Filmmakers Unearth Legendary Atari 'E.T.' Trove
Thousands of copies of the notoriously bad game were buried in a New Mexico landfill
A legendary trove of Atari's E.T. The Extraterrestrial video game has at long last been unearthed. The Associated Press reports that a documentary film production company dug the huge stash of game cartridges out of a landfill in Alamagordo, New Mexico on Saturday, confirming rumors that had circulated for decades regarding the fate of the notoriously terrible game.
The tale of E.T., often hailed as the worst video game ever made, has long fascinated dedicated gamers and pop culture historians. Atari had released the game in 1982 after buying the rights to E.T. from director Steven Spielberg for $22 million. After it proved a failure in sales, reports emerged that the company had quietly dumped millions of unsold copies of the game into a city landfill somewhere and encased them in concrete. Two years later, Atari was out of business and the American video game industry had fallen on hard times.
Although a few people, including the game's designer, Howard Scott Warsaw, insisted that the mass burial was just an urban legend, director Zak Penn decided to find out for sure. The writer of The Avengers and X-Men 2 is helming a documentary on the story for Fuel Entertainment and Xbox Entertainment Studios as part of a series of original programming to be released on Microsoft's Xbox game consoles. To help with the excavation, he enlisted University of North Dakota archaeologist Bill Caraher, a specialist in medieval Christian architecture and former Atari 2600 owner.
A crowd of local residents and gamers gathered at the excavation site on Saturday morning as backhoes and bulldozers ripped through the landfill's concrete covering. To entertain the spectators as they waited, a 1980s game console was hooked up to a TV in the back of a van and a life-size E.T. doll had been arranged inside a DeLorean.
Just before 1 p.m. on Saturday, the crew hit their target, unearthing hundreds of the E.T. game cartridges, along with boxes, other games and Atari hardware. "For anybody who doubted," Penn told the crowd, according to CNET, "there's a whole heck of a lot of games down there. We just saw them."
Latest News
- Aug 12, 2014Robin Williams, Oscar-Winning Actor and Comedian, Dead at 63 in Apparent Suicide
"He has been battling severe depression of late," says actor's publicist. "This is a tragic and sudden loss"
- Jul 27, 2014On the Cover: Yasmine Hamdan
Get a first look at the new issue of Rolling Stone Middle East
- Jul 06, 2014From Beirut to Britain: Postcards Hit the Road
The Lebanese folk-rock outfit on their U.K. tour and plans for their debut studio album
- Jul 05, 2014Dubomedy Team Take 'Clowns Who Care' Classes to Refugee Camp
Young Syrian refugees in Jordan receive performing arts and visual arts classes
- Jul 04, 2014Ahmed Nour's 'Waves' Wins at Ismailia Film Festival
Egyptian director picks up Best Long Documentary award for intimate look at revolution

Newsletter
Most Popular
-
Hamza Arnaout: Songs That Give Me Goose Bumps – Playlist Special 2014
-
Perfect Storm: Nineties Hip-Hop – Playlist Special 2014
-
Miran Gurunian: Songs I Wish That I’d Written – Playlist Special 2014
-
Will Janssen: Eighties Metal – Playlist Special 2014
-
Vin Nair: The Greatest Rock Ballads – Playlist Special 2014
