‘Assassin’s Creed’: Transition From a Great Video Game to an Extraordinary Movie Promises Thrill and Action

By Lester Mondragon - 14 Nov '16 08:38AM

Film reviews are very optimistic when it comes to Video Game to Movie transition projects. This time reviewers gets the nod on how the latest "Assassin's Creed" film will perform proving previous critics wrong on its coming opening this 21st of December, 2016.

The trailers had painted what the fans are going to expect from the movie. The epic correlation of how the film was crafted and given due course. What is great about the "Assassin's Creed" is that it was developed by the video game makers themselves known as Ubisoft, now Ubisoft Motion Pictures, as stated in Screenrant.

"Assassin's Creed" has already the number of followers since it was a video game created last 2007. It has the making of an action packed blockbuster that will leave moviegoers at the edge of their seats. It began when executed prisoner Callum lynch, played by Michael Fassbender, was ressurected and forced to participate in a scientific project of Abstergo Industries. 

"Assassin's Creed" Lynch, discovers that his lineage is from a secret society of Assassins. He then is exposed to a modern technology called the Animus, where he realigns his memories in retrieving the abilities and skills of an assassin. The Animus Technology transported his memories in the era of the Spanish Inquisition. Here he began to understand his role of being an assassin. He is to fight against injustice and corruption by the Templars. His connection to his descendants and acquired skills is summarily infused to his present day existence.

"Assassin's Creed" has a plot of the conflict between Assassins and Templars. They had been battling each other from centuries past. Callum Lynch is an assassin fighting the Templars in the present day setting.

The "Assassin's Creed" is further boosted by the presence of high caliber actors like Jeremy Irons and Marion Cotillard and is direcected by Justin Kurzel, as reported from IMDb.

Movie reviews say that video games transition to movies have that thing called the curse when it does not do well in the box office. They can consider it now myth busted as the Assassin's Creed will undo all that. You better see it to believe it.

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