swallowed whole by Rapture's steady decent into anarchy.

Little Elenore's are, to me personally, the best audio diaries in the game and single handedly make it's case for existence, as some call it a cash in by 2k. If that is the case... it's the greatest cash in ever made.


13. Michael Beattie as Mordin Solus (Mass Effect 2)

It's one thing to read Mass Effect's cumbersome codex and know that Salarians rarely live past their forties. It's another to see a beaten down middle aged biologist scooting around a room, dropping unimportant words, while rambling about some Cerberus mercs that just shot their way into his clinic.
"Sad Mordin" by Kitao-Chan

I liked talking to my crew in every game, but I found myself just hanging on this guy's every word. Every time I did anything I'd rush back to Mordin's lab to see if he had anything to say about it.

I didn't really give a damn who, or what, Salarians were until I met Mordin. He was a gem. Not only did he have comic timing like a Swiss watch "Target flammable, or... enflammable. Forget which, doesn't matter."

But his story arc is the best in the trilogy and my personal favorite. Now, the nerdier fans may already know Beattie was re-cast in 3 by William Salyers. I thought he was good, very good even, but I came to the dance with Beattie, and he gets the spot... had to be him.




12. Ellen McClain as GlaDOS (Portal)

Wanna kill 10 minutes?

Worth it.

What else is there to say about GlaDOS that hasn't already been said? Does she carry both games on her shoulders? Yes. Is she one of, if not the greatest, evil AI character(s) of all time? Absolutely. But though it may seem like her lines are just fed through an auto reader, there's an actor behind the voice, and her effort must be praised.

Drollery. Its a fine art with very few masters, Bill Murray among them. I'd like to float McClain's candidacy. Her great con is that she only sounds like a robot, her human inflection and deliberate sarcasm is so slight, it takes a few listens to appreciate. The auto-tune screams are just a bonus.





















11. Nolan North as Nathan Drake (Uncharted 1-3)

You sir, are a living, breathing, delight.

What is it about Indiana Jones? Why is he so universally loved and iconic? Naughty Dog thought they had a pretty good idea how to answer those questions. Chief among them, the casting of Nolan North, the video game world's favorite character actor. Drake put him on the map and for a very good reason. He's instantly lovable. You all want to get a beer with Nathan Drake, admit it.

But that's not the only thing at play. It took people years to realize that Nathan Drake has racked up a kill count to rival Pol Pot. But he never feels like a cold blooded murderer. Why? The writing and storytelling play a central role, sure, but I think it's because North's performance isn't just shackled to cut scenes. 

His running commentary in game are the most immersive as any I've ever heard. Early on in Among Thieves, when I found an assault rifle for the first time, I whispered to myself "all riiiiight." When I equipped it, Drake said the exact same thing in the exact same way. I put my controller down, stood up, and applauded. His reaction to the world around him emulates the player's feelings so effectively it practically breaks the 4th wall. I've never seen anything like it before or since, and for that, he's on the list.
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10. James Arnold Taylor as Ratchet (Ratchet and Clank)

There's a reason this series has endured as long as it has. It's charming and witty in ways too few games attempt to be in the AAA space, though I struggle to call any of it's installments "great".

But I'd wager it never strived for greatness and it never needed to, in the end we all just wanted to see what those two were going to do next. The writing was always pretty strong, I've mentioned that, but it's Taylor's performance that brings it all home.

The guy's a natural. He's effortlessly charming, and he makes it look so easy. Too many games get tired after a 3rd installment, but these guys are truckin' past 8 and there's a feature film on the way. 

With Taylor in the lead, obviously.

9. Courtnee Draper as Elizabeth (Bioshock Infinite)



So folks have finally turned against Infinite's glowing initial reception. They call it stale, repetitive, half baked and pretentious. I humbly disagree with all those charges, but there is at least one thing we can all agree on: Elizabeth was everything she was promised to be. Draper just brings it. She may be a classic, wide eyed, Disney princess for the first few hours, but never too much of one. There's a believability to her naivety that makes her endearing... instead of unbearable.

Things change, her character darkens, yet she still retains enough of herself to help recall the long way her arc has come. Her evolution is long and gradual and Draper's performance echoes it to a tee. Did I mention she can sing like a motherf**ker? Well she can, and it's just another way she goes the extra mile to make Infinite one the standout titles of the longest generation in history. No matter what they say.


8. Alan Blumenfeld as Boyd Cooper (Psychonauts)

Do me a favor, and see how long you can watch this:


God, I love Boyd.

