Overall impression
Spot the mighty whale with Captain Ahab in the 25-line Moby Dick slot machine by Microgaming, featuring Win Freezing feature and Free Spins! The feature films were edited for content, to remove objectionable material, and for time - one such instance was the first network telecast in 1962 of John Huston's 1956 film Moby Dick, a Warner Bros. Film which runs 117 minutes uncut, and yet was shown in a two-hour time slot with commercials.
Game Information | |
---|---|
Name: | Moby Dick |
Software: | Rabcat |
Game Type: | Video slot |
Paylines: | 25 |
Progressive: | No |
reels: | 5 |
Where to play?
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Read ReviewIf you're looking for a whale of a game, Rabcat and Microgaming's Moby Dick slot machine might just be the ticket. Moby Dick has been released on Microgaming's Quickfire platform, but make no mistake about it; this is a Rabcat developed title.
Moby Dick is, of course, based on the Herman Melville novel of the same name, which told the tale of Ahab's hunt for an imaginary white whale. The slot machine was one of the most anticipated games of modern times, but has the slot machine lived up to its hype? We put Moby Dick to the test, to see if Rabcat's newest slot machine sinks or swims against other leading online slot machine games.
How to play
To get the ball rolling, let's look at the payline structure of this slot machine game. Moby Dick features 25 paylines spread over 5 reels and that in and of itself is rather standard for any video slot.
This game will not permit players to alter paylines, although they can adjust their total bets. Players can expect to be able to wager anything from a floor of 25c per spin, up to a ceiling of just $50 per spin on this game. At least Moby Dick is a cheap slot to play, all things considered.
Features
Wild symbols: Players will note that the ship's wheel appears as a wild symbol in Moby Dick. This icon can substitute for any other symbols in the game, although it cannot replace scatter symbols. Again, there is nothing inherently new in that.
Re-spin bonus: Players are going to be able to trigger a re-spin bonus in this slot machine game. This occurs whenever a win is acquired on the reels of the game. Once a win has been acquired, a re-spin will be issued with all winning symbols remaining locked into place on the reels for that spin. Players can add to those winning combinations, and if they do so, the re-spins will keep on coming.
Free spins bonus: Moby Dick isn't short of a free spins bonus, either. You have to love it when a slot machine contains both a free spins bonus and a re-spins bonus. Scatters can appear stacked in this slot, so you can land far more than you would ordinarily do in a typical slot. Moby Dick's free spins bonus promises either 10, 12, 15 or 20 free games when 4, 5, or 7 scatters land on the reels. Extra wilds can boost your wins on the central reel during this free spin bonus round, and the feature can also be retriggered by landing more scatters whilst it is in play.
Maximum pay-outs
Players hoping to land a big jackpot win will need to land 5 of the Moby Dick white whale symbols on any payline in the game. This can see players pocket a jackpot worth around 200x their total bet. Alternatively, players can land 5 wilds on a payline to pocket the same cash prize. Okay, it is not exactly an epic jackpot win, but winning 200x your total bet is not to be sniffed at in a game which dishes out wins rather frequently.
Summary
Moby Dick is certainly going to lure in players. Not necessarily because of its gameplay, but because of its title. This is a slot machine based on a legendary book that most of us have read. It is an instant allure. However, from a gameplay perspective, Moby Dick is not exactly overly special, and players will begin to notice that when they start spinning the reels of this slot.
Play With $200 + 200 Free Spins - CLICK HERET&C Apply 18+The ABC Sunday Night Movie is a television program that aired on Sunday nights, first for a brief time in 1962 under the title Hollywood Special (although Time magazine lists this version as The Sunday Night Movie) to supposedly replace an open time slot for the TV show Bus Stop, which was cancelled after March 1962. It then began airing regularly under its more commonly known title from late 1964 to 1998, on ABC. Since 2004, it has aired sporadically as a special program, now titled the ABC Sunday Movie of the Week, though as of the 2011-12 television season, the only films in this timeslot were aired under the Hallmark Hall of Fame banner, which transferred to ABC in that season. However, in 2014, The Hallmark Hall of Fame moved exclusively to cable on the Hallmark Channel. As a result of this, the Sunday Night Movie is now exclusively relegated to two special holiday movies, The Sound of Music every holiday season and The Ten Commandments every Easter.
