Here's the Story That Alex Garland's ELDEN RING Movie Should Tell
Alex Garland is officially heading to The Lands Between. A24 and Bandai Namco have tapped the Ex Machina and Annihilation filmmaker to write and direct a live-action Elden Ring movie.
This is a big move for both Garland and A24. Known for cerebral sci-fi and grounded psychological storytelling, this is uncharted territory, a sweeping dark fantasy epic loaded with monster gods, obscure lore, and more emotional trauma than a family reunion at Stormveil Castle.
It’s easily the biggest swing either has taken: a sprawling, high-fantasy world born from the minds of Dark Souls creator Hidetaka Miyazaki and Game of Thrones author George R.R. Martin. Expectations are appropriately colossal.
But the big question is: What story are they going to tell?
If you're familiar with Elden Ring, you know the game gives players the freedom to piece together their own path through fractured lore and cryptic NPCs. It’s not exactly screenplay-friendly. That’s why the best approach for Garland might be to focus not on your Tarnished, but one who came before: Vyke the Dragonspear.
Before the player ever touched grace, Vyke wasn’t just another warrior trying to become Elden Lord, he was the Tarnished to watch. A once-loyal knight of Leyndell’s Ancient Dragon Cult, Vyke’s story is tragic, beautiful, and perfect for the screen.
According to lore, Vyke trained under Lansseax and pursued the Elden Ring with a determination that mirrored the player’s own journey. But everything changed when he tried to save his Finger Maiden from her destined sacrifice.
That’s where the tragedy really kicks in.
"Vyke's story revolves around his desire to save his Finger Maiden from being sacrificed to become Elden Lord, a fate that seemed inevitable for him. He sought out the Three Fingers, potentially on the advice of Shabriri, and embraced the Frenzied Flame, ultimately becoming a Lord of Frenzied Flame."
A man chasing glory gives it all up for love, not for power, not for dominion, but to save someone who was viewed as disposable. And in doing so, he loses his mind, his purpose, and is eventually imprisoned, his journey cut short. “A fate worse than death” doesn’t begin to cover it.
This is pure Garland material, a character at war with himself, torn between love and destiny, slowly unraveling under the weight of a cursed world. Vyke isn’t a Chosen One. He’s not a god or a myth. He’s a tragic reflection of the player, the path that could have been, and that makes him the perfect protagonist.
"Vyke's story is a cautionary tale about the consequences of choosing the Frenzied Flame path and the struggle between love and duty. He represents the player's mirror image, a Tarnished who embraced the Frenzied Flame to avoid a seemingly inevitable sacrifice."
With Garland’s eye for psychological nuance and A24’s appetite for boundary-pushing cinema, this could be as massive and epic as The Lord of the Rings.
This could be a stunning fantasy film that gives us something intimate, brutal, and emotionally honest, and Vyke’s story is exactly that, a poetic nightmare about love, power, and the cost of choosing your own path.
If A24 and Garland are serious about doing this right, they’ll let us burn with Vyke first.