Indie Game: The Movie

Indie Game: The Movie is a 2012 documentary film made by Canadian filmmakers James Swirsky and Lisanne Pajot. The film is about the struggles of independent game developers Edmund McMillen and Tommy Refenes during the development of Super Meat Boy, Phil Fish during the development of Fez, and also Jonathan Blow, who reflects on the success of Braid.

Indie Game: The Movie
Directed byJames Swirsky
Lisanne Pajot
Produced byJames Swirsky
Lisanne Pajot
Starring
CinematographyJames Swirsky
Lisanne Pajot
Edited byJames Swirsky
Lisanne Pajot
Music byJim Guthrie
Production
companies
BlinkWorks
Flutter Media
Distributed byBlinkWorks Media
Release dates
  • 20 January 2012 (2012-01-20) (Sundance)
Running time
94 minutes (Canada)
103 minutes (International)
LanguageEnglish

After two successful Kickstarter funds, interviews were conducted with prominent indie developers within the community. After recording over 300 hours of footage, Swirsky and Pajot decided to cut the movie down to follow the four developers selected. Their reasoning behind this was to show game development in the "past, present and future" tenses through each individual's story.

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