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* AdultFear: Learning that your barely-year-old-child is dying of cancer and slowly watching them get worse.
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It begins with Ryan and Amy Green, a devoutly Christian married couple and parents of three, [[DownerBeginning learning that their youngest Joel has been diagnosed with a rare form of Cancer at the age of twelve months and has only four left to live]]. Joel ends up surviving, but continues to live with the illness. His father, an indie game developer, decides to [[IShouldWriteABookAboutThis document his family's experience with raising a dying child]] in an autobiographical exploration game titled ''That Dragon, Cancer'', named for a bedtime story about Joel that he and his wife would tell their children. What begins as a simple way for the Green's to cope with their impending loss soon becomes a poetic message about what we do for our loved ones and how the more difficult parts can sway our own beliefs.
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It begins with Ryan and Amy Green, a devoutly Christian married couple and parents of three, [[DownerBeginning learning that their youngest Joel has been diagnosed with a rare form of Cancer cancer at the age of twelve months and has only four left to live]]. Joel ends up surviving, but continues to live with the illness. His father, an indie game developer, decides to [[IShouldWriteABookAboutThis document his family's experience with raising a dying child]] in an autobiographical exploration game titled ''That Dragon, Cancer'', named for a bedtime story about Joel that he and his wife would tell their children. What begins as a simple way for the Green's to cope with their impending loss soon becomes a poetic message about what we do for our loved ones and how the more difficult parts can sway our own beliefs.
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* CreatorCouple: Ryan, an indie game developer, creates the game with his wife, a writer, supplying the script.
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* CreatorCouple: InUniverse (and out, since it's a documentary). Ryan, an indie game developer, creates the game with his wife, a writer, supplying the script.
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!!Tropes appearing in this documentary
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!!Tropes appearing in thisdocumentarydocumentary:
!!Tropes appearing in this
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''Thank You For Playing'' is a 2015 documentary about the creation of the critically acclaimed indie game ''That Dragon, Cancer''.
''Thank You For Playing'' is a 2015 documentary about the creation of the critically acclaimed indie game ''That Dragon, Cancer''.
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''Thank You
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[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/static1squarespace.png]]
''Thank You For Playing'' is a 2015 documentary about the creation of the critically acclaimed indie game ''That Dragon, Cancer''.
It begins with Ryan and Amy Green, a devoutly Christian married couple and parents of three, [[DownerBeginning learning that their youngest Joel has been diagnosed with a rare form of Cancer at the age of twelve months and has only four left to live]]. Joel ends up surviving, but continues to live with the illness. His father, an indie game developer, decides to [[IShouldWriteABookAboutThis document his family's experience with raising a dying child]] in an autobiographical exploration game titled ''That Dragon, Cancer'', named for a bedtime story about Joel that he and his wife would tell their children. What begins as a simple way for the Green's to cope with their impending loss soon becomes a poetic message about what we do for our loved ones and how the more difficult parts can sway our own beliefs.
The documentary follows the development of the game, it's creative process and the tolls it eventually takes on the Greens, up to it's eventual release, intercut with the Greens' days-to-day life as they continue to treat Joel's condition while still allowing him to have a happy childhood, [[ElephantInTheLivingRoom fully aware that it could end at any minute]].
This page is under construction.
!!Tropes appearing in this documentary
* AdultFear: Learning that your barely-year-old-child is dying of cancer and slowly watching them get worse.
* CreatorCouple: Ryan, an indie game developer, creates the game with his wife, a writer, supplying the script.
* DudeNotFunny: The Greens are occasionally accused of exploiting their son's illness for the sake of entertainment by creating a video game about it.
* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: The Greens' clearly make an effort not to draw attention to Joel's cancer, wanting him to spend however much time he has left living a happy childhood with his brothers, and his many doctor's appointments and treatments are treated matter-of-factly. [[spoiler:It isn't until Ryan has to do multiple takes of an especially emotional line in the game that we see the magnitude of the situation come crashing down on him and he breaks down crying]].
* HappilyMarried: Throughout the emotional rollercoaster of caring for Joel while still raising two ([[SurprisePregnancy eventually three]]) other children, Amy and Ryan are nothing but supportive of one another and are clearly deeply in love.
