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Red vs. Blue: The Blood Gulch Chronicles
File:RvB general poster.jpg
Red vs. Blue official promotional image.
Engine(s)Halo: Combat Evolved
Halo 2
Halo 3
Halo 3 (beta engine)
Marathon Trilogy
Genre(s)Comic science fiction
Running timeFive minutes per episode (average)
Created byBurnie Burns
Matt Hullum
Geoff Ramsey
Gustavo Sorola
Jason Saldaña
VoicesBurnie Burns
Jordan Burns
Yomary Cruz
Rebecca Frasier
Dan Godwin
Joel Heyman
Matt Hullum
Geoff Ramsey
Ed Robertson
Jason Saldaña
Gustavo Sorola
Nathan Zellner
Kathleen Zuelch
Release(s)April 1, 2003June 28, 2007
Format(s)DivX, WMV, QuickTime, DVD, Flash
No. of episodes100, excluding special videos
Website
http://rvb.roosterteeth.com/

Red vs. Blue: The Blood Gulch Chronicles, often abbreviated as RvB, is a machinima comic science fiction video series created by Rooster Teeth Productions and distributed primarily through the Internet and DVD. The series chronicles the story of two opposing teams of soldiers fighting a civil war in the middle of a desolate box canyon (Blood Gulch), in a parody of first-person shooter (FPS) games, military life, and science fiction films. Initially intended to be a short series of six to eight episodes, the project quickly and unexpectedly achieved significant popularity following its Internet premiere on April 1, 2003. Rooster Teeth therefore decided to extend the series; the fifth and final season ended with episode 100, released on June 28, 2007.

Red vs. Blue emerged from Burnie Burns' voice-over-enhanced gameplay videos of Bungie Studios' FPS video game Halo: Combat Evolved. The series is primarily produced using the machinima technique of synchronizing video footage from a game to pre-recorded dialogue and other audio. Footage is mostly from the multiplayer modes of Halo: Combat Evolved and its sequels, Halo 2 and, on a few off-series 'community videos,' Halo 3, on the Microsoft Xbox and Xbox 360 video game consoles.

Both within the machinima community and among film critics, Red vs. Blue has been generally well-received. Praised for its originality, the series has won four awards from the Academy of Machinima Arts & Sciences. It has been credited with bringing new popularity to machinima, helping it to gain more mainstream exposure, and attracting more people to the art form. Graham Leggat, former director of communications for Lincoln Center's film society, described Red vs. Blue as "truly as sophisticated as Samuel Beckett."[1] While special videos continue to be released online, the completed series is also available on DVD, making the series one of the first commercially released and successful machinima products. Rooster Teeth has created videos, some under commission from Microsoft, for special events, and Red vs. Blue content is included with the Legendary Edition of Halo 3.

Rooster Teeth have also announced a new series, entitled Red vs Blue: Reconstruction, due to be released later this year.

Plot

Red vs. Blue centers on the Red and Blue Teams, two groups of soldiers engaged in a civil war. Each team occupies a small base in a box canyon known as Blood Gulch. According to Simmons (Gustavo Sorola), one of the Red Team soldiers, each team's base exists only in response to the other team's base. Although both teams generally dislike each other and have standing orders to defeat their opponents and capture their flag, neither team's soldiers are usually motivated to fight each other- if they are otherwise, neither are efficient. Teammates have an array of eccentric personalities and often create more problems for each other than for their enemies.

The main Red vs. Blue storyline spans five seasons, the most recent beginning publicly on October 2, 2006.[2] Rooster Teeth periodically releases self-referential public service announcements (PSAs) and holiday-themed videos, which are generally unrelated to the main storyline. In these videos, the members of both teams claim to be actors on the Red vs. Blue series itself, but maintain their Blood Gulch Chronicles personalities. On June 16, 2006, Burns announced a five-part mini-series, Red vs. Blue: Out of Mind, which chronicles the adventures of the mercenary Tex (Kathleen Zuelch) after her disappearance in season 4. The mini-series premiered exclusively on the Xbox Live Marketplace,[3] but Rooster Teeth later made it available on their official site.[4]

Although the background of Red vs. Blue is primarily taken from Halo: Combat Evolved and Halo 2, its creators consciously limit connections to Bungie's Halo fictional universe. A special video made for E3 2003 portrays Master Chief, the protagonist of the Halo series, as a larger-than-life member of the army, and the Red vs. Blue trailer and first episode establish that the series is set between the events of the two games. Beyond these references, however, the series follows an independent storyline, which, according to Burns, is intended to make it accessible to those unfamiliar with the games. For example, even though the season 4 and season 5 casts include characters from the alien Covenant Elite race, Rooster Teeth never portrays those characters in their original Halo context.[5]

File:RVB group shot.jpg
A scene from Red vs. Blue. From left to right: Simmons, Grif, Sarge, Donut, Tex's future robot body, Sheila (the tank), Caboose, and Church.

