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Now the dream of this life must end and so too must the dreamers within it. For over 30 years, they've lied to their own souls. For 30 years, they've denied their own fate. But now is the end of days, and I am the reaper.
—Dark Alessa to Rose Da Silva

Dark Alessa is a character in the Silent Hill film and Silent Hill: Revelation. She is the dark part of Alessa Gillespie's soul, an embodiment born from her pain and suffering.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Though her physical form is that of a 9 year old, her actual age is 30 years old, however, because she shares the same soul as Alessa, she is 39 years old by the events of the first film.

Background[]

Alessa_Gillespie

Alessa Gillespie

Alessa Gillespie's story.

Sometime around 10 PM on November 1, 1974, a young girl named Alessa Gillespie was burned alive by a group of religious fanatics who believed her to be a witch due to her possible lack of father and possible psychic powers. The burning went awry, leaving Alessa alive, but with third degree burns over her entire body.

After being taken to Brookhaven Hospital, Alessa's rage and hatred spiraled out of control. Her hate caused her to manifest extreme psionic powers, resulting in the flowers next to her hospital bed wilting at an unnatural rate of speed. When a curious nurse looked into Alessa's burn tent, she lashed out, burning the nurse's eyes and making them bleed forever, staining her clothes.

DarkAlessaHand

Dark Alessa at Alessa's hospital bed.

Immediately after, Alessa's soul split in two, causing the creation of Dark Alessa. Dark Alessa approached Alessa, and promised her that she could help her to take revenge on the cult. Alessa gave in to her own dark side, and she and Dark Alessa created the Otherworld, an alternate reality infected by Alessa's rage and pain. Dark Alessa used the Otherworld and a horde of monsters under her control to torture and kill those who had wronged Alessa, including both the cultists and Alessa's classmates, who had bullied and harassed her on a daily basis.

TOC2

Dark Alessa carrying Sharon.

In the 1990s, Alessa split her soul a second time, and created Sharon Da Silva, a doppelgänger of herself containing her good side. Dark Alessa carried the baby Sharon to the local orphanage, where she left her to be found by Sister Margaret.

Nine years later, Dark Alessa began to appear to Sharon in her sleep, causing her to sleepwalk. Dark Alessa continued to call to Sharon, intending to bring both Sharon and her mother to Silent Hill, West Virginia, the town where Dark Alessa and Alessa reside.

Silent Hill[]

Dark Alessa, seen at the begining of the film

Dark Alessa's first appearance.

In a sleepwalking fugue, Sharon Da Silva walks out of her house and to a steep cliff. As her mother calls to her, Sharon looks down and sees nothing but Dark Alessa, who seems to be beckoning her to throw herself off the cliff. At the last second, Rose Da Silva grabs Sharon and throws her to the ground, stopping her from falling to her death. During this, Sharon can be heard screaming, "Silent Hill! Silent Hill!" The next day, Rose takes Sharon to Silent Hill, intent on discovering the cause of her illness. As Rose arrives on the outskirts of the town, Dark Alessa darts into the road, causing Rose to crash her car. Once she is knocked unconscious, Sharon is removed from the car, and Rose is shifted into the Fog World.

Alessarun

Dark Alessa running from Rose.

Dark Alessa appears to Rose almost immediately after she wakes up from the crash, luring her into a dark alley, where she leads her to a miner strung on a fence and a group of childlike monsters known as the Grey Children. Rose comes across Dark Alessa again at Midwich Elementary School. As before, Dark Alessa leads her to clues pertaining to Alessa's past. When the Otherworld overtakes the school, Dark Alessa appears to Rose in her natural form, with greasy hair, pale skin, and blood smeared on her mouth. Dark Alessa later leads Rose to the sacrificial chamber where Alessa was burned alive, but quickly catches fire and disappears, referencing Alessa's burning.

RoseAlessa

Rose speaking with Dark Alessa.

At the hospital, Dark Alessa tells Rose the truth because she feels that she deserves it: Dark Alessa was the one who led all of the clues throughout the town in order to test Rose's love for Sharon and see if Rose is a worthy mother to be her new mother. Dark Alessa explains Alessa's history and why Rose was brought there. She explains to Rose that she intends to kill the cultists for their crimes against Alessa, and that she needs Rose's help to finish her plan. She also adds that it's time for the cultists to suffer the consequences of their actions. Dark Alessa warns Rose that Christabella, the cult's priestess, has likely found Sharon already, and that she intends to kill her in the same way she attempted to kill Alessa. Desperate to save her child, Rose agrees to help Dark Alessa and Alessa to get their final revenge. Dark Alessa hugs Rose, allowing her body to merge into Rose's.

