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Far Cry 3

  • Video Game
  • 2012
  • 18
IMDb RATING
8.8/10
24K
YOUR RATING
Far Cry 3 (2012)
Savages trailer
Play trailer3:10
18 Videos
26 Photos
Psychological ThrillerActionAdventureCrimeDramaThriller

While skydiving, Jason Brody and his friends land on an island overrun by pirates, where Jason is torn between fighting for the Rakyat resistance and rescuing his friends.While skydiving, Jason Brody and his friends land on an island overrun by pirates, where Jason is torn between fighting for the Rakyat resistance and rescuing his friends.While skydiving, Jason Brody and his friends land on an island overrun by pirates, where Jason is torn between fighting for the Rakyat resistance and rescuing his friends.

  • Directors
    • Laurent Bernier
    • Robert Darryl Purdy
  • Writers
    • Jeffrey Yohalem
    • Lucien Soulban
    • Li C. Kuo
  • Stars
    • Lane Edwards
    • Alex Harrouch
    • Mylène Dinh-Robic
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.8/10
    24K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Laurent Bernier
      • Robert Darryl Purdy
    • Writers
      • Jeffrey Yohalem
      • Lucien Soulban
      • Li C. Kuo
    • Stars
      • Lane Edwards
      • Alex Harrouch
      • Mylène Dinh-Robic
    • 52User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 9 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos18

    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Trailer 3:10
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Trailer 2:14
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Trailer 2:14
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Trailer 1:34
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Trailer 1:35
    Far Cry 3 (VG)
    Far Cry 3: Savages Character Trailer 3
    Trailer 3:09
    Far Cry 3: Savages Character Trailer 3
    Far Cry 3 (Far Cry 3 Revealed Trailer)
    Trailer 10:11
    Far Cry 3 (Far Cry 3 Revealed Trailer)

    Photos26

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    Top cast54

    Edit
    Lane Edwards
    • Grant Brody
    • (voice)
    Alex Harrouch
    Alex Harrouch
    • Riley Brody
    • (voice)
    Mylène Dinh-Robic
    Mylène Dinh-Robic
    • Liza Snow
    • (voice)
    Kristian Hodko
    Kristian Hodko
    • Oliver Carswell
    • (voice)
    Natalie Brown
    Natalie Brown
    • Daisy Lee
    • (voice)
    James A. Woods
    James A. Woods
    • Keith Ramsay
    • (voice)
    Gianpaolo Venuta
    Gianpaolo Venuta
    • Jason Brody
    • (voice)
    Michael Mando
    Michael Mando
    • Vaas Montenegro
    • (voice)
    Steve Cumyn
    Steve Cumyn
    • Hoyt Volker
    • (voice)
    Charles Malik Whitfield
    Charles Malik Whitfield
    • Dennis Rodgers
    • (voice)
    Martin Kevan
    • Dr. Alec Earnhardt
    • (voice)
    Faye Kingslee
    Faye Kingslee
    • Citra Talugmai
    • (voice)
    Alain Goulem
    Alain Goulem
    • Agent Willis Huntley
    • (voice)
    Julian Casey
    • Bambi 'Buck' Hughes
    • (voice)
    Stephen Bogaert
    Stephen Bogaert
    • Sam Becker
    • (voice)
    Dylan Taylor
    Dylan Taylor
    • Hurk
    • (voice)
    Mo Zinal
    Mo Zinal
    • Seto
    • (voice)
    • (as Mo Zainal)
    Nigel Whitmey
    Nigel Whitmey
    • Leonard
    • (voice)
    • Directors
      • Laurent Bernier
      • Robert Darryl Purdy
    • Writers
      • Jeffrey Yohalem
      • Lucien Soulban
      • Li C. Kuo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews52

    8.823.6K
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    Featured reviews

    9william-v-black

    Amazing Story-telling

    This review is focused completely on the story, not any game play elements. And as far as story-telling goes, this is the best depiction of the slide into insanity and/or empowerment that survival in a violent environment can bring.

    The fact that the main character is a character, rather than just some first-person avatar for the player, let's the creators of the game tell an amazing story of transformation. Jason Brody starts the game out as a privileged white kid. He's the kind of guy that the majority of us would hate. And in fact, he is pretty douche-y. But over the course of the game, as he has to do more and more to save his friends he changes.

    So many times Hollywood is quick to portray only two outcomes from having to fight a war, which though he is in no way a soldier is exactly what Jason does. Either you become a kill-crazy nut-job or you become a despondent, PTSD-ridden misanthrope. Jason skirts between both, sometimes questioning what it is he has become and other times realizing that he is in fact a stronger person for all that he has gone through.

    It's really his reactions in this game and how he goes from simply wanting to save his friends to wanting to not only save them but also kill everybody involved in their capture that is so amazing. It really is like watching a very well written and directed movie.