And you know what? I love this game. This made my summer in 2005 and I've looked back on it fondly ever since. The standout performance for this game was hotly contested as I've decided on only using one example per game (my apologies to Armin Shimerman). It was a tight race with Richard Horvitz in third and David Kaye second. But I knew it had to be this guy. The standout character, in the standout chapter, of a standout game. And thus Boyd Cooper is #8.

 I never gave much thought to what the inside of a paranoid-schizophrenic man's head would look like, but now I can't imagine it looks like anything other than Boyd's neighborhood. Now far be it from me to call anyone's crippling mental illness hilarious, but Blumenfeld's tireless energy sells every line so well, it's only a matter of time before I wind up standing around in his house listening to the greatest random generated dialogue ever recorded. That video doesn't even have all of it.  

I'm not the first to bemoan Psychonaut's middling sales, that's a reality I've learned to deal with a long time ago. But people in the industry played and loved it... so why isn't Blumenfeld at least half as exposed as Nolan North? That's crazy.


7. Dameon Clarke as Handsome Jack (Borderlands 2)

Lintufriikki? I am in your debt.
The answer to the question of who the greatest villain in video game history used to be so simple for me. But then Dameon Clarke just had to come along and make my life that much more complicated. Borderlands 2 is a great game I've played for hundreds* of hours and it's easy to forget his impact as you get further and further away from the main story. The side quests are uniformly delightful and take up the vast majority of playing time, it's then easy to think of Jack as a secondary character. But no, not only is he the primary antagonist, I'm gonna say it's his game. Clarke owns it. The biggest of it's many laugh out loud moments are all his.

He is, by a wide margin, the funniest delusional sociopath ever written. And thanks to more than a few extra wrinkles in Clarke's performance, one of the best ever acted. There comes a time, about 3/4 of the way through to the end- 
Spoiler
-where you threaten the life of his only daughter. A lesser game would have had him taunting and cursing the player character, never reasoning with him/her in a way a three dimensional father would. And to be fair, that is what he spends most of his time doing. But right before you kill her, after you've taken down every obstacle he could throw in your way... he begs you to stop. More importantly, you believe him. For that, I applaud both Clarke and Antony Burch (he wrote the thing). 


6. Jennifer Hale as "Fem" Shepard (Mass Effect)


Fem-shep by Muju

18%. Less than 18% of the millions of people that have played Bioware's opus have even experienced one of the best things about it: the female Commander Shepard. This is an issue that belongs solely to the interactive medium. When two actors are playing the exact same part, someone's going to edge ahead. Not to dump on Mark Meer, who did a damn fine job of "Male-shep" and is a seriously funny dude, but bluntly put... Hale is just that much better.

Not that Shepard is an easy task for any actor. He/She is essentially two completely different characters in three humongous games. The line between the "do gooder" and the "loose cannon" can get blurred. Unfortunately, Meer could read both roles a little too similarly and the impact wouldn't hit as hard.

This rarely happened in Hale's case. Her renegade rarely raised her voice, because if her ruthless reputation truly preceded her, she wouldn't have to. Her Paragon was also suitably different. Sweeter isn't the right word, hopeful is. Hale had a world weariness about her white knight. Someone who saw the best in people, but would take care of business before being fooled twice.

The percentage above is a travesty. An artistic insult on par with How Green was my Valley?** I feel a few years down the line, Fem-Shep will get her due, but at least we have a female protagonist as relateable as her right now. It's not like having two lead characters was a cheaper, less complicated decision for Bioware. Think about that before calling them sellouts.

*seriously, just... hundreds. I'm not well.

** Chew on that, film nerds! 

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5. J.K. Simmons as Cave Johnson (Portal 2)

Hands down, the biggest laugh I've ever gotten from a game is from a tirade from this man about lemon grenades. Simmons is one of the film industry's most beloved character actors for a very good reason, he's just that good. Sure, maybe he's been pigeon holed into the no nonsense, delusional authority figure. But here he does his best work as Aperture Science's CEO.

His character arcs perfectly as you delve deeper and deeper into Aperture's tumultuous financial past, as Cave's once hopeful eccentricity decays (hilariously) into furious desperation. He may be almost exclusively played for laughs, but there is depth to Cave if you're willing to dig for it. So for rolling up his sleeves for a video game when he could just as easily looked down on the medium, Simmons has both my respect as well as the #5 spot.

Seriously, it's worth buying the whole game for the combustible lemons rant.