Season 1

April 1, 2003September 28, 2003: episodes 1–19

The indifference in Blood Gulch is disrupted by the introduction of new characters. Donut (Dan Godwin) joins the Red Team; on his first day, he captures the Blue flag when his new teammates, Grif (Geoff Ramsey) and Simmons (Gustavo Sorola) send him on a fool's errand during the absence of the team leader, Sarge (Matt Hullum). Meanwhile, a rookie named Caboose (Joel Heyman) and a battle tank named Sheila (Yomary Cruz) join the Blue Team and accidentally kill the group's self-appointed leader, Church (Burnie Burns). At the request of Tucker (Jason Saldaña) and Caboose, Blue Command hires a mercenary named Tex to help. Church briefly returns as a ghost to warn his teammates about Tex, who soon arrives but is captured after returning the flag. Church again appears to the Blues to explain that Tex is actually his former girlfriend, whose mind is partially controlled by a psychotic artificial intelligence (AI). He organizes a rescue mission and succeeds, but decides to keep Tex stationed in Blood Gulch long enough for him to remove the AI. Church possesses the Red Team's robot, Lopez (Burnie Burns), to warn them of Tex's next attack, but is unable to stop Donut from mortally wounding her with a grenade. Church runs to her side, stealing Lopez's body in the process. Just before she dies, she informs Church that her AI is gone. Meanwhile, Caboose ominously insists that his real name is O'Malley.[6]

Season 2

January 3, 2004June 11, 2004: episodes 20–38

Three months after Tex's death, DuFresne (Matt Hullum), a medic soon nicknamed "Doc," arrives in the canyon on loan to both armies due to a lack of resources, but is soon rejected by both teams due to his annoying personality. Meanwhile, Church eventually loses control of his stolen robot body. Tex returns as a ghost and informs the Blues that her evil, megalomaniacal AI, O'Malley (various),[7] had transferred itself to Caboose just before her death. Church and Tex enter Caboose's mind and force out O'Malley, but the AI takes control of Doc. Later, the Blues capture Donut, and Sarge decides to build new robot bodies for Church and Tex in exchange for his return. Meanwhile, Sheila and Lopez form their own robot army and attend the exchange to conquer the Blues. During the ensuing standoff, Tucker discovers that both teams are apparently secretly controlled by the same Command; they have a common contact named Vic (Burnie Burns). O'Malley suddenly appears, kidnaps Lopez, and escapes with him through a teleporter. The Red and Blue Teams call a truce and team up to pursue O'Malley.[6] However, the teleporter malfunctions,[8] and the teams become scattered across various locations outside Blood Gulch.[9]

Season 3

October 12, 2004May 18, 2005: episodes 39–57

On behalf of Vic, O'Malley hires a mercenary, Wyoming (Matt Hullum), to kill Tucker and thus keep the secrecy of the apparent Command conspiracy. The Red and Blue Teams regroup on Sidewinder and confront O'Malley, but a bomb built into Church's robot body propels everyone, except Church, into the future (represented by Halo 2); Church is thrown into the past (represented by the Marathon Trilogy). In the future, the Reds and Blues battle O'Malley at his new fortress but become trapped inside with an active time bomb, who is later revealed to be a sentient, foul-mouthed entity named Andy (Nathan Zellner). In the past, Church waits one thousand years until Gary, a computer he met, can teleport him back to Blood Gulch. He arrives before the events of the first episode and attempts to prevent the problems of seasons 1 and 2, but realizes that his own actions caused these issues, and eventually travels to Sidewinder to be blown into the future with everyone else. He arrives just in time to ask Gary, who remains in the fortress, to stop Andy's detonation. O'Malley soon lays siege to his captured fortress with an army of robots. However, an unknown being destroys the army and then confronts O'Malley himself. Unknown to the Blues, the Reds leave mid-battle and arrive back at Blood Gulch. The season ends as a creature creeps up on an unsuspecting Church.[10]