The ABC Sunday Night Movie was replaced in 1998 with The Wonderful World of Disney although the Sunday Night Movie initially continued to air alongside TWWOD for its final season.
History[edit]
Encouraged by the ratings success on NBC's Saturday Night at the Movies, ABC initially purchased 15 United Artists films released in the late 1950s for its April 1962 premiere.[1]United Artists Television also provided some short featurettes promoting upcoming United Artists cinema releases to fill out some films that ended before the two hour time slot finished.
Edits for television[edit]
Moby Dick Slot Machine
The program presented theatrical feature films airing on TV for the first time. The feature films were edited for content, to remove objectionable material, and for time - one such instance was the first network telecast in 1962 [2] of John Huston's 1956 film Moby Dick, a Warner Bros. film which runs 117 minutes uncut, and yet was shown in a two-hour time slot with commercials. In many cases, however, the broadcast was expanded from two to two-and-a-half hours to fit a film's longer running time, as in the two 1966 network telecasts of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel (a 1956 film not to be confused with the 1967videotaped television adaptation of the musical, also broadcast by ABC). The first major network showing of Superman in 1982 was broadcast in two parts with previously unused footage. Extra footage was also added to the ABC broadcast of Star Trek: The Motion Picture in 1983, Superman II in 1984 and Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan in 1985.
Because the concept of letterboxing films for television had not been introduced yet, the films shown were also pan-and-scanned so the image would fit the standard 4:3 television screen.
James Bond franchise[edit]
In 1972, ABC bought the broadcasting rights to the James Bond franchise (also by United Artists). The first film broadcast was Goldfinger. Unlike the British broadcasts of the James Bond films, the franchise was not presented in production order.
ABC made edits to the Bond films for violence, sexual content, and so that the films would fit in the time allotted, but perhaps the most controversial of these was the re-edit[dead link] of the 1969 film On Her Majesty's Secret Service broadcast on the ABC Monday Night Movie.
ABC held the rights to the James Bond films until 1990, when The Living Daylights was the final film aired prior to Turner Broadcasting buying the TV rights to the franchise. The Bond films have also aired on several cable channels not owned by Turner. ABC broadcast the films again as a promotional tie-in when Die Another Day was in theaters in 2002, dubbed as The Bond Picture Show on Saturday nights.
ABC Sunday Movie Special[edit]
Occasionally, The ABC Sunday Night Movie would telecast what they termed an ABC Sunday Movie Special when a film presentation was over three hours or overflowed prime time. When the movie in question was a family film, the telecasts would begin at an earlier hour, so that the film would end at around 11:00 p.m, enabling younger viewers to watch without having to stay up too late. The Movie Specials invariably consisted of blockbusters, such as The Bridge on the River Kwai, The Robe, Oliver!, and The Ten Commandments. The last-named film continues its television career on ABC today, having become, like The Wizard of Oz, an annual television tradition. It is usually shown during the Palm Sunday or Easter weekend (The Robe, which made its TV debut in 1968, had been shown on Easter weekends by ABC prior to being sold to local television stations). The telecast of Patton, which took place in 1972 at 9 P.M. E.S.T., was remarkably mature, in that very little of the film's profanity was cut for television.
ABC would occasionally telecast Movie Specials on other days of the week as well, among them Fiddler on the Roof, and Godspell (which was shown on network television as a Thanksgiving season special in 1974).
