Hank, just for the record on that "the third person" line, if you listen to the audio commentary on the DVD during that scene, Seth Gordon says that Brian Kuh was referring to himself there. (According to Seth, Brian was claiming to have done it in private, but he wanted to be the first to do it at Funspot.) Take that with a grain of salt, because I have no idea if he was right, but according to Seth, Brian was talking about himself.
I have to admit, it makes sense to me. Does Brian seem like the kind of guy who (at the time) would acknowledge anyone other than Billy or himself as a top DK player? He had a chip on his shoulder about it from the minute Steve walked into Funspot. "He'd like to tell you that he's the Donkey Kong champion, but all of us have not seen him play Donkey Kong." (And, of course, the silly backroom dissection of Steve's gameplay that we all saw on YouTube, which any KS-capable player should have known was totally legit, unless their judgment was clouded. "This isn't Level 5 behavior!" Oh please. You may have a point with the extra joystick clicks, but a room full of gaming experts, including Brian, seriously couldn't recognize that the barrels were properly "aggressive" on L5, or acknowledge that wild barrels can be leeched safely? GTFO.)
I've also seen that early screener cut (go to
56 seconds in on this clip for anybody who wants to watch), and yes, they (wisely) deleted that onscreen caption from the final cut. Maybe they didn't want to accuse Brian of lying, or for some other reason, but it was definitely the right thing to do.
Steve Wiebe mentioned (maybe it was during his talk a couple months ago at that event in Washington(?) that there's actually a longer version of the movie that exists somewhere, just not publicly. Like a 2-hour cut with Double Donkey Kong and everything. That, obviously, is a holy grail.
The producers were definitely aware of Tim. I'm certainly not disputing that! But the fact of the matter is that you have several people in the movie saying, on camera, and with no possibility of editing, "Steve was the first to beat Billy". It wasn't just those onscreen graphics. So I just can't hold "the usual suspects" (KoK producers, Walter, Billy, Steve) solely responsible. The community clearly didn't assure the movie guys that Tim was legit. When nobody is talking about Tim, and Robert is expressing skepticism about Tim's tape because he never saw it, what are the filmmakers supposed to conclude, other than it was, indeed, "consistently disputed"?
I honestly believe that the omission happened in good faith, or at least, not in bad faith. Everybody just plain dropped the ball.
And while it definitely made the movie better, and definitely figured into their decision (since it's their job to make the best movie they can) the fact remains that Tim never actually had the highest DK score!
Let's say Hank had never officially submitted his 1,138,600, but it was known and acknowledged that it happened, even uploaded to YouTube or something, and Vincent had beaten his 1,127,700 score last January when he got 1,135,900. Vincent would have been "the world record holder" on TG, but would anybody have considered him the actual world record holder?
Leaving Tim out was just shorthand for the fact that Steve (and Billy) had beaten Tim long before Tim got the "record."