Season 4

August 29, 2005April 1, 2006: episodes 58–77

As the Red Team re-explores Blood Gulch, Simmons is briefly exiled from the Red team, and paints himself Blue in anger. Back at the fortress, the Blue Team learns through Andy's translating that the new Alien (Nathan Zellner) is on a sacred quest to become ruler of his people and has come to retrieve The Great Weapon, an energy sword. However, Tucker has found the weapon first, and now only he can use it. The Alien forces Tucker, Andy, and Caboose to partake of his quest; Tex trails and later joins them. Wyoming re-appears, however, and kills the Alien, before fleeing with Tex in pursuit. Meanwhile, Church returns to Blood Gulch and encounters the blue Simmons, whom he pretends not to recognize, and accidentally contacts Vic Jr. (Burnie Burns), a distant descendant of Vic who informs Church about past events. Simmons returns to the Red Base to relay Vic Jr.'s information, while the quest team returns to Blood Gulch. Tucker becomes ill, and Church calls Doc, whom O'Malley still controls, for help. After Doc diagnoses Tucker with male pregnancy, Andy reveals that the Alien had impregnated Tucker through parasites, and the latter gives birth off-screen. O'Malley leaves Doc after Sarge contacts Command for reinforcements, and a ship immediately crashes into the gulch, on top of Donut.[11]

Out of Mind

June 16, 2006September 4, 2006: Parts 1-5

Set after the events of episode 71, the five-part Out of Mind mini-series chronicles Tex's pursuit of Wyoming as she tracks him to O'Malley's base. The story then flashes back to detail the implantation of the AI Omega (who would become O'Malley) into Tex. After the flashback, Tex enlists another soldier from the same implantation process, York, to help infiltrate the base. As they do so, they become caught in a fight with Wyoming and two henchmen. York is fatally wounded, but Tex, with the aid of Delta, York's AI, corners Wyoming. The mini-series ends as Tex attacks Wyoming so that she can discover O'Malley's current host.[12]

Season 5

October 2, 2006June 28, 2007: episodes 78–100

Donut has fallen into an underground cave from the force of the craft's weight, unknown to the Reds. Grif's sibling, Sister (Rebecca Frasier), emerges from the ship, though it is revealed to Grif and Simmons she is meant to be on the Blue Team after the death of Captain Butch Flowers, who was accidentally killed by the time-traveling Church. Grif gives Sister up, reasoning that she wouldn't be safe if Sarge learned her true alliance. The Reds soon discover the underground cavern and find Donut alive; and find an underground surveillance computer spying on Blood Gulch. Meanwhile, the Blues decide to move Sheila's AI to the crashed ship following malfunction in the tank, and deal with Tucker's birth of the alien child, Junior (Jason Saldaña). Tex returns, and it is revealed that Gary is Wyoming's AI, as O'Malley was to Tex, and built Wyoming a teleporter to escape Tex's questioning in Out of Mind. Vic contacts the Blues, urging them to attack Red Base via the caves; instead, they split up.

Caboose tends to Sheila as Doc, Junior, and Sister go through the caves alone, and find Lopez, who had returned to the Gulch with O'Malley. The group is then confronted by O'Malley's new host, a revived Captain Flowers. Church, Tucker and Tex meanwhile attack the Red Base head on, and are ambushed by Wyoming and Gary, the latter of whom now inhabits the Blue tank. Wyoming uses his secret ability to rewind segments of time in order to defeat the Blues as efficiently as possible, but Tucker, who is somehow aware of the time anomalies because of the sword, stabs and kills him before he can rewind time again. It is revealed that Junior is the supposed ruler of the aliens from the sacred quest of season 4, and that the villains intend to exploit the Alien race through him. Tex, realizing an opportunity to win the war by enslaving the aliens, coaxes O'Malley into infecting her, and enters the ship with Lopez and Junior. However, the Reds have placed Andy on the ship, and an explosion is seen. The survivors return to their bases and echo dialogue from the first episodes.[13][12]

Recovery One

Continuing the plot shortly after Out of Mind, Agent Washington (aka "Recovery One") Is sent to retrieve the Delta AI from York's body, but soon finds himself under fire from Wyoming, who flees. With the mission a relative success, Washington is given a new destination by a voice on the radio, and asks for the coordinates.

