ctrlnuke wrote:You go into a horror movie with the intent on seeing brutalization of the actors/actresses. It's known before going into it that that's what you're going to see.
Silent Hill had mostly a female cast, but to try to make it into something it's not (i.e. some political statement about women/fetish/whatever you're trying to say) is just stupid.
Familiarize yourself with some film theory and get back to me. A good starting place with respect to this might be Linda Williams's "Discipline and Fun:
Psycho and Postmodern Cinema." You see the repeated victimization of women as a result of a mostly-female cast, but I see the causal relationship going in the other direction.
I should also point out that I didn't take issue with the violence, only with the fact that the movie itself was a pitiful excuse for the showcasing of said violence. The savagery is to be expected, but most vehicles for it at least try to justify themselves.
As for the game, I don't really enjoy video games any more (once I grew out of q3, that was it). If you are suggesting it as a way of better understanding the background of the movie, fine, but I expect films to be able to stand alone -- sequels notwithstanding.
Edit: and knocking the movie because the females weren't that attractive is moronic. Sorry you didn't get a chubby watching Silent Hill, but I don't think that was the intent.
I don't generally care if movies star superhot women or not, but that could have been a redeeming factor, and it is one that the folks behind Silent Hill really missed out on. That's all I said. Reading too much into such a statement is "moronic."
And do you really think they put Laurie Holden into Trinity-style skintight latex because that's what cops wear? She squeaked when she walked, for fuck's sake.