How many times have you seen the movie?
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- Naughty Nurses
- Gravedigger
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I noticed the Starz thing too. Starz can suck my ballz. They rarely play anything I am personally interested in watching. I had to cancel my subscription b/c of that. I prefer HBO and Showtime, at least they have some kick ass original programming and fairly good movies most of the time.
ANYWAY, I have seen the movie at least 20 times. It's rediculous the amount of times I have seen it. I can pretty much quote the whole thing.
I am soooo sad.
ANYWAY, I have seen the movie at least 20 times. It's rediculous the amount of times I have seen it. I can pretty much quote the whole thing.
I am soooo sad.
- Tripp Ownz
- Just Passing Through
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SilentMadness wrote:this is a little off topic, but it still fits anyway but...
have you noticed that starz has seriously stopped showing silent hill since at least, I think, last year? While the movie wasn't popular, it wasn't that bad. I find it amusing that they can show the more horrible movies like bloodrayne 2, underworld, and the resident evil movie, which each sucks in my opinion yet I think they only showed silent hill a few times and now it's long gone. Thank goodness I have the dvd.
*ahem* I really liked RE, sure they didn't stick to the plot of the games that well.... Ok, at all... but they were still decent!
As far as SH I probably really have seen it 50+, no lie. The first night I watched it three times at least, we were all drunk and kept forgeting we had already watched it.
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- der Morgenstern Czigany
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They [I assume, Starz], showed SH quite a lot of times. I guess they finally decided to stop showing it.
What I like about having the dvd though (compared to watching it on tv), is you can skim through it. I love the whole movie, but my favorite part is when it's nearing the end (when Rose goes through the basement...). I guess it's all the quotes, one after the other that I love so much. I've only done it about once before, but I had the movie stuck in my head. So I put on the dvd, skipped to that part, and watched the ending again.
What I like about having the dvd though (compared to watching it on tv), is you can skim through it. I love the whole movie, but my favorite part is when it's nearing the end (when Rose goes through the basement...). I guess it's all the quotes, one after the other that I love so much. I've only done it about once before, but I had the movie stuck in my head. So I put on the dvd, skipped to that part, and watched the ending again.
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I've watched the flick endlessly, as if seeing it over and over were part of being stuck in Silent Hill itself.
A lot of people have complained about the script (the substitute of the mother and child dynamic, use of the quasi-fundamentalist cult, etc.). I was tempted to do the same before reflecting on how empty the whole thing could have been without Avery and Ganz. How often do you get one of the authors of Pulp Fiction to contemplate writing a script for a game adaptation? In the future, when people won't be stupid about games as art, no problem. But in the present and recent past, Avery was a score.
Of all the game-based movies I've seen, SH comes the closest to replicating the experience and atmosphere of Japanese survival horror. When the main character reaches each pivotal new landscape, it feels exactly like arriving at a new level in SH. That and the falling ash felt perfect to me despite some of the flaws in the second half of the story.
The movie appeals more as an environment and a mood than as a straight narrative, and the places draw you in far more than the characters' tacked-on arcs.
I was really impressed that the director conveyed the combination of freedom and claustrophobia, fear, fascination and grief, survivalism and self-destructiveness, that characterized SH1 and 2 for me. To watch it is to feel as if you yourself were moving through those environments. The last director who made me feel that way was probably Tarkovsky.
So, to sum, I can understand why certain people hated it, though I myself am addicted to it for reasons that have little to do with the narrative.
Media list: I own this flick on DVD and Blu-Ray. I'm tempted to buy the discounted UMD but will restrain myself, since I've ripped it to PSP already. I've also seen it in the theater, though I've yet to watch it on cable.
I love horror films that draw the viewer into stasis. I love paintings that do that as well -- I'm thinking of Hylas and the Water Nymphs, by Waterhouse, or his painting of the Harpies, or his subtly disquieting portrait of Lilith (far more disquieting once you learn who/what Lilith is in Jewish mysticism). Certain Hindu paintings, too, give me that sense of unease -- portraits of Shiva meditating in his ice world on the end of life's cycle, and Kali caught at the savage moment when she realizes carnage is futile.
A lot of people have complained about the script (the substitute of the mother and child dynamic, use of the quasi-fundamentalist cult, etc.). I was tempted to do the same before reflecting on how empty the whole thing could have been without Avery and Ganz. How often do you get one of the authors of Pulp Fiction to contemplate writing a script for a game adaptation? In the future, when people won't be stupid about games as art, no problem. But in the present and recent past, Avery was a score.
Of all the game-based movies I've seen, SH comes the closest to replicating the experience and atmosphere of Japanese survival horror. When the main character reaches each pivotal new landscape, it feels exactly like arriving at a new level in SH. That and the falling ash felt perfect to me despite some of the flaws in the second half of the story.
The movie appeals more as an environment and a mood than as a straight narrative, and the places draw you in far more than the characters' tacked-on arcs.
I was really impressed that the director conveyed the combination of freedom and claustrophobia, fear, fascination and grief, survivalism and self-destructiveness, that characterized SH1 and 2 for me. To watch it is to feel as if you yourself were moving through those environments. The last director who made me feel that way was probably Tarkovsky.
So, to sum, I can understand why certain people hated it, though I myself am addicted to it for reasons that have little to do with the narrative.
Media list: I own this flick on DVD and Blu-Ray. I'm tempted to buy the discounted UMD but will restrain myself, since I've ripped it to PSP already. I've also seen it in the theater, though I've yet to watch it on cable.
I love horror films that draw the viewer into stasis. I love paintings that do that as well -- I'm thinking of Hylas and the Water Nymphs, by Waterhouse, or his painting of the Harpies, or his subtly disquieting portrait of Lilith (far more disquieting once you learn who/what Lilith is in Jewish mysticism). Certain Hindu paintings, too, give me that sense of unease -- portraits of Shiva meditating in his ice world on the end of life's cycle, and Kali caught at the savage moment when she realizes carnage is futile.
- AnastasisXD
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- der Morgenstern Czigany
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Sorry about the poll thing; I can't reopen it.
@ columbarium: I think your comments are interesting. I personally loved the move. I agree that it showed a lot of various emotions. I loved how realistic it was, like when Cybil dropped the f-bomb. lol
@ columbarium: I think your comments are interesting. I personally loved the move. I agree that it showed a lot of various emotions. I loved how realistic it was, like when Cybil dropped the f-bomb. lol
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- der Morgenstern Czigany
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- AnastasisXD
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- AnastasisXD
- Hope House Careworker
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- AnastasisXD
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- Just Passing Through
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