Here's the movie that was made at the time when Anti-D&D hysteria was at its peak.  Based off the book by Rona Jaffe who apparently investigated a mentally disturbed D&D player and uncovered the dangers of the game.  As I choke back the bile that is building in my throat from his supposed take on how he thinks this is how the game is played, I will say that I would be impressed if I could capture the atmosphere of seriousness that the players show in the game sequences in my own players.  I know that would never happen as someone would make a Monty Python joke or something and ruin the mood so I accept it and move on. 
So in the movie, Tom Hanks plays a guy who seems normal enough but suffers a mental break down while doing a live action version of their table top "Mazes & Monsters" game (original name there...).  Any he goes back and forth between himself and his character and wanders around New York, killing a mugger in the process.  Finally after wandering for days his friends find him and try to bring him back to reality but its too late.  Tom Hanks is gone (I could only wish).  So he spends his days at home thinking he's his character and in a fantasy world.  He and his friends go off on one final adventure, Rona Jaffe makes money, and I die a little more inside...
Isis and I found this one by accident as we were waiting in line at the grocery store.  One store has rows of cheap (sometiems obscure) movies.  I glanced over saw the cover and saw Gary Gygax's name on the front.  I won't recap the whole qoute but Gary calls it "...a very good horror story."  I love Gary but I want to know what those "..." were before he called it a good story.
With a tagline of "Roleplaying with a Vengence", I knew it'd be bad.  I didn't know how bad it'd be though. Boy howdy.
It focuses on a nerdy young fellow (whoa surprise! Who didn't see that coming?), that is picked on and spends most of his time escaping into the fantasy world through his character, a Knight (whose name escapes me).  After being spurned by a female gamer that he is in love with, he goes out and gets killed in an auto accident.  He vows that he will return for his love someday.  So, the Knight Chills title comes into play as a Knight that is similar to his character begins appearing and killing members of the gaming group that teased him.
I will give it credit that the actual gaming sequence is the most true of any of the movies mentioned so far.
Now we are gettng into the somewhat better catagory of this section.  Gamerz is one of those movies that I'm not sure if it was made By Nerds, For Nerds, or By Nerds, For Average Viewers.   The camp level isn't terribly high but neither is the plot.  It is Scottish so sometimes understanding the dialog can be a bit of a problem if you don't pay attention. 
In it we have a nerdy fellow (wait..didn't I just say that a few minutes ago?), who is picked on and escapes into a fantasy world (hmmm...deja vu..).  He is a Game Master so he makes his own campaign setting/Mega Dungeon (the Dungeon of Shzrenk! Huzzah!!) and takes over an "inferior" GM's game. 
The plot gets more bizarre as it focuses on the social interaction between the players and how it spills over into the game world.  When action is taking place in the game world it shows it in simple but rather neat computer generated sequences where the locations are detailed but the characters are black shilhouettes.
The climax shows what happens when DMs go bad as the frusterated GM does a TPK (Total Party Kill) because he is jealous over the goth-girl player toying with his feelings.  The TPK leads to an actual brawl between some of the players and the GM. That finally clears the air and they bury the hatchet.  This was more about the players than the game.  Interesting and different.
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