From blockbusters to lacklusters, if there was a movie released at t♐he time there’s a goodཧ chance Nintendo made a game out of it.

Beginning with Raiders of the Lost Ark for the Atari 2600, adaptations of films have been a huge part of gaming. Nintendo took Atari’s idea and ran with it, releasing over 50 movie-based games for the 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:NES including some classics (Willow, Goonies II) and some clunkers (Home Alone, Predator).

RELATED: 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:10 oꩵf the Gr🙈eatest NES Games on All Time

Whether because of the timing of their release, the number of copies produced, or the succesꦐs of the film they’re based on, thes💧e are 10 movies you probably didn’t realize were made into NES games.

10 Darkman

Imagine just having watched Darkman, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Sam Raimi’s "super-hero" film about a scientist who replicates skin tissue to impersonate and gruesomely murder his enemies. Would your first thought be “Man, my kid’s gonna love playing the video game version of this!” Well, someone at Ocean Software did and in 1991 Darkman arrived on the NES.

Despite being plagued by slippery controls and a rock-paper-scissors style of combat, Darkman is probably one of the best-looking titles on the system. It’s also a rare instance of a game👍 staying true the film it’s based on.  This includes the stage designs, the mid-level cutscenes, and the Game Over screen of Liam Neeson’s face crying tadpole sized tears.

9 Hudson 🐈Hawk

While R rated films like Rambo could be effectively marketed to children, they weren’t the only attempts at pushing adult oriented movies on kids. Both critically panned and commercially unviable, 1991’s Hudson Hawk starring Bruce Willis seems like an unlikely choice for an NES ♏game.

Hudson Hawk is yet another bland side-scrolling platformer. While the 8-bit version of Hudson does resemble ol’ Bruce, it's more like if a 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Die Hard action figure got stuck in the microwave. What the🧜 game lacks in graphics, controls, and gameplay it more than makes up for in boredom and frustration. Luckily the develop🦂ers were aware of this and if you pause the game you’re given the rare suicide option “A+B = Quit”. Take it quick!

8 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade 𓄧

The last film in the trilogy, 1989's Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade was a huge hit with both audiences and critics. It should then be no surprise that it received ports for many video gam🍸e systems includi🦄ng the NES. Bizarrely, there are TWO separate versions of this game with virtually identical titles and cover art.

Despite their copycat appearance, these two games were made by separate game companies. The Taito version is the more faithful to the film, incorporating plot elements and some cool pixel portraits of Harrison Ford and Sean Connery. 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:The Ubisoft version...is a three color mess that feels more like a Gameboy title than an NES🃏 o♊ne.

7 𓄧 The Untouchables

1987's The Untouchables, starring Robert De Niro and Kevin Costner, was a beautiful, suspenseful, and bloody film. Naturally it was a great choice for the kid-friendly NES which is why a video game version appeared two year🅠s later.

RELATED: 10 NES Games That Made (Almost) Everyone𒁏 Rage Quit

The Untouchables is a 3rd person gallery shooter executed very poorly. Never has a mouse or Zapper been more needed and us♔ing the D-Pad to target is excruciating. Punctuating this poor mechanic even more is the fact that this game is timed meaning you need to be almost perfect in your shots or its game over.

6 ♈ 💃 Gotcha!  The Sport!

168澳洲幸运5开奖网:The NES Zapper was a huge part of what made the NES so successful and early releases like Duck Hunt and Hogan's Alley featured prominently in Nintendo's marketing. After the initial enthusiasm wore off, few titles were released for the light-gun and the ones that did come out were widely i🍬gnored.

One such Zapper game was the awkwardly titled Gotcha! The Sport!, a clunky paintball simulator that requires the player to shoot with one hand and move the screen with the second controller. Even more bizarre is that this game is somehow based on the relatively obscure 1985 film Gotcha! starring Anthony Edwards of ER fame.

5 Dirty🐭 Harry

Released in 1971, Dirty Harry waited 19 years for its first video game adaptation. Not only does Harry looks more like 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Tom Cruise in Risky Business, but this barely 8-bit side-sಌcroller has some of the most awkward controls on the NES. Having to press A & B together in order to 🐎jump should be punishable as a war crime.

One amazing thing about Dirty Harry is the openinౠg screen has a rendering of Clint Eastwood's face accompanied by a pitch perfect voice over of his signature catchphrase ♐"Go ahead, make my day."

4 🗹 Batman Returns

One of the best movie to game adaptations of all time is Batman for the NES, which Sunsoft followed up with the good but not great spinoff: Batman Return of the Joker.  Released late in the life of the NES, a third Batman game arrived in 1993: Batman Returns.

RELATED: 🐼5 Movie Licensed Games Tha🤡t Deserve Remakes (& 5 Better Left Forgotten)

Konami's adaptation of 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Tim Burton's dark sequel went mostly unnoticed by the millions of gamers who'd already moved on to the Super Nintendo. While the graphics are a bit scaled down compared to its SNES counterpart, it's still classic Konami, filled with fun gameplay and a💃mazing♈ music.

3 The Rocketeer ꧒

In one of Hollywood's many attempts to revamp an old intellectual property, The Rocketeer was a commercial failure when it was released. In spite of this, a game adaptation appeared 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:on the NES that same year.

The first thing one might ask when playing this game is "Hey! I thought the Rocketeer could fly?"  Even though he's wearing his famous jetpack, this Rocketeer puzz🍸lingly refuses to lift off. Only in the later stages can you utilize his rocket and the odds tha♛t you stayed with it that long are slim to none.

2 Cool Wor🌄ld ꦅ

When released in 1992, Cool World was touted as the more adult answer to Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Famous for films like Fritz the Cat and Wizards, Ralph Bashki d🌳umbed it down withꦫ this raunchy and ultimately uneven R Rated film. Well, sounds like perfect territory for an NES game!

Another terrible platformer, Cool World features some awful graphics and monotonous level design.  Its greatest strength, the music, is also its greatest weakness. For some reason the gameplay interferes with the audio track and every time you jump the backing music pauses for a second. It's like listening to the world's worst dub-step DJ test out his e❀ffects buttons.

1 Blues Brothers 🧔

The Blues Brothers, the classic SNL sketch turned real life band, starred John Belushi and Dan Akroyd as the eponymous brothers of blue: Jake and Elwood. Coming 12 years after the release of the feature length film, Blues Brothers for the NES doesn't quite live up to thei💫r legacy.

Developed by Titus Games (of Superman 64 fame), Blues Brothers takes all the frustration and aimless gameplay of Cool World and adds vertical level designs with impossible jumps. If perpetually climbing and then falling back to the beginning of the stage sounds like your cup of tea, then Blue Brothers is for you!

 NEXT: 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:10 Lesse🌟r-Known NES Games That Need Mor📖e Love