Applications Google
Menu principal

Post a Comment On: Horrorthon

"Silent Hill"

12 Comments -

1 – 12 of 12
Blogger Catfreeek said...

Thank you Jordan! I am so tired of being flogged for praising this film, finally reading a review from someone else who really "gets it" is such a breath of fresh air. I've played the Silent Hill games and felt the film captured the aire of the games brilliantly. It actually makes you feel uncomfortable watching it and that is how it should be. What sane person would want to stay in Silent Hill? Seriously. Excellent review.

December 22, 2009 4:53 AM

Blogger Catfreeek said...

To be fair Octo & 50P also rated this well. I've found the folks who didn't like it mostly are people who were not familiar with the game. They just didn't get it.

December 22, 2009 5:24 AM

Blogger Jordan said...

I'm not familiar with the game either! I saw it with no advance knowledge at all...another reason why I like it so much. I only learned about the game afterwards, and I've never played it.

December 22, 2009 5:31 AM

Blogger Jordan said...

I "got it" just because, you know, it's awesome. I can imagine disliking the final act, but I can't imagine not grooving on the whole trip.

December 22, 2009 5:32 AM

Blogger JPX said...

I’ve only seen Silent Hill once but I recall leaving the cinema frustrated. I felt like I was given this fantastic, majestic world and fantastic set-up and then somewhere along the way I stopped understanding what was happening. Perhaps I missed the point of it all, specifically that the narrative is of little importance, that Silent Hill is a perpetual fever dream nightmare. I’m sometimes reluctant to admit that I don’t enjoy films that I don’t “get”. This reluctance stems from my low self-esteem conviction that by stating this aloud people are rolling their eyes, confirming their quiet belief that I’m dumb. For example, I know I should like everything David Lynch creates, but I simply can’t get into his films that don’t have a beginning/middle/end. I don’t care if a story is nonlinear, but damnit, I want to leave a story with some sort of closure on what I just watched. For these reasons I aborted Lost Highway and Mulholland Drive when it became clear that I didn’t know what the heck was going on. Don’t get me wrong, this is one of the best looking horror films I’ve ever seen. At times it reminded me of the bleak Hellraiser 2 world, which gave me the chills when I first viewed it. Having said this, I’m willing to give Silent Hill another look because Jordan has a way of writing reviews that compel me to challenge my initial impressions of things.

Roger Ebert has a different take on Silent Hill and you can read it here

December 22, 2009 6:50 AM

Blogger It Builds Character. said...

As an art history grad student/horror fan who dreams of someday writing about the influence of art in horror films, nice work!
To expand upon what you said about detractors not wanting to watch while someone else plays: I've been familiar with the Silent Hill games for at least 10 years...but I've only held the controller myself maybe 3 or 4 times. I've always been perfectly content sitting and watching while someone else plays. I have fond memories of when Silent Hill 2 came out, and one of my roommates would play with my other roommate and I occasionally taking over until long after the sun set. When we'd finally decide to stop playing, all the lights would be out and we'd be scared out of our wits! It was like watching a really long horror movie. With most games, I can definitely understand not wanting to watch while someone else plays, but the Silent Hill games are an exception. I'm glad that there are people that come to the movie getting that.

December 22, 2009 8:56 AM

Blogger Catfreeek said...

JPX don't feel bad about the frustration factor I hear that from Tony all the time. He doesn't like movies that you confusingly have to puzzle together either, he's more of a straightforward guy.

I look at it this way, we both play computer games, he likes the straightforward rpg fighting type games with a definite goal and direction. I like puzzle type games like Myst or Juggernaut, these would make him nuts. So it makes sense that those type of movies would frustrate him as well.

Nice input IBC, I almost prefer to watch most games instead of playing since I'm just terrible with live action fighting. I've been trying for years to get someone to play through the Fatal Frame games for me, I'm just so terrible at it I keep dying. I think they're scarier or at least as scary as Silent Hill and they have puzzles for me to figure out as well :)

December 22, 2009 10:03 AM

Blogger JPX said...

I wanted to point out that Jordan's Silent Hill is our 1,200th review on Horrorthon, congrats all!

December 22, 2009 12:09 PM

Blogger Jordan said...

There is no prize.

December 22, 2009 12:17 PM

Blogger Catfreeek said...

Yay!

December 22, 2009 2:10 PM

Blogger Octopunk said...

Tip-top review! I loved it when you list the movie's problems and then say "but I can’t make myself care."

If anyone read the comment I made on the Frozen review an hour ago (real-life horror can bore me), Silent Hill is the seductive opposite: horror from beyond, wherever "beyond" happens to be. I'd neither played nor watched the game when I saw the movie, but I know a brilliant, fully-realized vision when I see one. Amazing stuff.

The movie's problems are really the exception, not the rule. In retrospect I think my main problem to with the big reveal was the lack of a cogent timetable for the events, although I don't recall the plot well enough to back up what I'm saying.

It's funny you mention Constantine, because the movies' attempts are so similar and achievments so different (i.e. Constantine, meh).

JPX: I watched a lot of experimental theater when I lived in New York, and I can think of two effects it had.

One, after seeing some of the good examples, I was able to appreciate the kind of art that is good enough to earn the right to divorce itself from narrative, and bombard the viewer with disconnected ideas and moods and still satisfy. That appreciation led directly to me liking Lost Highway when I saw it. (That plus all the nudity.)

Two, after seeing enough of the bad examples, I became totally confident in my right to dislike something even though there might be dimensions to it I didn't know about. If you don't like a work of art, then it's failed you.

I liked the Ebert review! Especially his mention of the Smoke and Flame Factory.

IBC -- appreciate the input! Thanks for commenting. Please do it more.

Catfreeek. Tony is right, puzzle video games suck buffalo butt. Okay, not really, but I have no patience for non-kinetic video games. Jordan has showed me some of Myst and 50Page has tried to get me into The Sims a couple of times, but my brain's fun centers ain't having it.

I think watching someone else's video game play is a lot more engaging than it sounds like, but it's hard to convince people of that if they've never done it.

December 22, 2009 10:29 PM

Blogger JPX said...

Damn that trailer is effective!

December 30, 2009 5:03 PM

You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.
Please prove you're not a robot