He later encounters the twin Freelancers South Dakota and North Dakota; the latter having been killed earlier and his AI, Theta, removed. Washington is ordered to find Theta and eliminate South to contain the situation. He spares South in order to enlist her help in defeating an unknown enemy that has been hunting the remaining freelancers.

The Delta AI then implants in South, who betrays Agent Washington, and convinces her attacker to steal his enhancements instead of following her and Delta. She is then later heard conversing with Washington's old leader, (Who reveals that she is actually Recovery Two) who instructs South to return to base, but she refuses, saying that she already has her AI, and flies away.

Reconstruction

On April 4, 2008, Burnie Burns announced a new series, Red vs Blue: Reconstruction,[14] Rooster Teeth's first series filmed on the Halo 3 engine. A trailer released alongside the announcement portrays two agents investigating an incident at military outpost 17-B, which had resulted in the annihilation of the forces stationed there. The agents find a cryptic message in the base that reads "We are the meta," and are later attacked and killed by an unseen or invisible foe while investigating a crashed ship. Before the second investigator dies he activates his recovery beacon. Over the course of the video a memo is read that addresses the concerns of the chairman of the Oversight Sub-Committee about Project Freelancer and the incident at the outpost.

The credits state that the new series will star voices from the original Blood Gulch Chronicles, including Burnie Burns, Rebecca Frasier, Yomary Cruz, Dan Godwin, Joel Heyman, Matt Hullum, Geoff Ramsey, Jason Saldaña, Gustavo Sorola, Nathan Zellner, and Kathleen Zuelch, as well as Recovery One voice actor Shannon McCormick.[15]

Although the released trailer gives the perception that this follow-up series will be in the form of an action-drama, unlike Bloodgulch Chronicles, in the comments on the official website, Burnie Burns hints that it may yet be a comedy.[16]

Characters

File:RvB Reds.JPG
The Red Team, from left to right: Sarge, the Warthog (jeep), Grif (Warthog driver's seat), Simmons (Warthog gunner), and Donut.

Red vs. Blue features characters whose personalities are skewed in different ways and to varying degrees. Character interaction and dialogue, rather than action, drive much of the story.[17] The series has revolved around eight main characters, four on each team. Several other characters, both team-affiliated and unaffiliated, human and non-human, have played significant roles at various points in the story.

Main characters

Sarge is the staff sergeant[18] and leader of the Blood Gulch Red Team. A military man with a Southern United States accent, he is the only Blood Gulch soldier on either team consistently serious about the Red versus Blue civil war. His sociopathic battle plans often entail unnecessary casualties of his own men, especially Grif. Dexter Grif is habitually lazy, irresponsible, and uninsightful. These characteristics earn him the disrespect and ridicule of both Sarge and Dick Simmons, Sarge's sycophantic, insecure, right-hand man. Despite this, Simmons, and Grif are often seen together, either chatting or bickering. Franklin Delano Donut is the eager rookie who joins the team in episode 3. He tends to annoy his teammates with his naïveté, garrulousness, and cheerfulness and becomes more effeminate and childish as the series progresses.

File:RvB Blues.JPG
The Blue Team, from left to right: Tucker, Sheila (the tank), Caboose (in Sheila's cockpit), Church, and Tex.

Leonard L. Church is the cynical de facto leader of the Blue Team. Often shouldering the responsibility of actually solving the various crises that the Blood Gulch teams encounter, he often ends up taking their brunt, leaving him increasingly disillusioned and antisocial. His serious, reasoned approach conflicts with the personalities of Lavernius Tucker and Michael J. Caboose. The first is snide, averse to work and battle, and obsessed with women; the second, although physically strong, exhibits ever-increasing degrees of stupidity and childishness throughout the series, to a point of a virtual divorce from reality. Tex, Church's former girlfriend, is hired by Blue Command to join the team as a mercenary in episode 10. Able to eliminate entire teams of soldiers by herself, she is described as "the most lethal soldier in Blood Gulch."[19]