    The primary villain through most of the game is Vaas, and he is extremely interesting and fun to watch. He has the same kind of chaotic energy as Heath Ledger's Joker, a kind of humorous outlook and deceptively flighty attention to the world around him that makes is sudden snaps into full-blown psychotic utterly frightening. And he makes a great counterweight to Jason. You get the feeling that if Jason spends too much time on the island he could end up like Vaas.

    I've never seen the psychological consequence of battle shown in this light on screen, in games, TV, or film, like this before, and it comes shockingly close to the reality of it. A little part of you does like it, and Jason shows that part. A little part of you can't believe what you've done, and Jason has those moments of panic as well.

    If you don't want to play the game or aren't willing to spend $60 for a good movie, watch some Let's Plays on YouTube. It makes for a great movie night.
    8MoeSnodgrass

    The best of the best -- but buggy (PC), perverse

    I'm an old man who's new to video gaming. I wanted to see what the state of the art and all the hype is about. It ends up that I purchase 3 or 4 games for every one that I truly enjoy. I have abandoned many very popular, highly-rated games after less than an hour of play.

    The Very Good: The main story is set in the present. That means: no stretches into unrealistic Sci-Fi worlds. I can enjoy Sci-Fi games, Deus Ex Human Revolution is one example, but the interminable popularity of the "Star Wars" series seems to dictate that we must endure comically-voiced robots in every futuristic game. Please.

    With a very good story and superb voice acting, this game comes the closest I've found to dramatic realism -- like a good movie -- only interactive. It's still a "first person, shoot 'em up" game and requires a very high level of suspension of disbelief -- more than I would like and greater than most cinema requires -- but this is getting closer to a quality of dramatic storytelling in a game.

    There exist fewer gaming clichés here. Gamers seem to hold past clichés as icons, dearly, with expectation, and here I think the developers felt a need to satisfy expectations. Fantasy/Sci-Fi seems the rule in gaming. However the very good aspects of this game demonstrate that the writers/developers were not limited by imagination or expertise. BTW, when I say the voice acting is superb I really do mean superb, at least in the main story line and among the primary and most supporting characters. Allow me repeat: Superb.

    The Mediocre: The original, incidental music is mostly percussion and synth, is often repetitive and droning and is just fair overall. The licensed songs (real pre-existing songs used in the game) are generally better. That licensed music plays over certain quests or sequences and whenever you are driving a vehicle. The game takes place on a tropical island and so the licensed music gave a very good sense of location. In that vein however, I, for one, kept wanting to hear "Israelites," the 1968 Top 40 reggae hit by Desmond Dekker. One particular licensed song that makes its way into the game is a truly inspired placement though.

    The Bad: For such a good game, the thought put into the side quests seems lazy, like an afterthought. Even the superb voice acting is diminished in the side quests, as though the main quest and the side quests were written by different teams or were hurried. I know, the development time and budget would have cost xx% more to integrate them more closely and realistically into the main quest. Even among all the video games I truly enjoy the lazy side quests are always apparent and sadly there is little exception here.

    With that said, there is an ongoing public debate concerning "can a video game be art?" It is these things like the worn-out clichés and poor integration of side quests that will continue to make the skeptics say "No." I very much want that answer to deserve to be "yes." Soon graphics technology will advance to permit a true confluence of games and movies allowing a new and true interactive cinema. Will the game writers and developers be up to the story task? Based on the evidence so far the answer is "no" but Far Cry 3 is as good as it gets. The best motion pictures, throughout the history of cinema for example, never compromised at all but video games compromise too easily and too frequently. That is the difference between games and art and is something I wish game producers would learn.

    The Bugs: Even on my 4 core, 16GB, Win7x64 PC with 1GB graphics there exist too many bugs and glitches to list. Outright crashes occur occasionally. Numerous glitches occur that require a restart from the beginning of a quest or at the most recent checkpoint. The system of one saving one's own progress is the worst I have yet encountered, nonsensical, nonexistent. The game auto saves checkpoints well enough and the game is enjoyable enough so that, although annoying, I can dismiss them. It's worth it.

    Perversion: so, so many video games, especially FPSs are violent but I have trouble gauging whether the more perverse aspects of Far Cry 3 are gratuitous or not. For the most part they advance the story and create a heightened sense of dread so I'm inclined to say 'no' but this is very definitely adult material. I was somewhat taken aback at a few points and so I felt it is worth mentioning: Adult Material.

    Conclusion: The cliché-ridden "Half-Life 2" is often held up as the contemporary milestone in good game development. Yes it is almost a decade older and the technological eras they were created in are vastly different but Far Cry 3 leaves Half Life and most all other games in the dust on the basis of story and voice acting alone.

