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BioWare On Why The Mass Effect Movie Stalled And How A TV Show Might Be Better

BioWare's Mac Walters had concerns about telling a story in 90 minutes, and he believes a TV series might be a better fit.

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A Mass Effect film was announced in 2010 with Legendary set to produce and Warner Bros. on board to distribute the project based on BioWare's RPG series. One of the hired writers, Thor's Mark Protosevich, eventually dropped out, and the project never got off the ground. Mac Walters, a BioWare veteran who has been with the studio for 17 years and was a writer on the original game, explained in a recent interview why the film stalled.

He told Insider, "It felt like we were always fighting the IP. What story are we going to tell in 90 to 120 minutes? Are we going to do it justice?"

Walters also mentioned that, as a result of a leadership change at Legendary, the movie studio was looking to focus more on TV. The producers then decided to restart Mass Effect, but it never worked out.

"It never picked up again after that, not for lack of trying," Walters said.

He went on to say that Mass Effect has "such an expansive" world that could be ripe for storytelling for film or TV. "So many people I know in the TV and film industry have reached out to ask me when we're going to do it and saying we've got to do it," Walters said.

Now, Walters believes that TV--not film--is the right way to tell Mass Effect's story outside of games. "If you're going to tell a story that's as fleshed out as Mass Effect, TV is the way to do it. There's a natural way it fits well with episodic content," he explained.

Walters added that each level or mission from Mass Effect is "like its own TV episode."

"It doesn't get written ahead of time. It gets written at the time that we get to it. So it gets added to the main story and sometimes the main story gets adjusted because we did something really cool in that 'episode.' So long-from storytelling is a great place for game franchises," he said.

While a Mass Effect movie or TV might not be happening anytime soon, HBO is working on a Last of Us TV series starring Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey. It, too, was originally envisioned as a film before switching to a TV series.

As for the Mass Effect game series, a new entry in the franchise is currently in development, but BioWare has said very, very little about it thus far.

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Shantmaster_K

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I really want the ME Universe to boom. So much potential.

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MigGui

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There are so many stories a Mass Effect TV series could tell, that the games only mention. It is easily one of the most captivating scifi universes

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Thuban_23

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This has been pretty apparent for a while. I hoped they would realize cramming a 10/20+ hour game into a 2 hour movie would've been a disaster before spending a boatload of money on Spirits Within. But man, somehow it actually encouraged them.

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ID0ntKn0w7

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90 minutes. That's hilarious. It would need to be at least 7 2 1/2 hour films

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ezio899

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Edited By ezio899

How about neither. Maybe in 2010 when you could do whatever you wanted. But now you gotta check enough woke boxes to please the social warriors or they threaten to cancel you for.....pick a stupid reason. Sad part? It might actually do well with a 40min-1hr per episode series. It could tell the contact war story or the 100 year Rachni war. There is so much they could do but it would be ruined by crybabies that want representation in a show they don't even watch.

Wanna know how I know this? Because these idiots are not old enough to know about Sex in the City and the L word. One focuses on Women and their side of relationships and the other is about lesbians. Both highly successful shows with GOOD representation but never get brought up cuz most of these woke babies are in their late teens or early 20's who only wanna cherry pick to win arguments they don't actually care about.

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MigGui

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@ezio899: what a huge pile of nonsense

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Erroneous_Snake

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@ezio899: I like how no one has said anything and you're already complaining. What is that rant really regarding? Or are all your complaints generally just hypothetical?

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IgrokU

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@ezio899: Except- Mass Effect is a story that has "wokeness" written in as part of the story, and it works just fine. To take it out would ruin it, and I am totally against ham-fisting in "wokeness" where there wasn't any to start with.

As long as they concentrated on the story, all good.

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Pyrosa

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@igroku: You're actually proving the point: It was written in, but it was effortless, automatic, and naturally led to all kinds of character stories.

In this current environment, where EVERYTHING has to be dragged into political "sides" for somone's gain, the exact same set of writers CAN'T write effortlessly anymore. Writing for profit must be miserable these days.

(Thus I side with the Reapers. PLEASE bring the orbital lasers...)

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ezio899

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@Pyrosa: Exactly. All you have to do is compare most modern day female characters in media against older characters. Ellen Ripley from Alien,Aliens. When she first appears you don't think anything about her. But as the series moves on she suffers with loss and tragedy that made her hard as nails but scared out of her mind while making a stand against a near unstoppable force. Sarah Conner from Terminator/Terminator 2. She was a waitress who is a overall cry baby scared out of her mind in the first movie. But by the time the movie is over she is standing up for herself to face a unstoppable force. Between terminator 1 and 2 she decided she will not be a victim and trained to be a badass. She took no ones shit and fought back with everything she had to protect her and her son.

Today? We got Rey Nobody(I'm not calling her skywalker) who just shows up. Becomes a god with the force with no effort or training. Captain Marvel. Becomes a god with almost 0 effort and walks around with a "lol i'm the best" attitude. There is no character development. There is no trials and suffering that makes these characters decide to grow and fight back. Even in Terminator 2 Sarah has MAJOR PTSD that makes her come off crazy and psychotic. But she still gets the job done and she even learns to "fight with the enemy" with a Terminator to kill a common enemy even though it's the very thing she fears most in the world.

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Thuban_23

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@Pyrosa: Yeah, I can agree with this. They really love crow-baring that stuff in to the point it's just awkward. But you kind of have to. Otherwise people, most of who will never watch the show, will cry until it's cancelled.

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