Significant supporting characters

  • Lopez: A robot built by Sarge that, due to a damaged voice card, can only speak Spanish. After the explosion that propels the cast into the future, only his head remains.
  • Sheila: The AI inside the Blue Team's tank and later in the ship.
  • Doc: A medic who exhibits extreme pacifism.
  • O'Malley: An evil, megalomaniacal Artificial Intelligence, who can travel from host to host via radio, originally having been implanted in Tex during a military experiment, also known as Omega.
  • Andy: A foul-mouthed bomb originally built to destroy O'Malley. He also translates the Alien's language and Spanish.
  • Alien: A creature who leads Tucker and Caboose on a "sacred quest."
  • Gary: A computer terminal who explains The Great Prophecy and tells Church about the Great Destroyer, and is later revealed to be Wyoming's partner Artificial Intelligence, Gamma.
  • Wyoming: A freelancer hired by O'Malley to kill Tucker. Wyoming was in Tex's elite division and was given his own AI, Gary.
  • Vic: A sardonic, unhelpful communications officer for both Red and Blue armies.
  • Junior: Tucker's alien baby, conceived parasitically by the Alien and Tucker.
  • Captain Flowers: The Blue team's former leader, later resurrected from the dead, and killed again shortly after.
  • Sister: Grif's color-blind sister, sent to aid the Blues.

Background

Red vs. Blue emerged from Burnie Burns's voiceover-enhanced gameplay videos that he created for a website called drunkgamers.com, which was run by Geoff Fink (later Geoff Ramsey) and Gustavo Sorola. Having played Halo: Combat Evolved extensively, the drunkgamers crew discussed one day whether the Warthog, an automobile in the game, actually looked more like a cat more specificly a Puma. This discussion, re-created in episode 2, was "the spark for the whole series."[20] With the idea that a full story could be developed, Burns created a trailer for Red vs. Blue, but it was largely ignored, and, for unrelated reasons, drunkgamers soon closed. Four months later, Computer Gaming World contacted Ramsey for permission to include a drunkgamers video in a CD to be distributed with the magazine. Ramsey granted permission, but he and Burns felt that they needed a website to take advantage of the exposure from Computer Gaming World. As a result, they resurrected the Red vs. Blue project and re-released the trailer to coincide with the Computer Gaming World issue. The first episode proper was released on April 1 2003.[21]

Rooster Teeth was initially unaware of the machinima movement. Co-producer Matt Hullum stated in an interview with GameSpy in 2004, "When we first started Red vs. Blue we thought we were completely original. We never imagined that there were other people out there using video games to make movies, much less that it was a new art form with a hard to pronounce name and an official organization."[22]

The nature of Red vs. Blue was different from Burns's initial expectation. A partial character introduction released between the original trailer and the first episode featured extensive action and violence, set to Limp Bizkit's song "Break Stuff." However, as the project developed, the crew realized that it was going to focus more on situation comedy rather than on the heavy action initially implied.[23] Indeed, although the series parodies video games, Ramsey noted, "We try not to make it too much of an inside joke. And I think we use more bureaucracy and military humor than anything else, which everybody working in an office can identify with."[24] Rooster Teeth noted that Red vs. Blue has a wide variety of influences,[25] including Homestar Runner,[26] Penny Arcade,[5] and possibly Mystery Science Theater 3000.[24]

Rooster Teeth also initially envisioned the project to be short, but the series grew beyond their expectations. Burns and Ramsey had preconceived a list of jokes for Red vs. Blue and initially planned the series to last between six and eight episodes. By episode 8, however, they realized that the series had fleshed out more than expected; they had covered only about one third of their original joke list.[27] Later in season 1, Burns estimated a series of 22 episodes; however, driven by the series' popularity, he realized that there was more potential story than could be covered in that length,[28] and was able to conceive an extension of the season 1 plot. On April 1, 2007, Burns announced that the series would end at episode 100,[29] which was released on June 28, 2007.

Production

File:RvB ep58 Sarge Donut.jpg
A Red vs. Blue scene filmed using Halo 2. Compare to the scenes above from Halo: Combat Evolved.

The writing process for the series has changed over time. Early in season 1, Burns wrote the episode scripts from week to week, with minimal planning in advance;[5] major plot events were conceived shortly before they were filmed.[30] For the second season, Matt Hullum became a main writer.[31] A rough plot outline is now written before a season begins, although the actual content of an individual episode is still decided on a more short-term basis.[32] Because Red vs. Blue is loosely based on the Halo universe, Rooster Teeth encountered some difficulties when trying to synchronize events in the series with the release of Halo 2.[33]

Aside from a few scenes created with the Marathon Trilogy and the PC version of Halo, Red vs. Blue is mostly filmed with interconnected Xbox consoles. As the series title suggests, the videos are largely set in the Halo map Blood Gulch and its Halo 2 counterpart, Coagulation. However, some episodes have been filmed on other maps, including Sidewinder and Hang 'Em High from Halo and Zanzibar and Waterworks from Halo 2. One special video used the public Beta of Halo 3 as a special introduction video. Within a multiplayer game session of any of the games used for filming, the people controlling the avatars "puppet" their characters, moving them around, firing weapons, and performing other actions as dictated by the script, and in synchronization with the episode's dialogue, which is recorded ahead of time.[34]

