We deliberately did not use an actual place, since it might cause inconsistency with the real thing.” “Of course, Silent Hill really does not exist, and we have not allocated a certain place or time in the game. A traditional town in the countryside is the setting for the game, where it creates the weirdness and the eeriness in the ordinary world.” Silent Hill director Keiichiro Toyama told PSM magazine in a 1999 interview that “the game was supposed have a ‘modern American novel’ type of atmosphere. The Silent Hill development team turned to Kindergarten Cop, released in 1990, to give their game an authentic small-town American feel, from the yellow school busses to the posters that decorate the school hallways. (In the movie, it’s called Astoria Elementary, but it’s a real-world grade school named John Jacob Astor Elementary.) It’s directly based on the school from Kindergarten Cop, as the below video thoroughly illustrates. The biggest reference is with Silent Hill’s Midwich Elementary School - which pulls its name from Village of the Damned. ![]() That may be the strangest revelation about Team Silent’s groundbreaking horror title, more so than any bizarre UFO or shiba inu-related secret ending in the franchise. It wasn’t until the following decade that hardcore Silent Hill fans uncovered the undeniable influence of Ivan Reitman and Arnold Schwarzenegger’s comedy movie Kindergarten Cop on the design and architecture of the game. Playing the original Silent Hill for the first time back in 1999, many of its influences were immediately apparent: Adrian Lyne’s psychological horror movie Jacob’s Ladder and adaptation of Lolita William Peter Blatty’s The Exorcist 3 Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining the sci-fi and horror works of Ray Bradbury, Stephen King (aka Richard Bachman), and Dean Koontz.
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