Method of presenting films throughout the 1960s[edit]
Beginning in 1965, The ABC Sunday Night Movie used a rather unusual method of presenting the films that movie series on other networks did not use. Except on rare occasions, such as the aforementioned Movie Specials, or films which already had a pre-credits sequence that led directly into the main title and so could not be altered, the opening credits of the particular film in question generally would not be shown until after the movie had ended. Instead, a teaser from the film was shown, whereupon an offscreen announcer (e.g. Joel Crager) would say the name of the film and its stars, and then the credit The ABC Sunday Night Movie would appear. A commercial would then follow, and when the program started up again, one would see the screenwriter and the director's names respectively - superimposed over the film's opening scene in credits manufactured by ABC. At film's end, another commercial would follow, after which, somewhat anti-climactically, the movie's actual opening credits, together with the studio logo, would then be presented exactly as they were originally made, as if the film were starting up again.
The ABC Sunday Night Movie was also famous in the mid 1970s for its theme music and brightly colored marquee. The opening has been parodied on the G4 network under the title Movies That Don't Suck.[3]
Other nights and methods of presentation[edit]
From 1968 to 1970, ABC ran a concurrent movie series on Wednesday nights, under the title The ABC Wednesday Night Movie.
A Tuesday night ABC Movie of the Week featuring only made-for-TV movies was added in 1969. The series was renamed Tuesday Movie of the Week and a Wednesday night Wednesday Movie of the Week, also presenting only made-for-TV films, was added in 1972. Both series continued until 1975.
From 1975 to 1983 (and again, briefly, in 1999) ABC ran a concurrent movie series on Friday nights, under the title The ABC Friday Night Movie.
Other concurrent movie series during that time also aired on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.
During the 1980s, films with more mature and politically charged themes, such as The Day After and Consenting Adult (homosexuality) aired under the ABC Theater banner.
Beginning in 1999, a Saturday night variant on the formula began, and has been somewhat of a ratings favorite. However, and more importantly nowadays, the ratings have varied from week to week. Since 1999, The ABC Saturday Night Movie has alternated with random repeats, The Wonderful World of Disney (up until 2008), and Saturday Night Football, which runs from the first Saturday in September, up into the first of December. Movies also alternate on various other nights of the week, for sweeps and also as holiday-based programming, such as the annual pre-Easter telecast of The Ten Commandments.
Announcers[edit]
For many years, until the early 1980s, the announcer for all of ABC's movie shows was network staff announcer Joel Crager.[4] Afterwards, the duties would be handled first by Ernie Anderson, and then others, including Gary Owens (with the announcer depending on the film's tone; Owens would do so for comedies).
How to play
To get the ball rolling, let's look at the payline structure of this slot machine game. Moby Dick features 25 paylines spread over 5 reels and that in and of itself is rather standard for any video slot.
This game will not permit players to alter paylines, although they can adjust their total bets. Players can expect to be able to wager anything from a floor of 25c per spin, up to a ceiling of just $50 per spin on this game. At least Moby Dick is a cheap slot to play, all things considered.
Features
Wild symbols: Players will note that the ship's wheel appears as a wild symbol in Moby Dick. This icon can substitute for any other symbols in the game, although it cannot replace scatter symbols. Again, there is nothing inherently new in that.
Re-spin bonus: Players are going to be able to trigger a re-spin bonus in this slot machine game. This occurs whenever a win is acquired on the reels of the game. Once a win has been acquired, a re-spin will be issued with all winning symbols remaining locked into place on the reels for that spin. Players can add to those winning combinations, and if they do so, the re-spins will keep on coming.
Free spins bonus: Moby Dick isn't short of a free spins bonus, either. You have to love it when a slot machine contains both a free spins bonus and a re-spins bonus. Scatters can appear stacked in this slot, so you can land far more than you would ordinarily do in a typical slot. Moby Dick's free spins bonus promises either 10, 12, 15 or 20 free games when 4, 5, or 7 scatters land on the reels. Extra wilds can boost your wins on the central reel during this free spin bonus round, and the feature can also be retriggered by landing more scatters whilst it is in play.
