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reporter, can, infomercial, enter the matrix, supplement, mike, malcolm, viva, good review, donald trull, alice, no one lives forever, patches, | The trailers the inhabitants live in feature the Residents' music in abundance. One trailer chess contains a comic book, disingenuously entitled "The Freak Show," with artwork done in a wonderful replication of the old DC Comics "House of Secrets" style of the 60s and 70s. Another trailer contains clips of the Residents' stage performances, including bits from "The chess Mole chess Show," the 1982 tour that featured Penn Gillette from Penn and Teller as the narrator. The player is also treated to clips from their myriad videos, as well as a discography. |
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The Residents call this their "Virtual Slideshow," and more accurately you could really call it a Disneyland of the Damned. Freak Show features artwork by Jim Ludtke and a number of other artists. It is viva set in a sideshow tent and in the living quarters of the freaks that work the show. The player is allowed to explore all of these places, including the trailers the freak performers live in, each area telling the sordid story viva of viva some sad creature's life. The game is not a ruinously dark affair, however, and it is also chock-full of hidden treats and surprises, albeit consistently disturbing ones. In one tent area, there's a section called "Pickled Punks," which contains photographs and historical narrative of actual circus freaks from the late 1800s and early 1900s. There are 90 biographies of performers largely forgotten as participants in one of the seedier episodes in entertainment history. This whole area of the game is highly evocative of Todd Browning's underground 1932 cult classic "Freaks." |
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