| Immortality | |
|---|---|
| Developer | Sam Barlow |
| Publisher | Half Mermaid Productions |
| Director | Sam Barlow |
| Producers |
|
| Programmer | Connor Carson |
| Writers |
|
| Composer | Nainita Desai |
| Engine | Unity[1] |
| Platforms | |
| Release |
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| Genre | Interactive film |
| Mode | Single-player |
Immortality is a 2022interactive filmvideo game developed bySam Barlow and published by Half Mermaid Productions. It was released forWindows andXbox Series X/S in August, whileAndroid andiOS versions were released viaNetflix in November 2022. AmacOS version was released in April 2023. A port forPlayStation 5 was released in January 2024.
The game is based on the fictional model turned actress Marissa Marcel (Manon Gage) who had starred in three movies from 1968, 1970, and 1999 but which were never released. Marcel has since gone missing, creating a mystery for the player to solve. In the same manner as Barlow's prior worksHer Story andTelling Lies,Immortality incorporates the use offull-motion video for the player to piece together Marcel's fate.[2] The player begins with one clip from one of the three films, and the player can pause and click on a person or item of interest. The game will then show all other clips from the three films, as well as behind-the-scenes production footage and television and interview clips, which the player can review and seek out further persons or items.[3]
The game is presented as a compilation of previously lostfound footage of the filmography of actress Marissa Marcel as well as associated promotional and behind-the-scenes material. Much of the plot is shown through secret footage the player reveals by manipulating the footage from the films, TV interviews, etc.; because of this, the plot progresses in a non-chronological, broken narrative format. This synopsis follows chronological order.
Two immortal beings, "The One" and "The Other", predate humanity and are able to live indefinitely by taking on the forms of humans and living their lives. This ostensibly ends the human's life, though elements of their personalities and memories mingle with the beings' own personalities and memories. Their kind's numbers have dwindled since human civilization began. They can regenerate from being killed, though some methods, especially burning, are implied to be physically permanent.
The One is fascinated with humanity, particularly their proclivities for sex, violence, and art. The Other is ambivalent toward Humanity, seeing them as inferior copies of the immortal beings, and believes that the immortals and humans should exist separate from each other. However, they indulge The One in their exploration of humanity.
The One becomes Marissa Marcel, a French girl who is implied to have been mortally wounded by German soldiers in World War II and absorbed by The One as a mercy. In 1968 she auditions and is awarded a role inAmbrosio, a film based on the gothic novelThe Monk by Matthew Lewis. During filming she becomes romantically involved withdirector of photography John Durick. The film's director, Arthur Fischer, steals the negatives, which prevents the film from ever being released.
Two years later, John directsMinsky, a detective story set in New York City's avant-garde art world. Marissa is lead and co-writer. Midway through production, The Other takes over the form of lead actor Carl Greenwood. While filming a scene, Marissa shoots and kills Carl with a prop gun at point blank range. To the rest of the cast and crew, this appears to be a tragic accident; the truth is that The One intentionally killed The Other due to their growing rift over The One's fascination with human creativity. The One also has The Other's body cremated, which both believe is the only way to kill an immortal permanently. Carl's death causes filming to halt, and the film is never released. Marissa reveals to John her and Carl's true natures as immortals, and that she killed Carl. John is horrified by this, which disappoints The One. They kill John and takes on his form, shedding Marissa's form. The general public assumes Marissa became a recluse.
Nearly 30 years later, Fischer gives the negatives fromAmbrosio to John in an attempt to free himself from deathbed regrets. The nostalgia causes The One to remember Marissa fondly and take on her form simultaneously with John's form, essentially existing in two bodies at once. Meanwhile, actress Amy Archer watches footage of Carl's death, which allows The Other to take her form. The Other reconciles with The One, now aware of cinema's ability to give them true immortality. John, Marissa, and Amy begin work on a new film,Two of Everything, where pop star Maria allows her coincidentally-identical body double Heather to take her place at a billionaire's birthday party. John directs and Marissa plays both Maria and Heather (paralleling The One's attempt to exist as two people). Amy plays the billionaire's wife who has Heather murdered, thinking she is Maria, to cover up an attempted rape by her husband. During filming, Marissa is sometimes unresponsive and suffers nosebleeds, and both she and John occasionally collapse in exhaustion. John is frequently absent during filming, implying that he vanishes when The One cannot maintain both forms. Amy pleads with Marissa to take breaks, but Marissa rebuffs her concerns. In the movie's last-filmed scene, Marissa spontaneously bleeds from her head. The One asks the Other to help her die onscreen as The Other did, and therefore become truly immortalized in film. Amy films herself burning an inert Marissa's body.Two of Everything never finishes filming.
The grid containing the clips they've collected during the game slowly disappears, revealing the face of The One. They tell the player they are "part of you, now," implying the player is their new host.

