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Dredge: What The Movie Adaptation Can Do To Succeed

Indie horror games may be a new favorite for the video game adaptation market. Video game movies are beyond the misguided eras that led some to imagine a surrounding curse, leading filmmakers to make more ambitious choices. Bringing a lesser-known title like Dredge to the big screen might not draw as many eyes as a Mario movie, but a smaller name allows this sailboat to explore stranger waters.




Dredge is an independent hit. The game sold more than 1,000,000 copies in around seven months, an impressive showing for a game without a big-name publisher. Critics broadly loved it. Metacritic reports 80 out of 100 scores on every available console. The game combined the enduringly popular fishing genre with unnerving Lovecraftian horror to create something unique and keep fans on their toes.

Dredge is getting a movie

Developer

Black Salt Games

Publisher

Team17

Release Date

March 30, 2023

Metacritic Score

8 out of 10


Dredge will soon receive a live-action cinematic adaptation from Story Kitchen. Gamers may remember the studio as the rapidly emerging titan in the video game adaptation field. They produced the well-received Sonic the Hedgehog movies, including the trilogy’s upcoming conclusion. Story Kitchen also has its hands in the upcoming adaptations of Streets of Rage and Lara Croft: Tomb Raider. Their connection should bring faith to fans, as almost every example they’ve touched has boasted financial success and widespread approval. Dredge is a unique and interesting choice for a film adaptation, especially from a group so dedicated to seeing non-traditional IP on the big screen.



Dredge embodies the fabulously unique genre of cosmic horror/fishing simulator. The player controls an unnamed Fisherman who accepts a job in the remote coastal town of Greater Marrow. The early game adopts the familiar rhythms of workaday job simulators. Players navigate their adorable vessel through the open sea, fill their inventory with fish, sell their bounty for upgrades, and head to bed to start the mission again the next day. Gradually, the Fisherman discovers strange events. Reeling in a line may yield a mutated nightmare. Townspeople warn against traveling at night. It’s the dawning horror of The Shadow over Innsmouth married to the daily grind of Stardew Valley. A movie based on the title might struggle in the new medium, but there are a few key steps that will ensure some success.

The Dredge movie must maintain the juxtaposition

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Without the quiet, contemplative, day-to-day grind of fishing, the cosmic horror lacks impact. The game succeeds by applying horror elements to a familiar and comfortable genre. It’s the same principle that created John Carpenter’s Halloween. The genre-defining slasher takes place in the suburbs, bringing fear to a place that symbolizes safety. The open sea offers no promise of safety, frequently humbling the most competent navigators with unexpected spite, but a repetitive day job lulls the mind into a state of security. Going out to get fish, concerned mostly with the arrangement of the inventory screen and the speed of the engines, is a fundamentally placid activity. The film can communicate this emotion through the central character and his surrounding world. Play the first act of Dredge like A River Runs Through It so that acts two and three can do The Call of Cthulhu with impunity.



The Dredge movie must nail big reveals

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Without wishing to spoil, Dredge gradually introduces larger and more threatening marine life as it goes on. The game could stand to be more bombastic in those moments. Massive animals ruin the boat with increasing frequency as the player navigates the narrative. It hits for several reasons, but many of those emotional reactions are lost upon an audience only watching the experience. This forces the filmmakers to lean into the inherent horror and away from the gameplay cost those beasts can inflict. The Fisherman has to sell the scares. Cinematography and sound effects are more critical when trying to draw in a more distant audience. This is one of the major pitfalls of adapting a video game to a non-interactive medium, but Dredge must adapt.


Dredge must deliver a perfect soundscape

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If the Dredge movie gets nothing else right, it must master the audio experience. Dredge‘s soundtrack, composed by the great David Mason, is a masterclass in building tension. It is, however, incomplete when listening to the traditional recording. Where Dredge excels is in the atmospheric sound effects that accompany Mason’s music. The natural noise provides more immersion than any live-action adaptation. This soundscape blends jaunty tunes with a haunting ambiance to build on the game’s tonal juxtaposition. If Story Kitchen can’t just rehire David Mason, they must deliver an appropriately note-perfect soundtrack and excellent sonic Foley work to help Dredge work on the big screen.


Dredge may seem like an unusual choice for big-screen success, but its path to the box office is clear. The game has everything it needs to succeed as a horror feature. As long as Story Kitchen finds the right blend of tones, filmmaking tricks, and a perfect audio experience, they can turn Dredge into their next success. Fans will be longing for the sea in the brief moment before they decide never to touch water again.



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