Silent Hill (a.k.a. Silent Hill: The Movie and Silent Hill: Centralia or Centralia) is the 2006 film adaptation of Konami's famous survival horror franchise. The story, though primarily based on the first Silent Hill game, includes elements from Silent Hill 2 and Silent Hill 3. The film is directed by Christophe Gans, with the screenplay written by Roger Avary based on the story adaptation by Gans and Nicolas Boukhrief.
The film stars Radha Mitchell, Sean Bean, Laurie Holden, Jodelle Ferland, and Deborah Kara Unger. It was released on April 21, 2006 in North America and was distributed by TriStar Pictures. The film will be released on DVD, Blu-ray disc, and UMD in North America on August 22, 2006.
As day turns into night, they break at a gas station in Brahams, a town not far from Silent Hill's turnoff. Rose finds that Sharon's drawings have been altered and portray disturbing images. Sharon cries out that she did not change them. Witnessing the outburst from the child, a female officer parked nearby with her motorcycle becomes suspicious and follows them as they leave. When the officer attempts to pull Rose over, Rose spots the turn off and, against her better judgement, hastily speeds towards Silent Hill. It starts to rain and a young girl is seen walking onto the road ahead. Rose, swerving to avoid her, is knocked unconscious as the car drives out of control.
Upon awakening, she leaves the experience behind as she exits onto the streets and approaches the edge of town, which she finds has been cut off by a large chasm that disappears into the fog. After being assailed by a distressed woman named Dahlia when she asks where Sharon is with a picture inside a locket, she escapes to run off to her car to call her husband. Even though he only receives fragments of her message, he hears enough to head off to Silent Hill in search of his family. However, he is stopped by officers who have blockaded the entrance to the town. Thomas Gucci (Kim Coates), the officer in charge, agrees to help Christopher after hearing his situation and heads into town with him to escort him along his search. In doing so he tells him about the coal mine fires that has been burning for far too long underneath the town.
As the corpse reanimates and approaches Rose, she runs out of the restroom to find the miners being attacked by a horde of insects (the Creepers). As Rose runs outside and down an alley, she passes by Christopher,who,even though they are in the same position in the town, are not in the same reality. But somehow, he breathes in her perfume, which surrounds him in acknowledgement that his wife is somewhere to be found. Rose, unable to make sense of everything, collapses as she is approached by The Red Pyramid (Pyramid Head) - a muscular humanoid that derives his name from a large pyramid that sits atop his head and wields a large blade. With the insects following him, Rose makes haste, when Cybil grabs her into a secure room. After a short attempt by The Red Pyramid to enter the room, the darkness recedes and Cybil and Rose are left in a deserted school. Cybil, realizing Rose was not delirious, agrees to head to the hotel where she believes Sharon will be.
Meanwhile, Christopher is told by officer Gucci to go home after a failed attempt to find Sharon and Rose. Eventually, denying a refusal of information, he breaks into Braham's hall of records and finds information on a child who was badly scarred in a fire — Alessa Gillespie. Later, he enters the orphanage where Sharon was adopted, and Gucci, having followed his tracks, arrests him for breaking and entering. Though instead of taking him to the station, he confronts him and reveals his scarred hands along with the secrets of the town, and forces him to leave for home.
Within the ground floors of the building, Christabella informs that the demon resides in a room in the basement, and reveals a map on the wall in which Rose memorizes the path she will have to take. A flashlight is given to her and is informed that the monsters will be drawn to it, as they are taken to an elevator. As Christabella tries to return Rose’s locket, she notices the picture inside it of her daughter has a strong likeliness to Alessa Gillespie. Declaring witch, she orders the miners to capture Rose, but Cybil defends them off as Rose heads down in the elevator.
As Rose heads for the room after reaching the basement, she discovers the path blocked by a number of frozen nurses holding knifes with towels wrapped around their heads. As she turns on the flashlight given to her, they spring to life, but realizing this expectation, she turns it off, and starts to carefully slip by them. After evading many attacks, she places the flashlight lit up on the floor to distract them, and finally makes it to the room, where white light appears around her.
A young girl’s voice praises her in the white light for following her clues and making it this far, and as a reward, Rose will learn the truth. She explains that Alessa was an innocent child whose mother was Dahlia. One day long ago, Alessa escaped into a bathroom from harassment by her classmates and others by being persecuted as a witch, only to encounter the school janitor Colin, where it is implied that she was sexually abused. Because of the believed sin she held, the church agreed the child needed to be cleansed, to which Dahlia obliged, but could not witness. After being left outside Room 111 that led to the churches congregation, she realized what she had done and fled to the police.