The "cameraman" is simply another player, whose first-person perspective is recorded raw to a computer. As the recording occurs within the game, a few different bugs and post-production techniques have been exploited in order to achieve desired visual effects. In particular, Adobe Premiere Pro is used to edit the audio and video together, impose letterboxing to hide the camera player's head-up display, add the titles and fade-to-black screens, and create some visual effects that cannot be accomplished in-game.[35]

Trocadero provides the music for Red vs. Blue, which did not feature any originally. According to a journal entry on the official site, Nico Audy-Rowland, Trocadero's bandleader, was introduced to the series after its premiere and enjoyed it enough to submit a song about it. Burns liked the piece and requested more;[36] he stated in the season 1 DVD audio commentary tracks that the music added a "whole new element to the series."[37] To create other sound effects, Burns used Foley artistry, in some cases to replace cinematically awkward counterparts from the game engine.[38]

Reception

Red vs. Blue attracted interest immediately; the first episode had 20,000 downloads within a day.[39] Shortly after episode 2, Bungie Studios contacted Rooster Teeth. The crew had feared that any contact from Bungie would be to force an end to the project, but Bungie enjoyed the videos and was supportive;[40] one staff member called the production "kind of brilliant."[41] A deal was arranged to ensure that the series could continue to use Bungie's game properties legally,[1] without license fees[41] and without creative guidelines from Microsoft, Bungie's parent company, except for specifically commissioned videos.[25] Red vs. Blue continued to attract more attention, and, by April 2004, Kevin J. Delaney of The Wall Street Journal estimated that weekly viewership was between 650,000 and 1,000,000.[1] In a 2006 interview, Strange Company founder Hugh Hancock called the series probably "the most successful machinima productions [sic]" and estimated that it was generating almost US$200,000 annually.[42] Red vs. Blue content was also included with a premium "Legendary" edition of Halo 3.[43]

Red vs. Blue was widely acclaimed within the machinima industry. The first season won awards for Best Picture, Best Independent Machinima Film, and Best Writing at the Academy of Machinima Arts & Sciences' 2003 Machinima Film Festival.[44] Two years later, at the 2005 festival, the third season won an award for Best Independent Machinima and was nominated for five others.[45] At the 2006 Machinima Festival, the series was nominated for awards in voice acting and writing, but won neither.[46]

Among film critics, the response was generally positive. Darren Waters of BBC News Online called Red vs. Blue "riotously funny" and "reminiscent of the anarchic energy of South Park."[28] Reviewing the three season DVDs for Cinema Strikes Back, Charlie Prince wrote, "Red vs. Blue is hysterical in large part because all the characters are morons, and so the seemingly intense conflict with the opposing base doesn't exactly work the way you'd think it would."[47] Leggat described the series as "[p]art locker-room humor, part Beckett-like absurdist tragicomedy, part wicked vivisection of game culture and sci-fi action films and games."[48] Ed Halter of The Village Voice dismissed the humor as shallow and described the first season as "Clerks-meets-Star Wars."[49] Leggat defended the humor, arguing, "The literary analog is absurdist drama."[1]

Another common criticism of Red vs. Blue was that its season 3 plot was too far-fetched and out-of-character. Charlie Prince wrote, "By the third season, however, the Red vs. Blue idea seems to be running out of steam.… It's not funny so much as just odd."[47] Writing for the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Wilma Jandoc agreed that the first part of "season 3… throws the teams into a ridiculous situation and has limited member interactions, leading to a lack of witty dialogue."[17] In an about.com review of the season 4 DVD, writer Eric Qualls thought that season 3 was "a little too long, and too complicated, and the jokes were a bit too far apart."[50] Nevertheless, both Prince and Jandoc were optimistic that the series would improve, and Qualls stated that the fourth season had "returned to the series' roots" as "some of the funniest stuff you’ll ever see."[50]

Rooster Teeth Productions has created special Red vs. Blue videos for various events. For example, Microsoft has commissioned Red vs. Blue videos for Xbox demo kiosks found in game stores and for a developer conference.[51] Barenaked Ladies has also commissioned videos for their concerts.[1] Other videos have been specifically created for gaming magazines, including Electronic Gaming Monthly and Computer Gaming World; gaming conventions, including E3 and the Penny Arcade Expo; and the Sundance Film Festival.

