Silent Hill is a 2006 supernatural horror film directed by Christophe Gans and written by Roger Avary, based on the video game series of the same name published by Konami. The first installment in the Silent Hill film series, it stars Radha Mitchell, Sean Bean, Laurie Holden, Deborah Kara Unger, Kim Coates, Tanya Allen, Alice Krige and Jodelle Ferland. The plot follows Rose da Silva, who takes her adopted daughter, Sharon, to the town of Silent Hill, for which Sharon cries while sleepwalking. Rose is involved in a car accident near the town and awakens to find Sharon missing. While searching for her daughter, she fights a local cult and begins to uncover Sharon's connection to the town's dark past.

The idea of the film adaptation of Silent Hill (1999) was voiced by director Christophe Gans for the first time to producer Samuel Hadida during the filming of the film Brotherhood of the Wolf (2001).[8] Hadida, knowing the game's rich visual aesthetics, believed that eerie storytelling matched Gans' encyclopedic knowledge of cinematography.[9] Gans became acquainted with the video game series approximately six years before the release of his film, and initially wanted to adapt the second game (2001) since it was the most "emotional" of all four and the most beloved by fans. He compared it to the myth of Orpheus, who descended into the underworld after Eurydice. However, he said that Silent Hill 2 was not the "real Silent Hill": there was no mythology, and the city only played the role of a backdrop for the unfolding story. As a result, he realized that it was impossible to film an adaptation of the second game without saying a word about the origin of the city.[10][11]


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Since Gans had already formed the concept of the future plot of the film, he sent the screenwriter several discs with "atmospheric" videos[A 2] to point Avary's work in the right direction, as well as the developments compiled by himself and Nicolas Boukhrief.[19] They were written in French, but the scriptwriter was required to translate them into English, write dialogues and change a few conceptual factors.[18] Avary did not limit himself to acquaintance with the presented film library and personally went through all entries of the game series.[20][21] All changes made by Avary were translated into Christophe's native language.[18] A rough draft of the work was ready by October 2004.[22][23] Nevertheless, due to the complete absence of male characters, the script was rejected by the producers; only after the script was modified to include Sean Bean's character and subplot was it approved.[20][24] Avary recalled that as soon as they received the "stupid note from the studio", Gans got angry. Yet, later they realized that this storyline can be made interesting and emphasize the peculiarities of the perception of reality.[19] As a result, the plot became a combination of the first game with separate elements of the second and third. Gans elaborated: "We weren't trying to put all three games into a two-hour production, this is an adaptation of the first Silent Hill. However, there are so many interesting details [in the following installments] that it was impossible to resist."[12]

The appearance of the games in the series was largely influenced by Adrian Lyne's film Jacob's Ladder (1990), especially the subway and hospital scenes. Gans believed that the film crew was able to create a unique piece that did not rely on the style of Lyne's film. Gans' film adaptation is not an imitation of Lyne's film, as Silent Hill has long evolved into a completely separate phenomenon that exists on its own.[12] The film was influenced by the work of Sergio Leone and David Lean: the city of the seventies was created under the inspiration of the films Lawrence of Arabia (1962) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966),[30] and in general, it was filmed under the influence of various works ranging from a book of pictures about Chernobyl to The Matrix.[19][36] In the film, Gans paid homage to the works of Salvador Dal, Hans Bellmer, Francis Bacon, Jean Cocteau, Alberto Giacometti, Clive Barker, H. P. Lovecraft, David Cronenberg and Michael Mann.[36][37]

Principal photography commenced on April 25, 2005, and ended three months later on July 22.[20][50] It took place in various locations in Canada, including Brantford, Hamilton, Brampton, and Barrie in Ontario; Winnipeg in Manitoba; St. George in New Brunswick, as well as on soundstages in Toronto and on location in Alma College.[51][52][53] The developers of the series Team Silent oversaw the entire production process of the film and collaborated closely with the production team, approving or rejecting decisions made by the director, screenwriter, and artists. As a result, the city's appearance was recreated with attention to the smallest details, down to errors in English names of the stores. The filming was done using a crane camera. The technology itself was improved in order to accurately simulate the operation of the virtual camera from the game.[12]

American studio Sony Pictures bought the distribution rights for $14 million for the United States and Latin America to be released under its TriStar Pictures genre film subsidiary.[56][57] On December 5, 2005, TriStar announced a competition to create the best poster, targeting fans of the series. Anyone could download several photos from the official website, WelcomeToSilentHill.com, and use them as a basis to create the final image. All competition entries were posted on the Internet on January 4, 2006, and a voting process took place. On January 17, specialists from the company selected 5 out of 50 works. On January 20, the finalists were announced, and two days later, the final version of the poster was chosen.[58] The Japanese trailer of the film is voiced by Joe Romersa.[59]

The composers of the film are Akira Yamaoka and Jeff Danna.[60] The music for the film is borrowed from the soundtracks of the first four games in the series.[61] The only track that does not belong to these albums is Johnny Cash's composition of "Ring of Fire".[62] Yamaoka mostly kept his own melodies intact as he wanted to maintain similarities to the game adaptation.[63] The soundtrack, which included vocal tracks, was not released as a standalone release.[10][64]

The obvious comparison here (girl murdered in the countryside of a Scandinavian nation; two flawed detectives investigate; grief-stricken parents) is "The Killing." But that was a popular Danish TV series (later, a not-that-popular American one on AMC), and "The Silence" is a German film. This isn't exactly a whodunit; we know the killer (of the first victim, anyway) from the start. We're witnesses to her brutal death, obscured by stalks of wheat in the vast field where her life ends. The mysteries here are larger, deeper, more ineffable than the purely practical concerns of crime-solving: motive, means and opportunity.

Why did Dead Silence 2: The Return Of Mary Shaw never happen? James Wan and Leigh Whannell made their names with the original Saw, which the former directed while the latter wrote and starred. The movie was intended as a straight to video release, but after receiving strong buzz at festivals, it received a theatrical push and became a surprise smash. This led to yearly sequels, though Wan declined to return while Whannell wrote parts two and three. The series is still going to this day, with the upcoming ninth movie starring and written by Chris Rock arriving in 2020.

Baring a 2012 loose remake called Silent Night (read our review here), the series has laid dormant since 1991. So, props to writer/director/actor Kyle Brooky for having a go at telling the next chapter.

Break The Silence: The Movie follows BTS on their 14-month long LOVE YOURSELF tour, and offers fans an inside look into their life offstage. Directed by Park Jun Soo and produced by Big Hit Three Sixty, the film is an adaption of the seven-episode docu-series Break The Silence, which was made available on fan platform Weverse earlier this year. The movie was first released in September this year, in select theatres across the globe.

When DDT became available for civilian use in 1945, there were only a few people who expressed second thoughts about this new miracle compound. One was nature writer Edwin Way Teale, who warned, "A spray as indiscriminate as DDT can upset the economy of nature as much as a revolution upsets social economy. Ninety percent of all insects are good, and if they are killed, things go out of kilter right away." Another was Carson, who wrote to Reader's Digest to propose an article about a series of tests on DDT being conducted not far from where she lived in Maryland. The magazine rejected the idea. ff782bc1db

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