Barlow had announcedImmortality as "Project Ambrosio" in 2020 and had blogged about its development over the year. His writing suggested that the game may have more of ahorror-themed nature than his previous games, along with several passages marked as ifclassified orredacted information.[4][5] Barlow brought on three additional screenwriters for the game:Allan Scott,Amelia Gray, andBarry Gifford.[2]
Casting for the game took place overZoom in early 2021.[6] It had been Manon Gage's first role in three years since graduating from theJuilliard School.[6] Filming for the three film-themed scripts was done chronologically and covered 400 pages.[6] It was shot over a 10 week period inArts District, Los Angeles around August 2021.[6]
The game was formally announced during theE3 2021 event in June that year for Microsoft Windows, iOS, and Android.[2] In March 2022, Half Mermaid Productions announced that a version for Xbox Series X/S would also be available at launch.[7] During PC Gaming Show 2022, it was announced that the game would release on 26 July 2022, but was later delayed to 30 August 2022.[8][9] In August 2022, it was announced that the mobile ports would be published byNetflix.[10]
Immortality premiered at theTribeca Film Festival in June 2022.[11] It was subsequently released on August 30, 2022 onXbox Series X/S,Xbox Game Pass, andWindows viaSteam andGOG.[12] It released on Netflix viaGoogle Play andiOS in November 2022.[13]
| Aggregator | Score |
|---|---|
| Metacritic | PC: 87/100[14] XSXS: 88/100[15] |
| Publication | Score |
|---|---|
| Adventure Gamers | |
| Destructoid | 9/10[17] |
| Edge | 10/10 |
| Electronic Gaming Monthly | |
| Eurogamer | Recommended[25] |
| GameSpot | 8/10[19] |
| GamesRadar+ | |
| IGN | 8/10[21] |
| PC Gamer (US) | 95/100[22] |
| The Telegraph | |
| The Guardian | |
| VG247 |
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(September 2022) |
Immortality received "generally favorable" reviews according toreview aggregatorMetacritic.[14][15]
In anearly review due to its print format,Edge awardedImmortality a perfect 10/10 score, the24th game in its history to do so.[27]
In addition,Immortality has been praised for its acting performances, notably that of Manon Gage, who has received critical acclaim for her performance as Marissa Marcel.Edge called her performance "outstanding."Vulture's Lewis Gordon called it "a knockout performance."[28] PJ O'Reilly ofPure Xbox said Gage "provides a core performance that marks her out as an absolute superstar in the making."[29]Vice's Cameron Kunzelman noted: "...watching Gage play Marcel playing these characters is like watching someone juggle while riding a unicycle in the middle of the Indy 500, and she does it perfectly and without breaking a sweat. It’s really something."[30]
Charlotta Mohlin has also been praised for her performance, withEdge calling her "remarkable",[27] and Tristan Ogilvie ofIGN calling her "spellbinding."[21] Well Played AU's James Wood said "[Mohlin's] work is something I will be thinking about for years to come."[31]
| Year | Award | Category | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Golden Joystick Awards | Best Performer (Manon Gage) | Won | [32] |
| Ultimate Game of the Year | Nominated | |||
| Best Storytelling | Nominated | |||
| The Game Awards 2022 | Best Performance (Manon Gage) | Nominated | [33] | |
| Best Narrative | Nominated | |||
| Best Game Direction | Nominated | |||
| 2023 | Society of Composers & Lyricists Awards | Outstanding Original Score for Interactive Media | Nominated | [34] |
| New York Game Awards | Big Apple Award for Best Game of the Year | Nominated | [35] | |
| Off Broadway Award for Best Indie Game | Nominated | |||
| Herman Melville Award for Best Writing in a Game | Nominated | |||
| Great White Way Award for Best Acting in a Game (Manon Gage) | Won | |||
| 26th Annual D.I.C.E. Awards | Mobile Game of the Year | Nominated | [36] | |
| Outstanding Achievement for an Independent Game | Nominated | |||
| Outstanding Achievement in Game Direction | Nominated | |||
| Outstanding Achievement in Story | Nominated | |||
| 23rd Game Developers Choice Awards | Game of the Year | Nominated | [37][38] | |
| Best Design | Honorable mention | |||
| Innovation Award | Won | |||
| Best Narrative | Nominated | |||
| Best Technology | Honorable mention | |||
| Independent Games Festival | Seumas McNally Grand Prize | Nominated | [39][40] | |
| Excellence in Audio | Honorable mention | |||
| Excellence in Narrative | Won | |||
| 19th British Academy Games Awards | Artistic Achievement | Nominated | [41][42] | |
| Narrative | Won | |||
| Performer in a Leading Role (Manon Gage) | Nominated | |||
| Performer in a Supporting Role (Charlotta Mohlin) | Nominated | |||
| Technical Achievement | Nominated | |||
| EE Game of the Year | Nominated |