Red vs. Blue has also received praise from soldiers stationed in the Middle East. An August 2005 blog entry by Kimi Matsuzaki of 1UP.com displays photographs of soldiers holding various weapons, as well as copies of the first and second season Red vs. Blue DVDs.[52] Geoff Ramsey later stated in an interview, "We get a lot of merchandise and DVDs out to Iraq and get a lot of great e-mails back."[24]

The notability and impact of Red vs. Blue extends to video games outside the Halo series. The developers of the Xbox 360 video game Gears of War, Epic Games, made a reference to a Red vs. Blue gag through an in-game achievement called, "Is it a spider?"; the award is earned for tagging opponents with grenades. Another reference to the series appears on Bungie's website. On a player’s profile screen the description of a kill or death with a flag is “Right next to the headlight fluid”.[53]

Impact on machinima

Red vs. Blue is widely credited with attracting public attention to machinima. Although examples had existed since the 1990s, Clive Thompson credited Red vs. Blue as "the first to break out of the underground."[54] Tavares, Gil, and Roque called it machinima's "first big success,"[55] and Paul Marino noted that "the series proved so popular that it not only transcended the typical gamer, it also claimed fans outside the gaming world."[56] In 2005, Thompson noted that "Microsoft has been so strangely solicitous that when it was developing the sequel to Halo last year, the designers actually inserted a special command — a joystick button that makes a soldier lower his weapon — designed solely to make it easier for Rooster Teeth to do dialogue."[41] The series has inspired other machinima productions, including The Codex.[57]

In the machinima industry, the series has been mentioned as the most successful example of the trend toward serial distribution. According to Hugh Hancock, this format allows for gradual improvement as a result of viewer feedback, and gives viewers a reason to return for future videos. Hancock argues that this model was necessary for Red vs. Blue's success: "Sunday night is Red vs. Blue night, just as (in the UK) Thursday used to be Buffy. Had RvB released their films as single downloads of an hour and a half, they'd have had nowhere near the success they currently enjoy."[58]

Distribution

Red vs. Blue video resolutions
Public Sponsor
Seasons 1–4
320×240
or
360×240
640×480
or
720×480
Out of Mind and after
320×180 640×360

Videos are typically available in QuickTime (QT) and Windows Media Video (WMV) formats. All released episodes of the latest season are freely available from the official site. A few episodes from the previous seasons are available from a rolling archive; each week, the videos are rotated to the next set. This setup is intended to help to control bandwidth costs;[59] as of September 2005, the official Rooster Teeth website was serving 400 terabytes of data monthly.[60] However, nearly all freely released episodes of Red vs. Blue are also available from websites such as Machinima.com, Archive.org, FilePlanet, and Google Video. Out of Mind is available to download free from the Xbox 360 on the Marketplace.

Members of the official website can gain sponsor status for a fee of US$10 every six months. Sponsors can access videos a few days before the general public release, download higher-resolution versions of the episodes, and access special content released only to sponsors. For example, during season 5, Rooster Teeth began to release directors' commentary to sponsors for download. Additionally, while the public archive is limited to rotating sets of videos, sponsors can access content from previous seasons at any time.[61]

Episodes are released in different resolutions; higher resolutions are reserved for sponsors. Beginning with the Red vs. Blue: Out of Mind mini-series, Rooster Teeth began to film and edit video in 720p high-definition,[62] and to release episodes in widescreen format, instead of hiding the game HUD through the letterboxing seen in full-screen releases.

Although it is distributed serially over the Internet, Red vs. Blue is also one of the first commercially released products made using machinima, as opposed to a product merely containing machinima. DVDs of the five completed seasons are sold through Rooster Teeth's official website, as well as at most EB Games, GameStop and Hot Topic stores in the United States.[63] On April 1st, 2008, a box set of all 5 seasons was released at Rooster Teeth's online store. This includes all bonus content from each of the previous DVDs, as well as a new bonus content disk, which has special features such as sponsor only content, and Recovery One. You can either buy the full package for $69.99, or just the bonus disk for $20.00. Each season is released on DVD within two months of that season's final episode. For the DVDs, the episodes of the main storyline are edited together to play continuously as a full-length film. Because the episodes as individually released often contain dialogue that continues into or past the fade to black at the end of the video, Rooster Teeth either removes that dialogue entirely or films extra footage to replace the original fade to black.[64]

