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About Me Member Deviously Deviant DOTTOR-CID20/Male/Italy Recent Activity Deviant for 4 Months
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Devious Info

  • Current Residence: Italy
  • Interests: draw
  • Favourite movie: Silent Hill
  • Favourite band or musician: Michael Jackson
  • Favourite genre of music: classical music
  • Favourite artist: Maurits Cornelis Escher
  • Favourite poet or writer: Dante Alighieri
  • Favourite style of art: surrealist
  • Operating System: Window xp
  • Favourite game: Silent hill
  • Favourite gaming platform: Pc
  • Favourite cartoon character: Spongebob

Silent Hill film inspired by Centralia

Tue Jul 28, 2009, 2:01 PM
Since the first Silent Hill game back in 1999, fans have wondered if the title town had a real-life counterpart. Is there a particular town that inspired the haunted wasteland we've come to know and fear in the games? There have been many speculations, and now here's a place you can actually visit... for REAL...

In researching the different elements of Silent Hill, screenwriter Roger Avary came across the town of Centralia, Pennsylvania (it's interesting that LA moviemakers look to the deep Midwest [or in this case, the eastern U.S. in Pennsylvania] when they're looking for something "strange" or "different"). Centralia planted the seed for what developed into the cinematic version of the town of Silent Hill.

As recently as 1981, there were over 1,000 residents living in Centralia, although the population has now dwindled to 11 (we'll say that again: 11 people) as a result of a 40-year mine fire burning beneath the borough (we'll say that again: it's been burning for 40 years... underneath the town). This is certainly not unlike Silent Hill, which was left deserted since devastating coal fires ravaged the town and its people.

The inferno started when a trash fire was lit in an abandoned mine pit in Centralia in 1962. The fire ignited an exposed vein of coal and spread throughout the mines beneath the borough. Several attempts have been made and millions of dollars have been spent unsuccessfully to extinguish this fire that still burns today.

The "problem" wasn't really acknowledged until a series of accidents in the '70s and '80s, including the appearances of sinkholes hundreds of feet deep. In 1984, Congress allocated more than $40 million for relocation efforts, and most residents moved to nearby Mount Carmel and Ashland.

However, a very few families opted to stay, and they're still there, despite the fact that the state of Pennsylvania has condemned all the buildings in the borough and the US Postal Service has revoked its zip code of 17927. The 11 holdouts include the town's 89-year-old mayor, Lamar Mervine, who refuses to leave because "I like it here."
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Comments


:iconinthename:
Thank You for the watch! Sorry that I'm so late responding to you.
~Sabrina

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:bulletblack:My Gallery! [link]:bulletblack:
:icondottor-cid:
Hey ,no problem! and thank you for the watch!
:thanks:
:iconinthename:
You're very welcome!:D

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:bulletblack:My Gallery! [link]:bulletblack:
:iconbeige-fifteen:
The more I see your work, the more I love it
:icondottor-cid:
thanks, I'm happy you like my drawings :-):-)

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