The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters
Dir: Seth Gordon
2007
*****
Seth
Gordon's The King of Kong: A
Fistful of Quarters has absolutely everything you could ever want from a
feature-length film. It's politics, it's religion, it's society, it's the human
spirit and it's the history of cinema, all in one 79 minute long documentary
that is essentially about a guy who plays an arcade game in his garage. Down on
his luck and recently laid-off, Steve Wiebe decided one day
to purchase an old Donkey Kong arcade machine to cheer
himself up with and to play on when not working. Wiebes cuts an unfortunate figure
of a man, a clearly intelligent and talented guy and would-be professional
baseball player cut down in his prime by injury, unlucky in life and
somewhat held-back due to suffering severe OCD. Donkey Kong offered
unexpected hope to him in the form of a challenge and what would emerge as his
ultimate ambition. Since 1981, the Twin Galaxies organisation has kept track of
every high-score achieved on an arcade machine and Wiebes
decided that he was going to be the new high-scoring record holder for Donkey
Kong to become the ultimate, King of Kong. Enter one of cinema's greatest
ever villains. Billy Mitchell is a legend
in the world of classic arcades. He had held the record for Kong, Ms. Pac-Man
and Centipede since the early eighties and is one of only
a handful of people who had reached the mythical 'split-screen'
level of Pac-Man, as well as reaching the games perfect score. Known for his
cocky attitude, spectacular mullet hair-cut and shameless self-promotion,
Mitchell (or 'The Sauce King' as he is also known as due to his special range
of hot sauces) was the player to beat. This is when the film really takes
off, Wiebes beats Mitchell's score of 874,300 with an amazing 1,006,600
points. However, after submitting video evidence of him doing this Mitchell
sends one of his minions (self-styled protégé Brian Kuh) to investigate. It's
like the Wicked Witch of the West sending out one of her flying monkeys out to
complete his dastardly plan. The plot thickens when Kuh discovers that Wiebes
arcade machine's circuit board was provided by Mitchell's arch-rival,
fitness guru and pickup artist Roy Shildt. Mitchell
reports Wiebes and Twin Galaxies denounce his high-score claiming
that the evidence was of poor quality. When Wiebes then goes on to beat
the high-score live to board members of Twin Galaxies, Mitchell
submits a highly suspicious and 'poor quality' VHS tape that he had
been saving for such an event, showing him beating both scores with a
spectacular 1,047,200. It's so good you couldn't make it up. It's the classic
tale of good vs. evil, the little guy taking on the big guy, a modern day (and
rather nerdy) David and Goliath if you will. It's a geek
epic, absolutely hilarious but never forced and one of the
best documentaries of all time.
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