A third version of the season is further edited for time for showing at the Lincoln Center and at other film festivals. In a 2005 interview, Burns noted that the first season, normally 75 minutes in length, was cut to 55 minutes for these venues, with an entire episode omitted.[65] Burns also noted in a website news post that the 135-minute season 3 DVD version had to be shortened to "a watchable-in-a-theater runtime of 100 minutes."[66]

With the public release of episode 87 on January 8, 2007, Matt Hullum announced that videos would be viewable in Macromedia Flash format. He stated that the change allowed Rooster Teeth to release public videos in a higher resolution "while keeping the file size low," and that the entire video archive would be updated. Code to embed the Flash video on other websites was also distributed.[67] In a site journal entry, Burns clarified that downloadable versions would continue to be released, but after their Flash counterparts.

The first season as well as a re-shot HD version of the second season has also been released on the Xbox Live Marketplace for a price of 80 Microsoft Points each.[68]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Delaney.
  2. ^ Burns, 2006, Season 5 Public.
  3. ^ Burns, "Out of Sight."
  4. ^ Burns, "Out of Mind on RvB."
  5. ^ a b c Smith.
  6. ^ a b Burns, et al., 2003. Cite error: The named reference "RvBS1" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  7. ^ O'Malley is voiced by the actor responsible for whichever character he is possessing at the time.
  8. ^ Burms, et al. 2005, episode 51.
  9. ^ Burns, et al., 2004.
  10. ^ Burns, et al., 2005.
  11. ^ Burns, et al., 2006.
  12. ^ a b Burns, et al., 2007.
  13. ^ A total of six alternate endings were released on the Season 5 DVD, with two of them having been available on the website since the release of episode 100
  14. ^ Burns, "RVB: Reconstruction."
  15. ^ http://rvb.roosterteeth.com/info/?id=2
  16. ^ http://www.roosterteeth.com/viewEntry.php?id=653
  17. ^ a b Jandoc.
  18. ^ Burns, et al. 2005, Character profiles, Sarge.
  19. ^ Burns, et al. 2005, Character profiles, Tex.
  20. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary, episode 2.
  21. ^ The History of Red vs. Blue; Konow, 2.
  22. ^ Kosak.
  23. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary, introduction.
  24. ^ a b c Konow, 4.
  25. ^ a b Oliver.
  26. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary, episode 16.
  27. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary episode 4.
  28. ^ a b Waters.
  29. ^ Burns, "Thank You".
  30. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary, episode 8.
  31. ^ Burns, et al. 2004, Audio Commentary.
  32. ^ Konow, 3.
  33. ^ Burns, et al., 2005, Audio Commentary, episode 39.
  34. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary; Delaney.
  35. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary; Moltenbrey.
  36. ^ Audy-Rowland.
  37. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary, episode 10.
  38. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary, episode 11.
  39. ^ Thompson, 1.
  40. ^ Konow, 2.
  41. ^ a b c Thompson 3.
  42. ^ MacGregor.
  43. ^ Halo 3 Details Explosion.
  44. ^ Machinima Awards 2003 Results.
  45. ^ 2005 Award Nominations & Selections; Mackie Winners Announced!.
  46. ^ 2006 Machinima Film Festival: WINNERS & Nominees.
  47. ^ a b Prince.
  48. ^ Leggat.
  49. ^ Halter.
  50. ^ a b Qualls.
  51. ^ Red vs. Blue : The Interview Strikes Back; Delaney.
  52. ^ Matsuzaki.
  53. ^ Hsu, 106.
  54. ^ Thompson, 2.
  55. ^ Tavares, Gil, & Roque, 4.
  56. ^ Marino, 19.
  57. ^ Whitley.
  58. ^ Hancock.
  59. ^ Video FAQ; Red vs Blue FAQ.
  60. ^ Totilo.
  61. ^ Sponsorship FAQ.
  62. ^ Sorola, Out of Mind.
  63. ^ Where To Buy Rooster Teeth Products.
  64. ^ Burns, et al. 2003, Audio Commentary, episode 18.
  65. ^ Marks.
  66. ^ Burns, It's Official.
  67. ^ Hullum 2007.
  68. ^ Surette, "Red vs. Blue yuks it up on XBL."

References

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