Assassin's Creed: Lineage

2009
Assassin's Creed: Lineage
6.9| 0h36m| en| More Info
Released: 25 October 2009 Released
Producted By: Ubisoft
Country: France
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Giovanni is an assassin living during the Renaissance in 15th century Italy. At this dawn of a new era, a conspiracy is being plotted by one corrupt family to overthrow the powerful Medici family and destroy a unified Italy. As an assassin, Giovanni must face this threat and bring justice. The story introduces the situation before Assassin's Creed II, and the enemies of both characters.

... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Director

Producted By

Ubisoft

Trailers & Images

Reviews

Horst in Translation ([email protected]) "Assassin's Creed: Lineage" is a television mini-series from 2009, so it is already seven years old. the title already states that this one is closely connected to the video game "Assassin's Creed". Actually, it plays before the game action, so maybe gives an insight into some of the characters in here. The entire thing consists of three episodes that run 12 minutes average, so you can easily watch the entire thing in slightly over half an hour. But I think you only should if you really care about the game. To me, the action in here did nothing and I guess you need to know "Assassin's Creed" to have a somewhat memorable watch. I don't like that though. A film should never rely on the audience having seen another film to appreciate it. Let alone having played a game. That's why I give it a thumbs-down overall. Visually, it is okay all in all, but in terms of story-telling and plot I found it mostly forgettable.
Mayank Agarwal One of the best CG work i have come across. The Renaissance theme looks so authentic. The dress/clothing/props used in the films make it seem so real. The 1500's view of Rome is a treat to the eyes. Actors are well cast. They feel very Italian keeping to the story. The action seems OK ,i think the one in game will be better.The story of intrigue is good and leaves a lot to questions. To know the rest we need to play the game and i really hate that part as i do want to know what happens to the characters. This is how a game promos should be made. Makes one want to get the game. The direction,script,music,research everything is spot on.The only reason i am not giving it 10/10 is because the unfinished story.
bob the moo So, this year my girlfriend kindly bought me AC: Brotherhood for Christmas – an easy present for her and one I actually wanted anyway. By luck I had the night of the 26th and the majority of the 27th all to myself – what better time to get stuck into this game? Well, sadly it was the PS3 version she ordered in error, so my free time remained just that – free time. Thinking of the game i took the opportunity to watch the short film that had accompanied Assassins Creed 2 – something I'd always meant to watch but never got round to since I'd rather be playing that great game.The story is a prequel of sorts to Assassin's Creed 2 and, as a promotional tool it makes sense as part of generally feeding the grapevine with more stuff to talk about. Other games use controversy to get chatter (MW2's airport massacre, Medal of Honor's Taliban etc) so perhaps it should be praised for that, however beyond ease of production, I wasn't really feeling it in the way that I felt the couple of trailers for AC2. The best bits of the live-action short film are the same as the moments of style and action from the animated trailers and indeed they very much try to look like the game to the point that I wondered why an extended computer-animated trailer wasn't produced instead of this? The story is fairly secondary here since this "feel" is what the film is all about, so any scene that is about being an actual "prequel" to the Italy-set part of AC2, is pretty dull and one can feel the film desperate to get to the next stylishly filmed bit of stealth or action. The cast are not bad, but they have nothing to do except be live-action version of computer game characters, they don't perform so much as jump around. This limits the film somewhat and it is therefore hard not to compare it to the beauty of the game, since it lays out its stall as being all about the look and style. Of course watching it ahead of the game this may not have been the case but certainly watching in retrospect it feels very much secondary to the game and clumsy by comparison.A curio piece for AC completists perhaps but not particularly worth seeing otherwise – and certainly not good enough to distract me from the knowledge that I should be playing the game, not watching this!
Alin Radu ...probably not, but what a spectacle!You don't have to play the games to appreciate these short films. The era of the Renaissance is brought back to life in this short but thrilling adventure. The CGI environment is extremely detailed and vivid. Three major Renaissance cities are shown, Florence, Venice and Rome. Florence, the era's birthplace, is the city with the tradition to cultivate art, science and architecture. Rich families are running the town, one of the most successful is the Medici. These families build representative residential Palazzos and public buildings such as orphanages and churches. Rome which becomes a center of art and science a hundred years after Florence (about the time the short films take place) is dominated by the pope who initiates building and support artists just like the Medici. This background is metaphorically shown by the construction of St. Peter dome. And Venice becoming rich through sea trade, a melting point between Europe and the east (Constantinople is Turkish). The rest of Europe is pretty much stuck in the middle ages. The characters look real and are on a same high level as the fantastic CGI environment. The cast is well chosen, the dialogues plausible and primal for the story. You cant complain about the costumes neither, somebody intensely studied the time-frame fashion (except of course Giovanni's stuff which is fictional). The characters look Italian, nobody puts Jake Gyllenhaal into a Persian dress here, promised. Music, camera work and directing are totally fine too. The whole thing is basically a synthesis of live-action and CGI and it works extremely well. But it is more than that. The gamer will love this, it will add a lot of background story to the game experience. The historian will be blown away by the details this thing throws at you. I just want to stop the movie for a second and jump in to explore the cityscape (a thing you will actually do in the games). So much happened in the streets of Florence and Rome, the new age is born here. Beyond this, it is also a good movie but if you review this as a movie/short films keep in mind where it comes from. It comes from a computer game from which it takes its coolness, its style, its atmosphere and its story. Don't judge this monster with the attitude of a conservative film lover. This is probably the best game adaption into film. It just works out. and it also features such a profound confrontation with history and architecture that is very rare I proclaim, yes, totally.