![]() ![]() I don’t think you can let that affect your performance or where you want to go with it, you’ve got to portray something as truthfully as possible, round the character out and make him a good, three-dimensional character and you know, that seemed to go down well the last time, the fans seemed to be quite excited about the film and I think it will be the same this time hopefully, but you’ve got just to go for it as you feel, as you should, rather than have any great weight of expectation on you. Not detrimentally so, in a positive way perhaps. The Silent Hill franchise does have a big, established fan base, do you feel a sense of pressure knowing there is already an expectant fan base out there? No, I wasn’t really, I wasn’t even very familiar with Silent Hill and the video games or anything, so it’s been a bit of an eye opener for me, but it’s still going strong and there are a lot of people out there who feel very passionately towards the game and I feel we have translated that into film quite well, and truthfully. Were you always aware when making a first that there was to be a second lined up? You seem to have a more prominent role in this sequel than you did in the first. It’s a father-daughter relationship and she falls for someone called Vincent and things change around, but that is the nucleus – the family. Yeah, you’re right it does, it’s not just people getting sliced up and this and that, it’s that fixed unit – the mother, father and daughter and you care for them having got to know them. The guy she is with discovers some stuff about her and weird abstract drawings and symbols and writings in her bedroom and he obviously knows there’s something going on and that she has been drawn to a darker side and then it goes on from there really, and he tries to save her and bring her back.ĭespite entering this quite disturbing fantasy world that is Silent Hill, at the heart of the film there are family elements, do you think that helps make this film relatable? But she’s obviously growing up and she meets a guy and goes to a different school and everyone thinks she’s a bit weird, which she is. ![]() And my character is just trying to bring up his daughter as a young, teenager trying to go to school, and just being a very vigilant father. They just have to keep moving along, moving home and changing their name and things like that, so they aren’t pursued by anyone. ![]() It’s some years on and my daughter has become 18 now and they’re just trying to keep their lives together after the horrific experiences of the last event which, including my wife, saw us all drawn to Silent Hill. So tell us about Silent Hill: Revelation – what’s different between this one and the first? Bean plays the role of Harry, a vigilant father to Heather (Adelaide Clemens) who is drawn into the surreal, alternate reality that is Silent Hill.īean discusses what it’s like to get involved in the horror genre, and what it is about this particular franchise that allows for it to stand out from the crowd, while also telling us of his joy at working alongside director Michael J. However, this Halloween we’ve got the promising Silent Hill: Revelation 3D – and to mark the release of the long-awaited sequel, I caught up with leading star Sean Bean.īased on the hugely successful video game franchise, Silent Hill: Revelation 3D takes us back to the eponymous town, a place where nightmares are a terrifying reality. As Chris learns, the townspeople disappeared and their bodies were never found - because they are trapped in this second, timeless dimension.As Halloween fast approaches it’s that time of year again when filmmakers see the annual occasion as an excuse to release their latest horror flick, as more often than not, we are subject to lacklustre, unoriginal movies that are about as scary as a packet of mints. The devil, Alessa, and the cult are trapped inside the gloomy, creepy purgatory in which Rose, Sharon, and Cybil have entered. Sharon was left at a church in a neighboring town, and she was adopted by Rose and Chris. When the devil took control of her body, he tossed out any innocence that remained inside her, resulting in Sharon as a baby. The incident caused a fire inside their church, and although the police arrived in time to pull Alessa free, she was burnt all over and in tremendous pain - pain that allowed the devil to take possession of her in exchange for granting her revenge against the townspeople. Alessa's aunt, Christabella, determined the girl was a witch and, ultimately, convinced her followers to burn Alessa alive. These fractured dimensions occurred because of a religious cult in the 1960s that bullied an illegitimate child named Alessa. ![]()
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