Maximum pay-outs
Players hoping to land a big jackpot win will need to land 5 of the Moby Dick white whale symbols on any payline in the game. This can see players pocket a jackpot worth around 200x their total bet. Alternatively, players can land 5 wilds on a payline to pocket the same cash prize. Okay, it is not exactly an epic jackpot win, but winning 200x your total bet is not to be sniffed at in a game which dishes out wins rather frequently.
Summary
Moby Dick is certainly going to lure in players. Not necessarily because of its gameplay, but because of its title. This is a slot machine based on a legendary book that most of us have read. It is an instant allure. However, from a gameplay perspective, Moby Dick is not exactly overly special, and players will begin to notice that when they start spinning the reels of this slot.
Play With $200 + 200 Free Spins - CLICK HERET&C Apply 18+The ABC Sunday Night Movie is a television program that aired on Sunday nights, first for a brief time in 1962 under the title Hollywood Special (although Time magazine lists this version as The Sunday Night Movie) to supposedly replace an open time slot for the TV show Bus Stop, which was cancelled after March 1962. It then began airing regularly under its more commonly known title from late 1964 to 1998, on ABC. Since 2004, it has aired sporadically as a special program, now titled the ABC Sunday Movie of the Week, though as of the 2011-12 television season, the only films in this timeslot were aired under the Hallmark Hall of Fame banner, which transferred to ABC in that season. However, in 2014, The Hallmark Hall of Fame moved exclusively to cable on the Hallmark Channel. As a result of this, the Sunday Night Movie is now exclusively relegated to two special holiday movies, The Sound of Music every holiday season and The Ten Commandments every Easter.
The ABC Sunday Night Movie was replaced in 1998 with The Wonderful World of Disney although the Sunday Night Movie initially continued to air alongside TWWOD for its final season.
History[edit]
Encouraged by the ratings success on NBC's Saturday Night at the Movies, ABC initially purchased 15 United Artists films released in the late 1950s for its April 1962 premiere.[1]United Artists Television also provided some short featurettes promoting upcoming United Artists cinema releases to fill out some films that ended before the two hour time slot finished.
Edits for television[edit]
Moby Dick Slot Machine
The program presented theatrical feature films airing on TV for the first time. The feature films were edited for content, to remove objectionable material, and for time - one such instance was the first network telecast in 1962 [2] of John Huston's 1956 film Moby Dick, a Warner Bros. film which runs 117 minutes uncut, and yet was shown in a two-hour time slot with commercials. In many cases, however, the broadcast was expanded from two to two-and-a-half hours to fit a film's longer running time, as in the two 1966 network telecasts of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel (a 1956 film not to be confused with the 1967videotaped television adaptation of the musical, also broadcast by ABC). The first major network showing of Superman in 1982 was broadcast in two parts with previously unused footage. Extra footage was also added to the ABC broadcast of Star Trek: The Motion Picture in 1983, Superman II in 1984 and Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan in 1985.
Because the concept of letterboxing films for television had not been introduced yet, the films shown were also pan-and-scanned so the image would fit the standard 4:3 television screen.
James Bond franchise[edit]
In 1972, ABC bought the broadcasting rights to the James Bond franchise (also by United Artists). The first film broadcast was Goldfinger. Unlike the British broadcasts of the James Bond films, the franchise was not presented in production order.
ABC made edits to the Bond films for violence, sexual content, and so that the films would fit in the time allotted, but perhaps the most controversial of these was the re-edit[dead link] of the 1969 film On Her Majesty's Secret Service broadcast on the ABC Monday Night Movie.
ABC held the rights to the James Bond films until 1990, when The Living Daylights was the final film aired prior to Turner Broadcasting buying the TV rights to the franchise. The Bond films have also aired on several cable channels not owned by Turner. ABC broadcast the films again as a promotional tie-in when Die Another Day was in theaters in 2002, dubbed as The Bond Picture Show on Saturday nights.