Inside the building where the church held their cleansing ritual, Alessa was chained up above a fire, to which everyone praised cleansing led by Christabella. However, before she was cooked to death, one of the chains broke, causing the fire to burn out of control and lead down into the coal mines of the town. After everyone fled and left Alessa behind, Dahlia returned with the police and fire department, where officer Gucci freed Alessa by risking burning his hands. She was taken to the hospital, where she was taken care of inside an ICU container mainly by a young nurse in red. The voice, now revealed as the young girl Rose has been following and the demon feared by the townspeople, explains this was where she arrived to help Alessa with her growing hate and vengeance. She explains that Sharon is a split of her innocence and good, while she herself is the vengeful, disgusted other, and the decaying, living body the original form.
The while light fades, and Rose finds herself in the hospital room with Alessa’s body inside the decaying ICU container. With the nurse in red whimpering to the side, the demon declares that this world is a personification of Alessa’a nightmares, and that the nightmare would not end until her vengeance is complete. Rose, now accepting and understanding what is going on, gives herself as a transport for the demon to enter the church, because the blind faith of the congregation prevents Alessa’s personalities from standing the light.
Meanwhile, the cultists are hurriedly looking for the child, believing that if they sacrifice her, they will avoid another apocalypse. They discover Sharon hiding with Dahlia and both are brought to the church. Cybil is shown to have survived her prior beating. Unfortunately, the Elders have tied her to the top of a ladder, and are preparing to burn her for aiding “the witches”. Christabella sets fire to the pit, and Cybil's ladder is lowered into the pyre. Cursing the Elders, Cybil proclaims that they all are “already in their own hell” and is consumed by the flames. Before the same can be done to Sharon, however, Rose enters the church.
Rose attempts to reason with them, insisting that Alessa was innocent, that their sacrifice of her was a sin and that it was the blind devotion of the church that brought this Hell upon them. As she advances toward Christabella through the crowd, she continues to argue with them in an attempt to expose the flaws of their faith and force them to accept their fate. Christabella, in response, stabs Rose in the heart with what appears to be an athame. Realizing, however, that she has committed murder, she quickly spins the episode, insisting that what did was justified, as Rose was a blasphemer.
Rose, Sharon, and Dahlia are the only ones to survive the carnage. As Rose and Sharon exit, Dahlia asks why she was spared. Rose, echoing Cybil Bennet's belief, says that “A Mother is God in the eyes of a child."
Rose and Sharon eventually make it out of Silent Hill and to their home. Their world, however, is still in fog. Christopher is shown napping on the living room sofa as it rains outside. As Rose — still within the fog — sits down opposite where Christopher is in the real world, he awakes, sensing his wife's perfume once again, and rushes toward the open front door, hoping to see Rose. This hope proves ill as there is no one there and Christopher stares blankly into the rain.
The film has so far received some positive reception from Dread Central claiming that the film is the “most faithful adaptation of a video game ever made”. It has received an average rating of 3.5/5 from Ain't It Cool News says Silent Hill “is a film made with passion”*." target="_blank" > Much of the French press has generally been open and accepting of the film saying: “Christophe Gans delivers a monument to us. A audio-visual experiment”*;" target="_blank" >“Silent Hill is a good entertainment for a public unused to terror without bloodshed and without the inevitable use of packaged action.”[http://www.nord-cinema.com/fiches/noscritiques1276.html
Most critic reviews have been negative, however. Hollywood Reporter has stated the film is “an overcooked nightmare”. Rotten Tomatoes has the film listed as 28% fresh (19 out of 68 reviews count fresh) from the critics, and 0% fresh from the “Cream of the Crop” critics.*" target="_blank" > Metacritic has scored this film at 30 / 100 [http://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/silenthill.
However, the film has received a weighted average score of 6.7/10 based on the ratings of over 10,000 community members on IMDb. Users at Rotten Tomatoes give the film a 70 / 100 rating and users at MetaCritic give the film a 8.4 / 10. Box Office Mojo users give Silent Hill an average of B out of 417 users voting. The grade breakdown as of Thursday, May 18th, 2006 is as follows: 264 users (63.3% of all the votes) gave Silent Hill an A, 75 users (18.0%) gave it a B, 34 users (8.2%) gave it a C, 18 users (4.3%) gave it a D, and only 26 users (6.2%) gave Silent Hill an F.*
While many of the film's main characters are original creations, the police officer Cybil Bennett, from the original Silent Hill, appears in the film, albeit in a much different role. She retains much of her same attitiude from the game, but her ultimate fate is different. The character of Christabella appears to be original and does not appear in any of the games, but a little girl of the same name did appear in the Silent Hill graphic novel, Dying Inside. The way Christabella speaks mirrors that of Claudia Wolf from Silent Hill 3. An unnamed nurse appears, whose costuming, including her candy red high heels, is a clear take off of the character Lisa Garland from the first Silent Hill game. Their particular situations are also somewhat similar. Also, the concept of internal guilt, self-righteous murderers, and the overall idea of “private hell” is taken directly from the second game while the themes of loss and lonliness echo that of the first Silent Hill game.
