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Great Pinball Machines: Bally's Cirqus Voltaire
The video game is now a ubiquitous part of American pop culture but pinball still holds a cachet of cool. Pinball went through a few lean years during the early years of the video boom, when designers tried to cram as much stuff onto the playfield as possible, perhaps feeling the clutter was needed to replicate the video game experience. In recent years, however, designers appear to have concluded--and rightly so--that pinball cannot be a video game, nor should it want to be.
A great game of recent vintage is the 1997 Bally release "Cirqus Voltaire". The theme is sort of a 'Cirque du Soleil" on acid, and the iconography of the circus that they cram into the design and play of the game is amazing. The ultimate object of the game is to "join the cirqus", which, of course, is a classical American archetype of freedom and escape. Yet this "Cirqus" is not a Norman Rockwell vision of juvenile fun--there are a lot of sinister undertones as well, including evil ringmasters and an almost palpable feeling of sleaze. The clowns here have more in common with the Simpsons' 'Krusty the Clown' than with Emmett Kelly.
The game play offers many Williams/Bally standards, with sweeping ramp shots, clever uses of time-worn features (like the disappearing pop bumper, reincarnated here as a balloon. This feature dates back to the 1950's and appeared on Williams "Gusher" among others), and multi-ball a-plenty.
At its nadir, pinball companies were cranking out games featuring themes and subjects that offered little, if any, synergy with game play. The low point might have been some of the celebrity tie-in games of the early eighties (which gave the world debacles like a Dolly Parton and Roy Clark tie-in). "Cirqus Voltaire" may represent a high point of thematic unity between game subjects, aesthetic design and play experience. It offers an otherworldly interpretation on a circus, with subtext, nuance and detail.
The really great thing about the game is the multiple levels of contextual awareness it offers. It alternately provides a celebration and condemnation of the circus and, deeper still, of the popular culture that spawns embraces them. This is not a new notion for a pinball machine to offer different levels of interpretation of seemingly innocuous events (it dates back to the pioneering artist Roy Parker, if not before) but in recent years it may not have been done more deftly than in Cirqus Voltaire.
Author Resource:-
Ross Everett is a experienced freelance writer who covers travel, poker and sports handicapping. He is a staff handicapper for Anatta Sports where he is responsible for providing daily free sports picks. In his spare time he enjoys fine dining, flower arranging and scuba diving. He lives in Southern Nevada with four dogs and a pet coyote.
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