ABC Sunday Movie Special[edit]
Occasionally, The ABC Sunday Night Movie would telecast what they termed an ABC Sunday Movie Special when a film presentation was over three hours or overflowed prime time. When the movie in question was a family film, the telecasts would begin at an earlier hour, so that the film would end at around 11:00 p.m, enabling younger viewers to watch without having to stay up too late. The Movie Specials invariably consisted of blockbusters, such as The Bridge on the River Kwai, The Robe, Oliver!, and The Ten Commandments. The last-named film continues its television career on ABC today, having become, like The Wizard of Oz, an annual television tradition. It is usually shown during the Palm Sunday or Easter weekend (The Robe, which made its TV debut in 1968, had been shown on Easter weekends by ABC prior to being sold to local television stations). The telecast of Patton, which took place in 1972 at 9 P.M. E.S.T., was remarkably mature, in that very little of the film's profanity was cut for television.
ABC would occasionally telecast Movie Specials on other days of the week as well, among them Fiddler on the Roof, and Godspell (which was shown on network television as a Thanksgiving season special in 1974).
Method of presenting films throughout the 1960s[edit]
Beginning in 1965, The ABC Sunday Night Movie used a rather unusual method of presenting the films that movie series on other networks did not use. Except on rare occasions, such as the aforementioned Movie Specials, or films which already had a pre-credits sequence that led directly into the main title and so could not be altered, the opening credits of the particular film in question generally would not be shown until after the movie had ended. Instead, a teaser from the film was shown, whereupon an offscreen announcer (e.g. Joel Crager) would say the name of the film and its stars, and then the credit The ABC Sunday Night Movie would appear. A commercial would then follow, and when the program started up again, one would see the screenwriter and the director's names respectively - superimposed over the film's opening scene in credits manufactured by ABC. At film's end, another commercial would follow, after which, somewhat anti-climactically, the movie's actual opening credits, together with the studio logo, would then be presented exactly as they were originally made, as if the film were starting up again.
The ABC Sunday Night Movie was also famous in the mid 1970s for its theme music and brightly colored marquee. The opening has been parodied on the G4 network under the title Movies That Don't Suck.[3]
Other nights and methods of presentation[edit]
From 1968 to 1970, ABC ran a concurrent movie series on Wednesday nights, under the title The ABC Wednesday Night Movie.
A Tuesday night ABC Movie of the Week featuring only made-for-TV movies was added in 1969. The series was renamed Tuesday Movie of the Week and a Wednesday night Wednesday Movie of the Week, also presenting only made-for-TV films, was added in 1972. Both series continued until 1975.
From 1975 to 1983 (and again, briefly, in 1999) ABC ran a concurrent movie series on Friday nights, under the title The ABC Friday Night Movie.
Other concurrent movie series during that time also aired on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.
During the 1980s, films with more mature and politically charged themes, such as The Day After and Consenting Adult (homosexuality) aired under the ABC Theater banner.
Beginning in 1999, a Saturday night variant on the formula began, and has been somewhat of a ratings favorite. However, and more importantly nowadays, the ratings have varied from week to week. Since 1999, The ABC Saturday Night Movie has alternated with random repeats, The Wonderful World of Disney (up until 2008), and Saturday Night Football, which runs from the first Saturday in September, up into the first of December. Movies also alternate on various other nights of the week, for sweeps and also as holiday-based programming, such as the annual pre-Easter telecast of The Ten Commandments.
Announcers[edit]
For many years, until the early 1980s, the announcer for all of ABC's movie shows was network staff announcer Joel Crager.[4] Afterwards, the duties would be handled first by Ernie Anderson, and then others, including Gary Owens (with the announcer depending on the film's tone; Owens would do so for comedies).
