Silent Hill
Silent Hill is a town surrounded by potent darkness, and the latest to drive through the portal is Rose who is trying to save her daughter.
30 January 1976, British Columbia, Canada
17 April 1959, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, UK
1975, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
11 March 1958, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
4 February 1981, Canada
28 June 1954, Upington, South Africa
17 April 1968, Rome, Lazio, Italy
April 29, 2009
It's one of the best video game adaptations I've seen in years.
May 02, 2006
Stuffed with cheap effects and devoid of tension, this French-Japanese-U.S. co-production contributes exactly zilch to the rich film history of those three nations.
April 24, 2006
A great-looking but stupefyingly incoherent supernatural thriller,
January 15, 2008
Whilst not as atrocious as some other films that have opened this year, the truely woeful story and quality of Silent is saved only by its occasion moments of visual flair, and its all over effective creepy atmosphere.
February 27, 2017
An atmospheric, disturbing and bloody movie, very true to video games. [Full review in Spanish]
May 06, 2006
French director Christophe Gans's adaptation of the Silent Hill computer game is visually inspired and thematically ambitious, yet ultimately uninvolving.
April 27, 2006
The film's peculiar rhythms%u2014action, exposition, action, exposition%u2014betray its video-game roots, but audiences unfamiliar with the Silent Hill series can be forgiven for thinking that the game asks players to run from place to place, shouting a l
January 22, 2010
Visually arresting but only sporadically enthralling.
July 14, 2007
The latest, most ambitious and perhaps least comprehensible video game adaptation in recent memory.
April 25, 2006
Structured around a series of blackouts and gross-outs, Silent Hill is one long free fall through icky surrealism and underlighted nightmares.
October 31, 2007
When everything starts being explained, the mystery evaporates and the world of the game loses its eerie bafflement.
April 26, 2006
Silent Hill is mostly paralyzing in its vagueness.

