Whenever something gets popular, there’s always going to be somethingknocking it off. Why get those expensiveJustice Leaguetoys when there’s a dollar store with theSense of Right Alliance? LikeSonic the Hedgehog? Then check outAwesome Possum! That’s not getting into the musical debate over which singer/band is a clone of another singer/band. The Beatles Vs The Monkees. Radiohead Vs Muse. Amy Winehouse Vs Duffy, etc.

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The most infamous copycats come fromcinema. Take a popular series, prefix it with a country, and fans will find a plethora of films that took ‘inspiration’ from another. There’s TurkishStar Wars(The Man Who Saved the Earth), ItalianJaws(Cruel Jaws), BritishThe Longest Yard(Mean Machine), and more. It happens to other media too, as thesefilms have copied video gamesto one degree or another.

5Final Fantasy And My Final Fantasy

It’s been said surprisingly often that 2001’sFinal Fantasy: The Spirits Withinwould’ve gone down better if it wasn’t a tie-in to the premier RPG series. The film had little in common with the games. Sure, some of them involved going to outer space, using fancy hi-tech gear, or other sci-fi tropes. But they were mainly fantasy games (hence the name), not dull predecessors toMass Effect. Still, that film might as well have been canon compared to the NigerianFinal FantasyandMy Final Fantasyfilms.

While B-tier Western studios will usually make a similar film and change the title a bit (Transmorphersinstead ofTransformers, etc.), Nigeria’s Nollywood went in a different direction here. They made two romantic dramas and named them after the JRPG series. They’ve done the same withGod of War(an African period drama) andStreet Fighter(akaStreet Fighters, an action comedy). Anyone in the know would check it out in the hopes of finding a Nigerian take onChocobos and Summons, only to get something closer toAlong Came PollyorHitch. How disappointing.

Video Game Knock-Off Films- Nigerian Final Fantasy

4Ek Tha Tiger And Indrajith

That said, there are more obvious copies out there. In fact, some games were so nice they were copied twice. India’s Bollywood produced two films that were very similar to theUnchartedgames. The first one, 2012’sEk Tha Tiger, was about a spy for RAW (India’s CIA equivalent) reclaiming nuclear secrets. He isn’tgoing through tombs like Nathan Drake, but his adventure is suspiciously close to Nate’s 3rd outingUncharted 3: Drake’s Deception. What with the similar clothes, stunts, setting, and poster.

2017’sIndrajithwent one further, as the film is about the title character joining an older man on an adventure to find a magical stone in the jungle before a set of rivals get to it. The makers said they were aiming more forIndiana Jones, though its youthful lead and older mentor bring Nathan Drake and Sully more to mind than Harrison Ford and Sean Connery. That, and the Himalayan stunt sequences and setting resemble those fromUncharted 2: Among Thieves. Oh, and the posters where Indrajith poses identically to Drake on theUncharted 1& 2covers.

Video Game Knock-Off Films- Indrajith Ek Tha Tiger Uncharted

3The Avenging Fist

Originally, this 2001 Hong Kong film was going to be calledLegend of Tekken. But producer Jing Wong didn’t get the license from Namco to use the fighting franchise. So, the film becameThe Avenging Fistand ended with a disclaimer saying the film was “not based on or related to any of theTekkenvideo games”. At first, it seems different enough as the plot is based largely around a set of gloves that give their user superpowers. But it drove one of its test subjects over the edge, leading them to go MIA.

Related:Is It More Important for a Tekken Movie to Be Accurate, or Be ‘Good’?

Video Game Knock-Off Films- Tekken 3 Hwoarang Avenging Fist

Then, it all gets familiar 20 years later as that subject’s son Nova takes part in a fighting tournament to take down the big villain Combat 21, and his returning father Dark Thunder. The three are loosely based on Jin Kazama, Heihachi and Kazuya Mishima. While Belle (Xiaoyu), Iron Surfer (Hwoarang), and his unnamed tournament opponent (Bryan Fury) were much more blatantlyTekken-inspired. Shame they couldn’t get Jackie Chan to play a counterpart to Lei Wulong. Instead, they got his classic co-stars Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao. It’s a nice touch, but they’ve been in better films, with and without Chan.

218.11: A Code Of Secrecy

Heading back to India,18.11: A Code of Secrecyfrom 2014 is about a software engineer who develops a program that warns everyone within an area if a bomb is about to go off. This catches the interest of Captain Rack, who wants to buy the technology, only to get spurned. In retaliation, Rack frames the engineer for terrorism. It’s up to the plucky programmer to find a way out of this mess.

So, the film is about a baseball cap-wearing figure seeking revenge, using a weapon in one hand and a phone in the other to do tech wizardry with. While it’s not completely identical to the game, it sounds like a close-enough copy toWatch Dogsand itsoriginal lead Aiden Pearce. The film didn’t have to worry about deceptive trailers, but it did have to worry about being bad.India Timessaid it was excessively preachy and “the songs are terribly placed”. Another critic said it would’ve been the perfect satire if it wasn’t totally serious about its subject.

Video Game Knock-Off Films- Watch Dogs 18.11 A Code of Secrecy

1Bonsam Besu

Finally, it’s back to Africa. Only instead of returning to Nigeria, the next film comes straight out of Ghana. This take onDevil May Crycaused a stir when its trailer hit the web back in 2011. It’s a bizarre collection of events as people yell “Bonsam Besu!” (“The Devil Will Cry” in Akan) and “Devil May Cry” intercut with bad CGI demons and monsters running amok on the streets. They can take human form, randomly attack people from behind, and terrorize the streets as the locals look on in shock. Or at least the ones in close medium shots do. Everyone else just minds their own business.

It rivals theDMC5live-action storyboard cutscenesin its surreal nature. Yet little else seems to be known about this film. Unlike its Nigerian equivalents, it does come close to theDevil May Crygames, as one hero tries to fight the demons with a mock sword. The director/producer Ninja did release a video commentary on the film on his YouTube channel Ninja Official TV, but it’s not in English. So, viewers will have to brush up on their Akan knowledge to learn the full plot behind this bizarre little film.

Video Game Knock-Off Films- Bonsam Besu DMC4