Decline due to the advent of cable networks[edit]
The advent of such cable television networks as HBO, Cinemax, Showtime and The Movie Channel (all of which broadcast theatrical films on cable before they appear on commercial television), along with the emergence of various home video formats, led to the decline of theatrical films regularly airing on commercial network TV. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, print ads for The ABC Sunday Night Movie regularly played up the quality of the film being offered to viewers at no cost ('Another Great Film Not On Pay TV'). Whereas one used to be able to see a relatively recent theatrical film on prime time commercial network television every night of the week, this is now done only occasionally (or, in the case of ABC's Saturday Movie of the Week, only when the network has no other sports commitments, usually confined to holiday weekends). Only cable networks exclusively devoted to films, such as AMC or Turner Classic Movies, show theatrical films in prime time every night; the big three networks, including the newer Fox network no longer follow this practice, except perhaps on holidays. The grand opening sequences of the past are now usually eschewed by merely mentioning the airing title in an 'up next' sequence, or a direct cut to a disclaimer noting the film has been edited and presented for a broadcast television presentation with the assumption viewers have already viewed the basic electronic program guide information for the film.
Ratings for selected films[edit]
Date | Movie | Household ratings or viewers |
---|---|---|
1966-09-25 | The Bridge on the River Kwai | Rating: 38.3 |
1967-03-26 | The Robe | Rating: 31.0 |
1972-10-01 | Love Story | Rating: 42.3 |
1972-11-12 | True Grit | Rating: 38.9 |
1972-11-19 | Patton | Rating: 38.5 |
1973-02-18 | The Ten Commandments | Rating: 33.2 |
1973-11-11 | Airport | Rating: 42.3 |
1974-10-27 | The Poseidon Adventure | Rating: 39.0 |
1976-01-18 | Jeremiah Johnson | Rating: 37.5 |
1976-02-29 | The Sound of Music | Rating: 33.6 |
1979-11-04 | Jaws | Rating: 39.1 |
1982-10-31 | The Wild Women of Chastity Gulch | Rating: 17 |
1983-11-20 | The Day After | Rating: 46 |
1989-11-26 | Blind Witness | Rating: 16.3 |
1990-03-11 | Brewster Place | Viewers: 13.9 million |
1990-03-18 | Love and Lies | Viewers: 16.8 million |
1991-05-12 | An Inconvenient Woman (Part 1 of 2) | Viewers: 16.6 million |
1993-10-10 | Shameful Secrets | Viewers: 18.1 million |
1997-02-16 | ..First Do No Harm | Viewers: 15.7 million |
1997-09-28 | Two Came Back | Viewers: 13.28 million |
1997-11-02 | Before Women Had Wings | Rating: 18.7 |
1997-12-28 | I Love Trouble | Viewers: 17.6 million |
2001-02-11 | Dr. Dolittle | Viewers: 15.6 million |
2001-11-11 | Saving Private Ryan | Viewers: 17.9 million |
2002-01-27 | Mouse Hunt | Viewers: 10.4 million |
2002-11-24 | The Pennsylvania Miners' Story | Viewers: 13.2 million |
2002-12-29 | The Sound of Music | Viewers: 11.5 million |
2003-05-11 | E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial | Viewers: 7.5 million |
2004-02-08 | Pearl Harbor | Viewers: 9.4 million |
2004-05-09 | Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone | Viewers: 11.1 million |
2004-06-20 | Bicentennial Man | Viewers: 5.1 million |
2004-12-05 | Mitch Albom's The Five People You Meet in Heaven | Viewers: 18.6 million |
References[edit]
- ^p. 146 Castleman, Harry & Podrazik, Walter J. Watching TV: Six Decades of American Television Syracuse University Press, 2003
- ^Moby Dick (1956) - IMDb, retrieved 2020-09-19
- ^YouTube video of Movies That Don't Suck intro, which mirrors that of ABC's intro from the 1970s.
- ^'Joel Crager Profile by Scott Benjamin'. www.musicradio77.com. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
Moby Dick Summary
External links[edit]
- The ABC Sunday Night Movie at IMDb