Hotline Miami: Maybe It Wasn’t As Great As We All Thought
What if Fight Club came out today? What if there was a sequel? Would the franchise still be as well-received?
I might be dating myself here, but I remember when Fight Club was considered to be the height of edgy commentary. Everyone I knew was really into the film, particularly my male peers. After a while, I found myself caring a lot less about it than they did. “Reclaiming masculinity through violence” was not a new idea at the time, and it definitely did not seem to me like a groundbreaking reaction to the perception that our culture is somehow overly feminized. In short, the more I grew up, the less I liked Fight Club. It started to be a sort of ideological litmus test over time, too. If I met someone who liked Fight Club a whole lot, that often turned out to be a sign that they really bought into its’ themes.
In that vein, have you ever considered that Hotline Miami as a franchise was never good?
The reviews have been coming in fast and furious for Hotline Miami 2, and many have bemoaned the mechanical and narrative aspects and claimed that it’s a shoddy sequel to what was arguably a strong first game. The game’s pace has slowed due to expanded level sizes, and the story is overall extremely weak. What made the first game enjoyable was the heightened mood, the unforgiving difficulty and the potent aesthetics coming together to a taut murder-fest. The sequel, however, undoes the successful format of the first. Does it also serve to highlight that maybe neither game can stand up over time?
The things that supposedly made Hotline Miami great feel incongruous to how we receive new games coming out now. In an era where we’re poo-pooing other titles for leaning too far into “apolitical” violence simulation (like Hatred, for instance), Hotline Miami 2’s failure is only that it didn’t live up to the hype that the first game set. I believe that despite Hotline Miami only coming out 3 years ago, its time has already passed.
Media is not always as timeless we’d like to believe, especially now in the time of instant reaction and ever-changing political awareness. Many things we liked at one point become irrelevant and even offensive when we return to them years later, since we are always growing and changing as people. For example, Breakfast At Tiffany’s is still considered a classic for any film buff, but modern audiences cannot help but be struck by the film’s discomfiting racism and orientalism. Some stuff I remembered being really into even just a couple of years ago don’t survive a second re-watch or play-through without seeing all the issues. (My love of Bioshock comes to mind.)