The young Alessa Gillespie and her mother Dahlia also appear in the film, though the relationship between them is quite different from the game. Originally in the game, Dahlia was the leader of the cult, not Christabella, and it is she who burns Alessa in hopes of invoking the child's dark powers and using them to bring forth a God. Another key difference between the film and the game is the cult's beliefs, in the game they were evil demon worshippers while in the film they are witch-burning puritans. It should also be noted that the plot point involving Alessa splitting herself into two halves and hiding the good half by disguising it as a newborn child is better explained in the game as Alessa's way of trying to keep her mother from using the girl's powers for evil. When the game's protagonist brings the good half to Silent Hill, Alessa shrouds the town in thick fog in hopes of keeping Dahlia from finding her.
Many of the creatures in the movie are also taken from the various games in the series, including the towering Red Pyramid (Pyramid Head from Silent Hill 2), the ever-present Nurses (based on the Bubble-Head Nurses from Silent Hill 2), the grey children (child-demon Mumblers from Silent Hill), and the creeping Patient Demon (based on the same creature from Silent Hill 2). The Janitor, an original creation of director Christophe Gans is brought to life by special effects supervisor Paul Jones for the film. He has some similarities in appearance and ability to the Victim Ghosts from The Room, but seems ultimately inspired by one of the scenes in the first game in which you find a body in one of the bathroom stalls while in the “Otherworld” version of the school. The body, however, does not come to life in game.
The town itself has been recreated with a striking attention to detail, right down to the names of many of the town's shops (some of which are borderline Engrish). As a result, the street scenes are almost indistinguishable from those of Silent Hill 2 and Silent Hill 3. The memorable Midwich Elementary School from Silent Hill also appears, along with Brookhaven Hospital (from Silent Hill 2 and 3). When Rose wakes up after the grey children attack, she wakes up in a bowling alley that is very similar to Pete's Bowl-a-Rama from Silent Hill 2.
Two scenes from the beginning of the first Silent Hill have been recreated almost shot-for-shot, one which features Rose and her daughter driving towards Silent Hill, only to crash after swerving to avoid a ghostly figure in the road, and one where Rose is ambushed by grotesque humanoid creatures after discovering a mutilated body crucified on a chain-link fence. At least one scene was also taken from Silent Hill 2. When Rose enters room 111 she finds a hole in the wall leading to another building, which is what happens to the main character in the game. Finally, when Christopher receives calls from Rose but only gets white noise, fans can notice similarities with James's radio when he discovers it the first time and hears a voice that sounds vaguely like Mary's. The same thing happens to Henry in The Room when he first tries to use the phone in his ghost-infested apartment.
Some dialogue from the film mirrors the game. When Rose meets Dark Alessa face to face for the first time, she says "you could be her twin". James says something similar when he meets Maria for the first time in Silent Hill 2, referring to his wife. When Rose sees the Red Pyramid stabbing through the door, she says "It's Him!" This is exactly what James says in Silent Hill 2 when he sees the "Misty Day - Remains of the Judgement" painting (a painting depicting Pyramid Head) in the historical society in Silent Hill 2.
There is also a police officer named Gucci who plays a part in the film — Officer Gucci was mentioned briefly in a note found inside a police station during the first game, stating that Officer Gucci's death appears to be from natural causes, although he had no history of heart disease. Gucci is obviously not dead in the film, so the character is a reference to the Gucci from the first game, not the same person. Officer Gucci does mention that his father is dead in the movie, so while one could say it is possible that his father is the Gucci mentioned in the game, Gucci mentions to Christopher that his father owned a shop, so he wasn't a police officer.
When Rose and Sharon are driving to Silent Hill, "Letter from the Lost Days" plays on the radio, very similar to the scene where Douglas drives Heather to Silent Hill in the 3rd game. The end scene where Alessa comes up through a hole in the church is similar to the way Claudia Wolf falls through the hole in the church at the end of Silent Hill 3. Also, the way bed ridden Alessa looks like mirrors the Mary-boss from Silent Hill 2.
Team Silent, the development team for Silent Hill, was a producer alongside Konami for the movie and the team oversaw the entire production of the movie, from the preproduction all the way to the postproduction stage. Everything that's in the film has been approved by Team Silent.
In a first for a theatrical film (game adaptation or otherwise), the score to the movie consists almost entirely of music from Akira Yamaoka's soundtracks to the four main games in the series. They were arranged by the film composer Jeff Danna (Resident Evil, The Boondock Saints), with some tracks appearing in almost identical form to their in-game counterparts, while others were recreated entirely.
The discs will be released in both Anamorphic Widescreen 2.40:1 and full screen versions and both will include a Dolby Digital 5.1 audio track *. The releases will also include a number of special features such as:
The official information on the DVD and UMD of the film, released by Sony Pictures, had no mention of a director's commentary or any deleted/extended scenes from the film's longer duration.
2006 films | Films based on computer and video games | American films | English-language films | Horror films | Silent Hill
Silent Hill – Willkommen in der Hölle | Silent Hill (film) | Silent Hill – A halott város | サイレントヒル (映画) | Сайлент Хилл (фильм) | Silent Hill (film)
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