Sunday, October 28, 2012

Silent Hill: Revelation


            Here's all you need to know about Silent Hill:Revelation.  A guy three rows behind me fell into such a deep slumber that he snored through about 30 minutes of the film.

            On to the review!

            For the rest of my life, I am only going to refer to this film as Silent Hill: Exposition.  I'm aware that exposition can serve a positive purpose in catching the viewers up on something important.  The idea is to prevent having to add scene after and dragging the movie down.  However, you run the risk of going too far in the other direction.  Now, we suddenly have every character spoon-feeding the audience everything they need to know.  In case you didn't know, this kind of kills a film's momentum.
            Silent Hill: Exposition isn't a bad movie, per-se.  The action scenes are fantastic, the creatures are truly creepy (especially the doll-spider), and there is an interesting plot.  It's just that the plot is buried under poor acting, too much talking, lots of standing around and some of the cheesiest twists I've ever seen.
            Much of it can be blamed on the acting.  It's hard to blame the actors per se, considering they're the likes of Sean Bean, Carrie-Anne Moss and Malcolm McDowell.  So I'll go ahead and say that poor director Mark Tonderai was in waaaaay over his head.  Sean Bean is especially wretched as Harry, the father of our titular hero.  He keeps dropping his American accent and mixing in his native Queen's English, but it gets so muddled that at one point I was convinced he'd decided to play a Russian immigrant.
            Malcolm McDowell and Miss Moss aren't quite as terrible. I think they were given so little to work with they ended up just showing up, getting their money, and calling it a day.
            I can't be as nice to our two primary characters, however.  Adelaide Clemens (Heather) isn't very good at all, and her character development is painfully ridiculous.  We sort of need her to be someone we can root for, since she's, y'know, the main character and all.  It's a shame that all I could do was laugh at the ridiculous.
            Then there's Vincent, played by Kit Harington.  To say he's instrumental to the plot would be an understatement, but at no point in the movie did I give a flying pig's ass about whether he lived or died.
            As for the plot itself, it's pretty straightforward.  Years after Heather's mother sacrificed herself to get Heather out of Silent Hill, Heather and Harry are constantly on the run.  There's a crazed cult that wants to drag Heather back to Silent Hill for a dark ritual, and Harry's not big on that idea.
            Of course, Heather has complete amnesia about the whole incident, and she just believes that she and her father are on the run from the law after Harry killed one of the cultists in their home.
            Yadda yadda, blah blah, that doesn't work out, Harry gets kidnapped, and Heather recruits Vincent to help her get to Silent Hill and rescue her father.
            The beginning is silly, the middle is apparently snore-worthy, and the ending is laughable.  Strangely enough, there really is a lot to like if you're a Silent Hill fan.  There are tons of nods to the video game franchise,  and the creatures really are amazing.  Someone put a lot of love into the crazy demons, and it shows.  The nurses are especially fantastic, and I wouldn't have minded just seeing a 90 minute film that followed Pyramid Head around while he violently interacted with crazier and crazier critters.
            If you still want to go see Silent Hill: Exposition then you absolutely must do it in 3D.  The effects make it worth your time, and it takes a few good scenes and makes them phenomenal.  Unfortunately for us and the future prospects of this film, none of those scenes involve a single main character being particularly useful.
            As someone who loves the Silent Hill games (but sucks at them), enjoyed the first Silent Hill and still quests for good scares, I can tell you that this film would make a perfectly adequate rental. 
            Still nowhere near as good as Sinister though.

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