Silent Hill [UMD for PSP] Review
First of all, let me just say, I'm fairly new to Silent Hill. I beat Silent Hill 2 and 5 during the year, I tried the fourth most SH &
I recently surprised the movie from beginning to end and it was great! (I had not seen the film when it came out, only about 30 minutes.) Anyway, you do not need a Blu-ray to discover the beauty of this film to appreciate, but you need a home theater really get the feeling! The atmosphere was well done, it felt very similar to gamesRate this movie stayed true to the players and try not to some fans brainless Hollywood, who could not understand probability of winning the movie anyway. I was surprised that this film was actually a good game adaptation! Most imitators failed miserably: Doom, Resident Evil, there were others? I think the reason has been completed, thanks to Christophe Gans, who, if you will note the specific features that you see, is a real fan of Silent Hill. However, this movie can not fool grabssome mind blowing special effects. This is a big budget film. The story is very nicely together, not to be confused too revealing, just perfect. The imagery is dazzling colors, details the environment, everything was perfect in my opinion. The soundtrack has remained faithful to its origins which is great. My only complaint was that Angel was not room in the movie, so bad. No big deal, but this film is still in my class all-time favorite movie. Are you a fan ofgames, but you've probably already seen, but now for those of you who know nothing of games, I think it could really be a fan. This film deserves at least a rent if you are at least a bit 'open-minded and not Gore and limits of action is limited, you will enjoy this movie.
Silent Hill [UMD for PSP] Overview
No Description Available.
Genre: Horror
Rating: R
Release Date: 2-OCT-2007
Media Type: 3\ Mini DVD for PH"
Silent Hill [UMD for PSP] Specifications
A lot of movies can be described as "dripping with atmosphere," but in the case of Silent Hill it's literally true. Faithfully adapted from the Konami video games by French director Christophe Gans and Pulp Fiction cowriter Roger Avary (both self-confessed video game addicts), this dark and grisly horror-fest is nothing if not a triumph of cinematography and production design, consisting of a minimal and mostly incoherent plot propped up by a mysterious maze of sets that literally seep, drip, and ooze with the atmospheric evil of past misdeeds. Welcome to the abandoned and perpetually foggy ghost town of Silent Hill, where grey ash falls like snow, a devastating coal-mine fire still burns in a hellish underground, and demons of various shapes and sizes make your worst nightmares seem like a walk in the park. It's here that distressed mother Rose (played by Pitch Black heroine Radha Mitchell) has taken her daughter Sharon (Jodelle Ferland) in hopes of discovering the source of Sharon's sleepwalking nightmares. What they find instead is a burned-out legacy of unspeakable evil, as Silent Hill's dark secrets are revealed. As opposing denizens of Silent Hill's meta-morphing underworld, Canadian actresses Alice Krige and Deborah Kara Unger seem to be the only ones who recognize this morbid mess as campy comedy; Gans (who established his visual flair with The Brotherhood of the Wolf) and Avary take it far too seriously, and the entire movie is utterly devoid of any emotional hooks or plot logic that would make us care about anything that happens. In crafting a loyal big-screen rendition of Silent Hill and its Playstation sequels, they've forgotten that movies play by a different and more demanding set of rules. As a result, they've made an impressive-looking but ultimately hollow horror film that only Silent Hill game-players can truly appreciate. --Jeff Shannon
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