4.Troy Baker as Kanji Tatsumi (Persona 4)

I have a very strange relationship with Japanese games. I have loathed games Americans have loved, (bayonetta) I have loved gamed Americans have loathed (FFXII). But here I am totally on board with the consensus, P4 was wonderful. A good yarn, with better characters, and even better gameplay. But aspects about it made me squirm. The transparent way your "girl" friends would fall head over heels for you if you just nodded your head at them enough was off putting, but give me another VG romance that isn't just as shallow, right? Even still, Rise and Yukiko got on my nerves like nobodies business. Atlus tried their damnedest to make them as 3 dimensional as they could, but their roles as stereotypical objects of affection remained painfully obvious.

So it shouldn't surprise that a tie came down between Baker and Danielle Judovit's Chie. But the match went to Baker, because not only is this the game that put him on the map, (I'm pretty sure) but because  Kanji is still the best developed "gay" character I've yet seen.

His sexual confusion is not glossed over in ways a western game might try. His boss battle is, for lack of more tactful phrasing, the gayest I've ever seen. But enough about Kanji on paper, what makes Baker's translation so damn special? Believable anger. It's harder than it sounds and this guy keeps that junk up for a solid 60 hour game. But when it comes to just hanging out with the guy, Baker touches him up with a lovable, twitchy mumble and that grew on me so much, I heard his voice even when the dialogue had switched to text. It was the PS2 after all, dvd's can't hold everything. But they could hold enough.

3. Dawn Olivieri as Lucy Kuo (inFamous 2)

 Again, this was another close call. It's script was great, it's acting was better, and it remains the best open world game I've ever played. It's hard nailing down what set Kuo apart from nearly every actor on this list, but I'm going to use the word "professional." There's an air to her reading (and I'm talking about all the leads here, sans Nix) that made me hopeful. Maybe She wasn't that into it, maybe she'd rather be back on Californication, but when she was reading Kuo I believed every syllable that fell out of her mouth.

Let's be honest, the character doesn't give her much to work with, and I like how she only winds up being a "friend" to Cole instead of a side of a half baked love triangle with Nix. She reacts to getting super powers like a real person. Turning into a flying ice sculpture is every bit as cool as it is a kafka-esque nightmare, and Olivieri mines that angle for all it's worth. No one talks about this game anymore, much less her performance. Than makes me angrier than I thought it would, so it puts her place much father up the list than I'd thought it'd be. If you haven't played IF2, you really should.

2. Michael Mando as Vass (Far Cy 3)


Far Cry 3 tried. It tried really hard. It wanted so badly to be a satire of white man's burden, that when the writer was called out for actually enforcing that stereotype, the author went into denial. But making a game is not the singular work of one writer. It takes an army of artists and mathematicians; and in the case of Mando, an actor that seizes the game's potential where almost no one else saw it. FC3 actually has a fine couple of actors, Buck the history rapist and that CIA guy come to mind, but Mando goes for broke and acts like he always knew he was going into the video game history books for this one. He did.

If you played the game you know it suffered the same issue as the original Bioshock. Once Ryan died, the central conflict deflated considerably. I'd make the argument that Fontaine was just as interesting and if the game's economy hadn't also collapsed in Olympus Heights... crap, I'm rambling. Vaas doesn't really arc and his role is sidelined into popping up and monologuing during set piece moments. But he's so good at it I don't care.

I hope this is a wake up call for all talented character actors rejected by the Hollywood machine. There is another way to get noticed.

1. Ashley Johnson as Ellie (The Last of Us)

 Ellie was more than a good character in a good game. The world of the Last of Us scared me in ways I hadn't expected. Not a jumpy "what's around the corner?!" scared, but a "This isn't gonna end well" kind of scared. But it's like Ellie somehow knew that and would repeatably break into bad ass guitar riffs, or spectacularly awful jokes, just when I was ready to put the game down over battle fatigue.

Just listening to her say she's starving took me back to my own childhood. That's exactly how I said it too: "I'm stAAAAAArvingggggggg." Johnson either knows a lot about children or everything about herself. The amount of character and personality she shoved into her ambient dialogue is going to change industry practices. Ellie and Joel are high water marks now, a high point people will be chasing for years. She one of only three bunches of wire frames and polygons to make me cry, but the most interesting thing is she's the only one of those three on the list.

Sometimes the writing is what pushed me over the edge, in this case it was both. Johnson earned the living hell out of the #1 spot and I think she'll hold it for years to come... but I'm willing to be surprised.  



So there. This took me way too long to finish and that's on me. I had a really hard time tamping down who would go where and I didn't want to brush off anyone with simple blurbs. But yeah, in the future I'm only doing fives or tens.

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