* InstantIndexJustAddWater: One of the first shots of the movie is footage from the game of Ryan's character sitting on a couch in a flooding doctor's office after learning that his son has cancer, and there we're shown several shots from the game of him either drowning or swimming in deep water. The real Ryan later dives into a pool at the hotel where his family are staying as a way to relax. There are obvious parallels to baptism in the second one, as the Greens' Christianity is a major part of the story.
* MeaningfulName: ''That Dragon, Cancer'' comes from a bedtime story Ryan and Amy would tell their children in which Joel was a brave knight fighting off an evil dragon, which represents his illness.
* TheShowMustGoOn: The only reason that the game gets finished is that Ryan and his team feel that they owe it to Joel [[spoiler:and his memory]].
* WhenYouComingHomeDad: Ryan quickly realizes that, in creating the game for Joel, he's spending less of what little time he has with him. He makes up for this recording the two of them playing for the game, eventually abandoning it until [[spoiler:Joel's death]].
''Thank You For Playing'' is a 2015 documentary about the creation of the critically acclaimed indie game ''That Dragon, Cancer''.
It begins with Ryan and Amy Green, a devoutly Christian married couple and parents of three, [[DownerBeginning learning that their youngest Joel has been diagnosed with a rare form of Cancer at the age of twelve months and has only four left to live]]. Joel ends up surviving, but continues to live with the illness. His father, an indie game developer, decides to [[IShouldWriteABookAboutThis document his family's experience with raising a dying child]] in an autobiographical exploration game titled ''That Dragon, Cancer'', named for a bedtime story about Joel that he and his wife would tell their children. What begins as a simple way for the Green's to cope with their impending loss soon becomes a poetic message about what we do for our loved ones and how the more difficult parts can sway our own beliefs.
The documentary follows the development of the game, it's creative process and the tolls it eventually takes on the Greens, up to it's eventual release, intercut with the Greens' days-to-day life as they continue to treat Joel's condition while still allowing him to have a happy childhood, [[ElephantInTheLivingRoom fully aware that it could end at any minute]].
This page is under construction.
!!Tropes appearing in this documentary
* AdultFear: Learning that your barely-year-old-child is dying of cancer and slowly watching them get worse.
* CreatorCouple: Ryan, an indie game developer, creates the game with his wife, a writer, supplying the script.
* DudeNotFunny: The Greens are occasionally accused of exploiting their son's illness for the sake of entertainment by creating a video game about it.
* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: The Greens' clearly make an effort not to draw attention to Joel's cancer, wanting him to spend however much time he has left living a happy childhood with his brothers, and his many doctor's appointments and treatments are treated matter-of-factly. [[spoiler:It isn't until Ryan has to do multiple takes of an especially emotional line in the game that we see the magnitude of the situation come crashing down on him and he breaks down crying]].
* HappilyMarried: Throughout the emotional rollercoaster of caring for Joel while still raising two ([[SurprisePregnancy eventually three]]) other children, Amy and Ryan are nothing but supportive of one another and are clearly deeply in love.
* InstantIndexJustAddWater: One of the first shots of the movie is footage from the game of Ryan's character sitting on a couch in a flooding doctor's office after learning that his son has cancer, and there we're shown several shots from the game of him either drowning or swimming in deep water. The real Ryan later dives into a pool at the hotel where his family are staying as a way to relax. There are obvious parallels to baptism in the second one, as the Greens' Christianity is a major part of the story.
* MeaningfulName: ''That Dragon, Cancer'' comes from a bedtime story Ryan and Amy would tell their children in which Joel was a brave knight fighting off an evil dragon, which represents his illness.
* TheShowMustGoOn: The only reason that the game gets finished is that Ryan and his team feel that they owe it to Joel [[spoiler:and his memory]].
* WhenYouComingHomeDad: Ryan quickly realizes that, in creating the game for Joel, he's spending less of what little time he has with him. He makes up for this recording the two of them playing for the game, eventually abandoning it until [[spoiler:Joel's death]].