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Silent Hill Review

Movies.com Critics

2.5

Dave White Profile

… like a two-hour Marilyn Manson video. Read full review

Other Critics provided by Metacritic.com

Critics scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more favorable reviews.

  • 2.0
    30

    out of 100

    Metascore®
    Generally unfavorable reviews
    based on a weighted average of all
    critic review scores.

  • 10

    out of 100

    The New York Times

    From first frame to last, not a second of the film has a grip on reality. Structured around a series of blackouts and gross-outs, it is one long free fall through icky surrealism and underlighted nightmares. It takes us to the sort of world where hell is round the corner, secret doors abound and faux-blond policewomen outfit themselves in skin-tight leather.

    Read Full Review

  • 20

    out of 100

    The Hollywood Reporter Ray Bennett

    Witless, soulless and joyless, it displays its video game origins throughout.

    Read Full Review

  • 33

    out of 100

    Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman

    A few of the images are startling, but as Radha Mitchell (a good actress) wanders through a ghost town, searching for her lost daughter as though she was touring an abandoned movie set, Silent Hill is mostly paralyzing in its vagueness.

    Read Full Review

  • 38

    out of 100

    Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

    Although I did not understand the story, I would have appreciated a great deal less explanation. All through the movie, characters are pausing in order to offer arcane back-stories and historical perspectives and metaphysical insights and occult orientations. They talk and talk and somehow their words do not light up any synapses in my brain.

    Read Full Review

  • 40

    out of 100

    Variety Dennis Harvey

    In the end, Silent Hill degenerates into an overblown replay of all those "Twilight Zone" and Stephen King stories in which outsiders stumble upon a time-warped location from which there's no escape.

    Read Full Review

  • 50

    out of 100

    Los Angeles Times Jan Stuart

    Works up a decent amount of solid, creep-show atmosphere in its first act before making some absurd decisions of its own in its second.

    Read Full Review

  • 63

    out of 100

    ReelViews James Berardinelli

    It packs in a few scary moments and offers a nicely ambiguous conclusion. In Silent Hill, atmosphere trumps storyline.

    Read Full Review

  • See all Silent Hill reviews at Metacritic.com

For Families provided by Common Sense Media

Iffy for 16+

Grim horror film about missing girl. Not for kids.

What Parents Need to Know

Parents need to know that this film is too violent for children. The storyline takes the form of a nightmare, so connections between scenes and events are sometimes hard to follow. The town is ostensibly located over an ongoing coalmine fire, and the general mythos has to do with a cult that accuses and burns witches in order to maintain the group's "purity." Characters burn, stab, shoot, and throw rocks at each other; the film includes a couple of vehicle crashes, frequent scenes where the mother and/or her daughter scream in terror. Men in miners' gear appear to threaten Rose, mainly because they look scary in goggles and overalls. Various monsters are misshapen and zombie-like human-types, able to shape-shift in bad-dreamy fashion. The monsters attack with swords, the cop shoots until she's out of ammo and then submits to a dire beating. Characters are burned to death, with skin melting, bubbling, and charring.

  • Families can talk about the popularity of horror movies, especially among teens. Why do so many people enjoy being scared? Does a movie need to be gory to be scary?

The good stuff
  • message true0

    Messages: Nothing you would want your kid to emulate.

What to watch for
  • violence false5

    Violence: Some of the child's drawings are gruesome (black chalk showing violence to bodies); car and motorcycle accidents; grotesque ghost-like figures who appear variously to be burned/charred, gooey, flayed, misshapen, bloody, and scarred; a cut throat spews blood; a nightmare creature gushes something like acid at the policewoman, whose helmet burns; weapons include guns, a gigantic sword that cuts through doors; penetration and whomping with poles, barbed wire seems sentient, winding around limbs and penetrating bodies.

  • sex false3

    Sex: References to woman's pregnancy (she won't identify the father); suggestion that a janitor abuses a girl (rendered in a brief visual innuendo, not explicit); villainess suffers barbed wire tentacles going up inside her dress, then splitting her apart.

  • language false5

    Language: Several uses of f-word; an s-word, plus repeated uses of "hell," "damn," and "ass."

  • consumerism false0

    Consumerism: Coke vending machine at a gas station

  • drugsalcoholtobacco false0

    Drinking, drugs and smoking: A character smokes in the background of a scene.

Fan Reviews provided by

5

best movie ever! by amystwilight
Have you ever wanted to see a movie where you have to watch it again and again to see whats going one? The acting was ever awsome! With the girl with the burnt body telling the story. There is lots of gross sences in it. I don't think its best to let kids under 10 watch.Because its creepy,gorey, + more.

5

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