Kane's Wrath: The FMVs

A quality computer game has many important prerequisites: great gameplay, a terrific story, really immersive atmosphere, etc. The Command and Conquer games are superb RTS experiences but remain relatively unique among other modern games in that they put a lot of effort into their full motion videos, or FMVs. A good game tells a story, but a great game immerses you in its cinematic presentation. But how do these live-action cut scenes hold up against Hollywood? This week, I look at Command and Conquer: Kane’s Wrath and judge its FMV sequences as I would a full-length movie. I’m not expecting Oscar caliber performances, but this has got to be better than a typical Sci-Fi channel movie-of-the-week. Right?

The first video opens with Kane stumbling into his command center like a cyborg on a bender recently returned home (Look what you kids did to my house! Get off my lawn!). He gives a speech about how the Brotherhood of Nod has been broken but will rise again, and an incarnation of this speech will occur every three missions or so. For those of you playing along, take a shot every time he says “Ascension.”



We’re introduced shortly thereafter to the charismatic leader of the Black Hand, played by Carl Lumbly. You might know him from the show Alias and as the voice of the Martian Manhunter from the Justice League animated series. Thankfully, these emotionally demanding roles have prepared him admirably to play the most depressive space marine ever.

Soon, you must capture him and he’s confronted by Kane. The mild scolding that follows would be more appropriate if Lumbly took the family car out for a joyride rather than inciting insurrection. As punishment, Carl Lumbly is made to watch a fake newscast of himself. His look of utter horror isn’t due to Kane’s surprise return, but to watching himself parade around like a doofus in black plastic shoulder pads.

The second chapter introduces the player to Nod’s Abbess, played by the lovely Natasha Henstridge (now forever known as the “poor man’s Tricia Helfer.”) It’s embarrassing enough for this once high-profile actress to be slumming in a computer game, but Natasha, you’re slumming in a computer game’s expansion pack.

CATEGORIES
Latest in Command Conquer
Command and Conquer: Generals
EA is "releasing the fully recovered source code" for 4 classic Command & Conquer titles, and it's the best thing a major publisher can do for game preservation
Command & Conquer 3 Tiberium Wars cheats
Command & Conquer 3 Tiberium Wars cheats
Command and Conquer: Red Alert cheats
Command and Conquer: Red Alert cheats
The Command & Conquer source code is going public
Command & Conquer Remastered is coming in June with 4K and revamped multiplayer
Command & Conquer voice actress reprises her role for the remaster 25 years later
Latest in Features
The Punisher holding two machine guns in the rain
Daredevil: Born Again - Learn the bullet-riddled comic book history of the Punisher before he officially joins the MCU
A woman in a underwater machine waving during the cinematic teaser for Subnautica 2.
Subnautica 2: Everything we know about the new underwater survival game
The AMD Ryzen 7 8700G being held above a motherboard by a reviewer
AMD's pro-consumer 9070 strategies are exactly why it's primed to dominate the CPU market in 2025
Assassin's Creed Shadows cinematic screenshot
Assassin's Creed Shadows' transmog looks set to combine the best of Odyssey and Vahalla to make changing my drip easier than ever
Split Fiction screenshot of Zoe and Mio in a fantasy world
Split Fiction feels like a Mass Effect-meets-Fable platformer and I'm obsessed with it after just one hour
Monster Hunter Wilds characters share a meal
Oh no, Monster Hunter Wilds is so good that I'm already counting the days until its inevitable Master Rank expansion