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He currently lives in Fort Lauderdale, Florida with his wife, Evelyn, and their three children, where he runs the successful “Rickey’s World Famous” restaurant chain and hot sauce company. He even has his own folk song. “If I have all this good fortune,” Billysays, “if everything’s rolling my way, if all these balls have bounced in my favor, there is some poor bastard out there who is getting the screws put to him.” Enter Steve Wiebe. Steve is a middle school science teacher from Redmond, Washington, where he lives with his wife and two kids. He was a star pitcher in college who brought his team to the state finals, but was unable to play in the game. He is a gifted musician who was in a Seattle grungeband in the early 1990s, but never managed to take off the way his contemporaries did. He was a successful engineer who lost his job at Boeing the day he and his wife signed the papers on their house. Steve has spent his entire life in second place — until Donkey Kong. One day, alone in his garage and armed with only a video camera, Steve shatters Billy Mitchell’s top score of 874,300 and completes the first recorded million-point game of Donkey Kong. Now, he just needs people to believe him. The King of Kong is the story of Steve’s mission for legitimacy and his descent into the world of competitive retro gaming. His scores are so high that fact-checkers from gaming’s record-keeping Mecca, Twin Galaxies, bully their way into his house and take apart his machine for inspection. His associations with fellow gamers who have vendettas against Billy Mitchell are questioned and scrutinized. Steve travels to conventions across the country, running up against Billy’s sycophants and proving himself in game aftergame, all the while trying to track down Billy himself and force a showdown to determine once and for all the best in barrel-jumping business. The world we glimpse is an absolutely fascinating little niche of society, governed by its own rules and mired in its own politics. It’s populated with characters that you wouldn’t believe if they showed up in a fictional story: the folksy, bearded Walter Day, who runs Twin Galaxies and wears a referee outfit during business hours; the loud and boorish Playgirl model Roy Schildt, who has dubbed himself “Mr. Awesome” and creates self-help videos that feature him imitating Patton and teaching you how to score with chicks. As Steve ventures from venue to venue, we learn more about the two men at the center of this struggle and see two distinct, fascinating portraits emerge that would feel right at home in the last act of a Rocky movie. Billy is neverseen without button-down shirt and colorful tie; Steve’s idea of dressing up is a polo shirt. Billy clearly loves to talk to the camera (or anyone who will listen) and spends his interviews dispensing sound bites and nuggets of gamer wisdom; Steve is comparably quiet, not even correcting the pronunciation of his last name when he is repeatedly referred to as Steve “Weeb” instead of “Weebee.” Steve is always with his wife or his kids; Billy is more likely to be on his cell phone to one of his business partners or Twin Galaxies flunkies. It’s silly, of course, to not account for internal manipulation by the filmmaker (never let the truth stand in the way of a good story, right?), but, at the end of the day, the images speak for themselves: Wiebe is still the genial, guileless, slightly goofy everyman who’s playing the game, jumping the barrels and climbing the ladders over and over and over again to pursue his goal; Billy is still the monolith rockstar, perfectly groomed, impossibly confident, content to live off his reputation and stay in seclusion at the top of his world. I won’t spoil whether or not Steve finally gets his one-on-one challenge, but suffice it to say that the movie delivers. It’s a story about Donkey Kong, sure, but, by the end of Steve’s quest (or at least the end of the last reel), it’s become about something larger than a plumber chasing his monkey: it’s about fighting City Hall, it’s about earning respect, and it’s about how you measure success. That's not bad for a game that only costs a quarter.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
If you notice, the “important package” that Billy gives to Doris is not the same one that the Twin Galaxies guys open later in the movie. Billy gave her the wrong tape, and the cast spent an hour watching professional wrestling before they realized that nothing else was recorded on it. Billy had to FedEx the real thing up to New Hampshire. I’ve actually been to The Funspot in New Hampshire. The movie doesn’t really give you an idea of the scope of this place, but it’s basically a multi-level arcade that’s the size of a small shopping mall. We're talking three stories of video games! Groovy Quotes
Adam Wood: I don't drink. I don't smoke. I don't do drugs. I play video games, which I think is far superior an addiction than any of those other ones. Walter Day: I wanted to be a hero. I wanted to be the center of attention. I wanted the glory. I wanted the fame. I wanted the pretty girls to come at me and say, "Hi. I see that you're good at Centipede." John Farley: (sung) Billy Mitchell primo joystick dude / Amazing in the maze, he ain't gonna lose. / Blue man in the corridor singing the blues. / A perfect game goes down. . . / Billy's on the moooove
[while Steve is breaking the Donkey Kong world record]
Student: Okay, I didn't know it was a world record... it's for Donkey Kong, is it? Oh, my gosh. This is, like, it's... all the science teachers here are weird. Billy Mitchell: The worst thing that could happen would be to give somebody the credibility of a score that doesn't deserve it. But even far worse than that would be to deny somebody the credibility when they deserved it. If I'm not there, I don't know. Jillian Wiebe: Work is for people who can't play video games. Mr. Awesome [a la Patton]: I want you to remember that no punk bastard ever got a gnarley piece of poontang by being sensitive and considerate!
Steve Sanders: [Mr Awesome] threatened Bill Mitchell physically. Uh, in fact, he has threatened Bill Mitchell's life.
Billy Mitchell: No matter what I say draws controversy. It's sort of like the abortion issue. Brian Kuh: There's a Donkey Kong Kill Screen coming up! Mr Awesome: Everything would've fell right into place, buthe forgot about one thing: that I would--about me convincing Steve Wiebe not to be a chump. Talking him out of chumpatizing himself.
Billy Mitchell: It's probably a good idea, like, if I say hi to Todd.
Cameraman: What if I told you the Guinness Book of World Records has asked Twin Galaxies to provide 6 to 10 classic scores for the 2007 edition?
Jillian Wiebe: I never knew that the Guinness World Record Book was so... I never knew it was so important.
Steve Wiebe: I traveled 3,000 miles to give myself a chance to get the world record and be in Guinness. I hope he can, at least, come ten miles and put his game on the line.
Billy Mitchell: Video Games are meant to be played in a competitive environment, under pressure, organized, where you have to perform literally on demand.
Steve Wiebe: I can handle losing if he would at least compete against me. Mike Thompson: I've heard a lot of talk of Billy Mitchell, and I've heard a lot of talk of strange videos and things. But I haven't heard much in the way of him getting in front of a camera crew with people and getting a record in front of people. I haven't heard about that yet. Maybe he did that 25 years ago. But I haven't heard of him doing it lately, and it makes you wonder why not.
Steve Sanders: I can only speak for myself, but I've talked with Steve, I talked to his wife, I talked to his kids. I've met with him, talked to him in detail. And, speaking for myself, I have no question about his integrity, his ability, or anything else. He's proven himself not just as a Donkey Kong player, but really as somebody who really desires to do the right thing.
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