http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/2010/04/video_games_can_never_be_art.html
Careful clicking the link, there were a shitload of comments on this article and for some reason they're all loaded on the page, so it may take a while to load.
Basically Roger Ebert tries to take apart the argument of a lady who cites 3 games as evidence that videogames are indeed, art. 2 of the games she cites are flower and Braid.
His argument is the way she's described these games has not made him interested enough to play those games.
Now to me, the question is, has he ever played a video game? Apparently he has, he even reviewed one for wired magazine although it was a point and click from 1994 that very few people probably heard of (sorry to Cosmology of Kyoto fans out there.)
I think this is a weak argument. It would be unfair of me to criticze movies as 'not art' without watching a lot of movies. Not only a lot of movies, but ones that are viewed by most people as 'art' like Dr. Strangelove, Casablanca, etc.
For him to rely on someone else's description of the game, decide he's not interested in even playing the game, yet still decry games as 'never art' is kind of unfair to me.
Careful clicking the link, there were a shitload of comments on this article and for some reason they're all loaded on the page, so it may take a while to load.
Basically Roger Ebert tries to take apart the argument of a lady who cites 3 games as evidence that videogames are indeed, art. 2 of the games she cites are flower and Braid.
His argument is the way she's described these games has not made him interested enough to play those games.
Now to me, the question is, has he ever played a video game? Apparently he has, he even reviewed one for wired magazine although it was a point and click from 1994 that very few people probably heard of (sorry to Cosmology of Kyoto fans out there.)
I think this is a weak argument. It would be unfair of me to criticze movies as 'not art' without watching a lot of movies. Not only a lot of movies, but ones that are viewed by most people as 'art' like Dr. Strangelove, Casablanca, etc.
For him to rely on someone else's description of the game, decide he's not interested in even playing the game, yet still decry games as 'never art' is kind of unfair to me.