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In this episode of Now for Something Completely Machinima, the team revisits Ozymandias (1999) — one of the earliest and most controversial works of machinima, created by Hugh Hancock and Strange Company using the experimental LithTech Film Producer toolkit.
What begins as a straightforward critique quickly turns into a deeper debate:
👉 Is Ozymandias a “bad film”… or a groundbreaking prototype that helped shape virtual filmmaking?
Ricky challenges the film’s pacing, visuals, and sound, arguing that by today’s standards it feels unfinished and awkward. But Tracy and Phil place the work in its historical context — revealing it as a crucial pivot point where machinima shifted from gameplay recording to intentional, cinematic storytelling inside game engines.
The panel explores:
Along the way, the hosts reminisce about the wild early days of machinima — executable films, hacked tools, screen-recording cameras, and the struggle to share video before YouTube even existed.
Whether you’re a machinima veteran or a newcomer, this episode is a fascinating look at how a rough, experimental short helped open the door to modern virtual filmmaking.
🎬 Watch, debate, and decide for yourself: brilliant milestone… or broken relic?
Time stamps -
01:00 Ricky introduces today’s pick: Ozymandias
02:10 Why the film mattered to early machinima
03:00 Ricky’s harsh rewatch critique
05:56 Damien: likely a LithTech test film
07:57 Ricky pushes back on “test video” idea
09:11 The infamous (hilarious) Archive.org comment
10:19 Tracy reframes Ozymandias as a historic pivot point
15:00 Early virtual filmmaking & camera tools explained
20:07 Pre-YouTube reality and why Film Producer failed commercially
24:36 Phil’s memories of Machinima.com’s homepage
26:30 Phil corrects the record: Strange Company built Film Producer
31:00 Why the “moving sand” was revolutionary in 1999
36:42 Original release was a standalone executable (not video)
38:09 Early capture glitches and screen-recording methods
41:05 Ricky: films “live in time” + call for context on Archive.org
43:03 How long did this take to make?
44:35 Festival nomination (Best Technical Achievement, 2003)
46:10 Tool credits — “Alpha 0.5”
47:00 Skyrim machinima tools & Unreal “Outside the Blocks”
48:20 Show wrap-up + listener email invite
Credits -
Co-hosts: Ricky Grove, Phil Rice, Damien Valentine, Tracy Harwood
Producer: Ricky Grove
Editor: Phil Rice
Music: Phil Rice and Suno AI
By Ricky Grove, Tracy Harwood, Damien Valentine, and Phil Rice5
33 ratings
In this episode of Now for Something Completely Machinima, the team revisits Ozymandias (1999) — one of the earliest and most controversial works of machinima, created by Hugh Hancock and Strange Company using the experimental LithTech Film Producer toolkit.
What begins as a straightforward critique quickly turns into a deeper debate:
👉 Is Ozymandias a “bad film”… or a groundbreaking prototype that helped shape virtual filmmaking?
Ricky challenges the film’s pacing, visuals, and sound, arguing that by today’s standards it feels unfinished and awkward. But Tracy and Phil place the work in its historical context — revealing it as a crucial pivot point where machinima shifted from gameplay recording to intentional, cinematic storytelling inside game engines.
The panel explores:
Along the way, the hosts reminisce about the wild early days of machinima — executable films, hacked tools, screen-recording cameras, and the struggle to share video before YouTube even existed.
Whether you’re a machinima veteran or a newcomer, this episode is a fascinating look at how a rough, experimental short helped open the door to modern virtual filmmaking.
🎬 Watch, debate, and decide for yourself: brilliant milestone… or broken relic?
Time stamps -
01:00 Ricky introduces today’s pick: Ozymandias
02:10 Why the film mattered to early machinima
03:00 Ricky’s harsh rewatch critique
05:56 Damien: likely a LithTech test film
07:57 Ricky pushes back on “test video” idea
09:11 The infamous (hilarious) Archive.org comment
10:19 Tracy reframes Ozymandias as a historic pivot point
15:00 Early virtual filmmaking & camera tools explained
20:07 Pre-YouTube reality and why Film Producer failed commercially
24:36 Phil’s memories of Machinima.com’s homepage
26:30 Phil corrects the record: Strange Company built Film Producer
31:00 Why the “moving sand” was revolutionary in 1999
36:42 Original release was a standalone executable (not video)
38:09 Early capture glitches and screen-recording methods
41:05 Ricky: films “live in time” + call for context on Archive.org
43:03 How long did this take to make?
44:35 Festival nomination (Best Technical Achievement, 2003)
46:10 Tool credits — “Alpha 0.5”
47:00 Skyrim machinima tools & Unreal “Outside the Blocks”
48:20 Show wrap-up + listener email invite
Credits -
Co-hosts: Ricky Grove, Phil Rice, Damien Valentine, Tracy Harwood
Producer: Ricky Grove
Editor: Phil Rice
Music: Phil Rice and Suno AI