    As of this writing Far Cry 3 as a whole is the state-of-the-art, the best of the best. Given the long time period the Valve company has been taking in the development of Half-life 3, one holds hope for it to be another new milestone, if only Valve can escape its C3PO/R2D2 mentality to somehow find a mature story. Fingers crossed.
    10mikedunlap45

    Amazing installment in the Far Cry series!

    I have been waiting for a game like this for a long long time, it has all the elements of a great FPS RPG that most people look for. Great characters, great story, absolutely BEAUTIFUL graphics and gameplay that is out of this world.

    This installment took a different direction than the first two, it takes the level design elements of the first Far Cry and the RPG aspect of the second but with a lot more interesting stuff added, just about everything you can do in the first and second, you can do in this one which it makes it that much more fun when it basically brings back the level design of the first one and adds the elements from the second as i said before. The game is simply amazing with a lot of fun stuff to do and a whole different game experience unlike any other, the weapon selection is fantastic! and the game definitely brings back nostalgia for the farcry fans.

    sure there are some flaws like screen tearing in the consoles versions , however it is only noticeable when your looking for it...the game otherwise is all around fantastic!

    be sure to pick this beauty up! don't miss out!
    9merem1

    Fantastic

    The game is amazing. Exploring the world and taking down the enemies in their outposts is fun. The character Vaas is an excellent villain. The story is good. You feel the insanity of everything going on throughout the game. There are plenty of action sequences that are spectacular. You feel how brutal the world of the game is. The way the game looks is beautiful. The graphics are awesome. This is one of my all time favourite games. I recommend it. Far Cry 3 is a wild ride.
    10SouravGh142

    Best Game Ever For Me..........

    An amazing game, featuring stunning visuals and game play.. Far Cry 3 is an exceptional FPS with fun mechanics and excellent characterization.. The freedom and power is intoxicating.. A new standard for the genre.. In Far Cry 3, you find yourself stranded on a tropical island, a lawless place ruled by piracy and human misery. You dictate how the story unfolds, from the battles you choose to fight down to the allies or enemies you make along the way. There are 18 radio towers to scale as you make your way through the game, each of which highlights new objectives on your map and opens up new weapons to buy at local shops, and each tower is a unique first-person climbing challenge - a peaceful ascent through a creaking spiral of steel that's fraying at the edges, revealing beautiful panoramic views before sending you back down to earth on a thrilling zip line .

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Vaas Montenegro (The mo-hawked villain on the cover of Far Cry 3) has a series of YouTube videos, demonstrating his favorite torturing methods on a Hollywood movie star.
    • Goofs
      In the introduction the group is shown to be on a resort island at least with night clubs. After escaping the pirates, the Main Character, Jason grabs his belongings and cell phone back. Soon after he is tasked by locals with re-activating "jammed" local Cell Towers, and regularly uses his cellphone throughout the game, but he nor any of his rescued friends/ friendly locals ever even consider trying to contact anyone in their native California, nearby embassies or the U.S. authorities which would definitely respond in aid or rescue very quickly. It is clear however that the survivors are spoiled, naive party goers that generally are not very smart, as well as the friendly locals not wanting Jason to leave the island because he is much more competent and instrumental to their cause of taking back over the Rook Islands.
    • Quotes

      Vaas: Did I ever tell you what the definition of insanity is? Insanity is doing the exact... same fucking thing... over and over again expecting... shit to change... That. Is. Crazy. The first time somebody told me that, I dunno, I thought they were bullshitting me, so, I shot him. The thing is... He was right. And then I started seeing, everywhere I looked, everywhere I looked all these fucking pricks, everywhere I looked, doing the exact same fucking thing... over and over and over and over again thinking 'this time is gonna be different' no, no, no please... This time is gonna be different, I'm sorry, I don't like... The way...

      [Punches crate aside violently. His agitation towards the player character is visibly growing]

      Vaas: ... you are looking at me... Okay, Do you have a fucking problem in your head, do you think I am bullshitting you, do you think I am lying? Fuck you! Okay? Fuck you!... It's okay, man. I'm gonna chill, hermano. I'm gonna chill... The thing is... Alright, the thing is I killed you once already... and it's not like I am fucking crazy. It's okay... It's like water under the bridge. Did I ever tell you the definition... of insanity?

    • Connections
      Featured in ScrewAttack's Top 10s: Top 10 Best and Worst of E3 2012 (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Paper Planes
      Written by Diplo & M.I.A.

      Performed by M.I.A. (as M.I.A)

      Courtesy of XL Recordings & Interscope Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 4, 2012 (Canada)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • China
      • United States
      • Sweden
    • Language
      • English
    • Production companies
      • Ubisoft Massive Studio
      • Ubisoft Montreal
      • Ubisoft Red Storm Studio
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16 : 9

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