Silent Hill

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Contre l'avis de son mari, Rose décide d'emmener sa fille Sharon à Silent Hill, une ville abandonnée qui semble irrésistiblement attirer l'enfant. Alors qu'elles pénètrent dans cet univers lugubre, Sharon disparaît. Noyée dans le brouillard, peuplée d'étranges créatures, régulièrement envahie par les ténèbres, Silent Hill va peu à peu livrer ses terrifiants secrets... (Metropolitan FilmExport)

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Critiques (10)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Principalement dans la première moitié, c'est un film d'horreur visuellement captivant. Il puise toute sa force dans la mise en scène impressionnante, le son et les performances solides. Cependant, plus il révèle de choses cachées, plus il devient prévisible et axé uniquement sur l'effet. Comparé aux adaptations de jeux vidéo comme Resident Evil ou Doom, il est clairement le vainqueur. Finalement, c'est une solide production de qualité. ()

Isherwood 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The cruelly long runtime unnecessarily dilutes the atmosphere of the film to the limits of the current horror standard, which could have been, with the excision of about twenty minutes of scenes (and not only the ones with Sean Bean searching), the clear king of video game adaptations. Christophe Gans provides some damn fine visuals, and particularly the ones from Silent Hill itself are delicacies that can be savored endlessly. The motion and music tracks are also very enjoyable. In contrast, he utterly fails in the dramatic construction of the story, which is stacked together with overly verbose dialogue, causing the film to degrade into B-movie waters at times. Fortunately, the falling ash, the marching undead, the alarm siren, and Radha Mitchell's performance are so evocative and suggestive and haunting that it is actually possible to forget all the negatives and state with equanimity: "Messieur Gans, le Pacte des loups, est-il pardonner." ()

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novoten 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Visually, it's absolutely amazing and whether it's Pyramid Head, Alessa, or any other appearance, I just envy what Gans presents to the viewer with a stunning piano accompaniment. Unfortunately, as someone who didn't play the video game source, I got quite lost and ended up completely lost at the end. If I hadn't looked up a lot of things, I probably still wouldn't know if I liked Silent Hill or not. After understanding the main connections, it's a bit far-fetched, but I give it four stars considering the atmosphere. It should have continued immediately the following year in this atmosphere and not turned the suspicious town of fog into a cheap horror brand. ()

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais In audiovisual terms - excellent. Almost everything from the book was included here, although that is paradoxically the biggest negative about it, because this way Silent Hill the movie seems just like another part of the game where, however, there is no opportunity for interaction - we move from level to level up until the finale. Literally like watching somebody playing one of the episodes of “Silent Hill" the game. The screenplay isn’t one of the strongest ever written, but it works for this picture and the ending fits exceptionally well with the overall mood. The actors are also well-chosen and even the little girl is bearable. Overall this is more of an unusual experience than an actually good movie. If nothing else, Christophe Gans proved that movies based on games don’t necessarily have to be C-movies, but can even be B-movie standard. ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Another proof that the world of PC games and the world of film are not yet very compatible. Gans brilliantly portrays the oppressive atmosphere of the game, but you can sense the leaning towards the mainstream and the resulting somewhat sterile portrayal of the horrors of darkness. The few digital boogeymen and the very decent gore didn't save it (but Pyramid Head was impressive despite the small space). They should have pushed the envelope more, throw out the boring storyline with the completely useless Sean Bean, which diluted the dense atmosphere of the film unnecessarily and did not solve anything, and above all to make the unraveling of the mystery more clear. It was too overcomplicated and chatty at the end. But Radha Mitchell was great. ()

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