State Of Play

  • Runtime87 min
  • DirectorSteven Dhoedt
  • GenreDocumentary
  • Released2013

Written by STEVEN DHOEDT I Camera STEVEN DHOEDT  I Original Music REGINA LOK YAN TO I Edited by GERT VAN BERCKELAER  I Sound Edit & Mix  RAF ENCKELS I Production Manager DAVID KIM TAE HOON I Produced by STEVEN DHOEDT  KIM MIN-CHUL  GERT VAN BERCKELAER

A co-production with MINCH & FILMS I RTBF I TV CHOSUN

Supported by FLANDERS AUDIOVISUAL FUND I CREATIVE EUROPE I KOREA COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION I  SEOUL FILM COMMISSION


‘STATE OF PLAY’ is – on the surface – a film about cometitive sports. But this time the sport in question is rather unusual. ‘Starcraft’ is a video game and especially in the West people don’t usually relate this with professional sports (just yet). In this case, the city of Seoul is the epicenter of the Starcraft Pro League. Players of StarCraft do not excel in extraordinary physical or athletic performances. They possess an exceptional concentration skill, ultra fast reflexes and an unusual stamina. Their playing speed is measured in ‘actions per minute’ (APM): it’s the amount of actions per minute a player can execute with keyboard and mouse. But just as most athletes, these players are very young when they start their professional career. Most of them quit school at 15 and embark on an extremely strict training schedule. Parallels can be easily drawn with the lifestyle of e.g. a professional gymnast or figure skaters.

The fascination to tell this story was triggered by the unusual Korean culture. The micro-world of the StarCraft Pro League is like a mirror of the South Korean society. A society so competitive that it almost seems logical that a simple videogame would result in a professional competitive sport. South-Korea is a country that aims high. It’s a country in full development that wants to prove itself on all levels – technologically, economically as politically.
‘STATE OF PLAY’ thus opens a window on the South Korean society and the rather unknown subculture of e-Sports.

Globally, hundreds of thousands of young players are seriously contemplating a professional career as a gamer. Annually, millions of viewers are attending the leagues or following the tournaments online. As competitive gaming is gaining momentum all over the world, it is time to show the true face of eSports.

Unlike several popular TV shows and newspaper articles before us, it is not our goal to demonise or to glorify the world of competitive gaming. This is not a world of
gaming addicts or social outcasts. Neither is it world where everyone achieves their dream and lives happily ever after.

Our aim is to show that eSports, even if it’s still in its embryonic phase, is a respectable spectator sport bringing joy and excitement to millions of people. For the athletes, it demands years of training and dedication to reach the top. As with all good sport stories, ‘State of Play’ thus depicts a journey of victory but also of defeat. Of hardships but also of friendships.

Ultimately, our film asks the same question so many athletes ask themselves: what does it take to be the best?

screenings

in the media

Guru Gamer

The video aims to clarify the effect of the debate, making a motion picture that is tempting as well as eye-opening.

Read the full Guru Gamer review

Word From The ROK

Three years in the making, State of Play finally premiered in South Korea on June 27th 2013. Its the first Belgian Korean co-production of Visualantics and Minch & Films.

Read the full Word From The ROK review

PU: Samuel

Op het internet wordt vaak gegrapt dat StarCraft de nationale sport is van Zuid-Korea, maar na het kijken van State of Play zou je het nog bijna geloven ook.

Read the full Korean Grindhouse review

Nonfics: Christopher Campbell

Although it’s hard to show the game play in a way that’s easy to follow, especially to viewers not familiar with StarCraft, he still delivers a compelling portrait of this industry and culture through individual characters,

Read the full Nonfics review

GoSu Gamer: Andrei Filote

Watching the GSL, I sometimes forget the effort needed to enter that stage. Even more astonishing is that the young people who compete decided at an even younger age to give it all their all, even though nobody was there support them.

Read the full GoSu Gamers review
    • 2014
    • NYC Indepentent Film Festival
    • Award for Best Documentary
    • 2014
    • Portland Film Festival
    • In Competition
    • 2014
    • Cinemasia Amsterdam
    • In Competition
    • 2014
    • Astra Film Festival
    • In Competition
    • 2013
    • Docville
    • In Competition
    • 2014
    • Film Festival Kitzbuhel
    • Out of competition
    • 2013
    • Film Festival Ostend
    • In Competition
    • 2013
    • CNEX Int. Documentary Festival Taipei
    • International Premiere
    • 2014
    • F.A.M.E.
    • Out of competition
    • 2013
    • Enfances Dans Le Monde
    • Out of competition
    • 2014
    • Cincinnati Film Festival
    • Out of competition
    • 2015
    • One World Film Festival
    • In Competition
    • 2015
    • Silk Road Film Festival
    • In Competition
    • 2015
    • L.A. Indie Fest
    • In Competition
    • 2015
    • DocPoint Helsinki
    • Out of competition
  • Runtime87 min
  • DirectorSteven Dhoedt
  • GenreDocumentary
  • Released2013

in the media

Guru Gamer

The video aims to clarify the effect of the debate, making a motion picture that is tempting as well as eye-opening.

Read the full Guru Gamer review

Word From The ROK

Three years in the making, State of Play finally premiered in South Korea on June 27th 2013. Its the first Belgian Korean co-production of Visualantics and Minch & Films.

Read the full Word From The ROK review

PU: Samuel

Op het internet wordt vaak gegrapt dat StarCraft de nationale sport is van Zuid-Korea, maar na het kijken van State of Play zou je het nog bijna geloven ook.

Read the full Korean Grindhouse review

Nonfics: Christopher Campbell

Although it’s hard to show the game play in a way that’s easy to follow, especially to viewers not familiar with StarCraft, he still delivers a compelling portrait of this industry and culture through individual characters,

Read the full Nonfics review

GoSu Gamer: Andrei Filote

Watching the GSL, I sometimes forget the effort needed to enter that stage. Even more astonishing is that the young people who compete decided at an even younger age to give it all their all, even though nobody was there support them.

Read the full GoSu Gamers review