Rose then carries Dark Alessa into the church where the cultists are hiding from Alessa's monsters, and tells them Alessa's truth, allowing Dark Alessa to speak through her. Rose's words incite the cult, and she is stabbed by Christabella, releasing Dark Alessa and opening a portal into Alessa's world. Dark Alessa climbs out of the Otherworld and dances in the blood of Christabella as Alessa rips her apart with rusted barbed wire.

LockEyes

Dark Alessa locks eyes with Sharon.

As Alessa's revenge ends, Dark Alessa finds Rose hiding in the corner of the church, shielding Sharon's eyes from the carnage. Dark Alessa approaches Sharon and locks eyes with her, causing her to faint, creating a full rebirth and merging of Alessa living in Sharon's body.[4] The darkness ends immediately afterwards, and both Dark Alessa and Alessa disappear.

Sharon walks left Rose

Sharon/Alessa leaves the room.

As Rose and Sharon leave the church, Sharon gives a knowing look to Alessa's mother, Dahlia Gillespie. It is implied that Sharon starts Rose's car with her mind. Back home in the Fog World, Christopher is nowhere to be found. Sharon leaves the room and her expression turns dark, indicating that Alessa's two halves have finally rejoined after 30 years, and that Sharon is now the complete Alessa.

Silent Hill: Revelation[]

DarkAlessaRev

Dark Alessa in her child form on the carousel.

Dark Alessa appears in Silent Hill: Revelation, taking the form of both a child and a teenager. Her child form is seen in a flashback chasing cultists and bringing the darkness of the Otherworld with her, and later appears on the carousel.

When Heather Mason, a renamed, older version of Sharon, returns to the town, Dark Alessa meets her on the carousel and then morphs into a teenaged version whose appearance and clothing match those of Heather, albeit with a darker and ruined appearance with ashen pale skin, black lips and black hair. She and Heather recombine and become a complete incarnation of Alessa, allowing Heather to take control of the Otherworld and its denizens.

Continuity changes[]

Aside from changing the vast majority of Alessa's backstory, Revelation also changes parts of Dark Alessa's story:

  • The merging of Alessa's soul seen at the end of the first film is ignored by Revelation, and Sharon and Dark Alessa are again shown to be separate entities in Revelation, with no explanation offered as to how or why they exist as two people.
  • Dark Alessa is stated to be the cause of the Great Fire that destroyed Silent Hill, having started it with the force of her hatred, however, the first film shows that the burning itself started the fire when the pit of coals overturned and ate down through the floor of the sacrificial chamber into a coal mine vent.
  • Dacompare

    Dark Alessa's appearance in Silent Hill versus that of Revelation.

    Dark Alessa's appearance is drastically altered from that seen in Silent Hill. In Silent Hill, Dark Alessa is shown with blood dripping from her eyes and mouth, black smears on her face and lips, and blue eyes. In Revelation, her face is clean and her eyes are black. Given that the ages of both Sharon and Alessa are retconned from 9 to 11 in the sequel, it is likely that Dark Alessa's physical form is supposed to be that of an 11 year old girl in Revelation, as compared to her 9 year old form in Silent Hill.
  • The manner of Dark Alessa's creation is changed in the original script for Revelation, which depicts Alessa turning her eyes black during the burning and becoming Dark Alessa. This version of Revelation shows that Alessa and Dark Alessa are the same person, not two separate bodies. It is never explicitly shown whether there are two or three versions of Alessa in the final film, though Alessa's adult form is never once mentioned or shown, suggesting that this retcon may be part of the film's official canon.
  • Notably, in the original script, the burning that creates Dark Alessa occurs in Alessa's own home, not a church, and it is presided over by Claudia and Leonard Wolf, with Christabella nowhere in sight.

Powers[]

Dark Alessa possesses a wide array of psionic abilities that allow her to affect the environment as well as herself in a variety of supernatural ways. Because Alessa was born with these powers, Dark Alessa also possesses them. She can shift her appearance at will, changing from looking identical to Alessa as a child to having a darker, more demonic appearance. She has the ability to be both tangible and intangible when she wishes, can appear and disappear at will, and also shows signs of extrasensory perception or cosmic awareness; as she is constantly aware of where Rose and the cultists are at all times.

Also notable is Dark Alessa's silence when she takes the form of the regular child version of Alessa. When Dark Alessa takes on a normal appearance, she does not speak, but rather relies on rattling a fence, making jerky movements, and stomping loudly to catch Rose's attention. This likely is a reference to Alessa's inability to speak or scream after she was burned in the fire, given the heavy emphasis on Alessa's silence in both the theatrical poster and the script. It could also be an inspiration from the game, and how Cheryl Mason ignores her father in his nightmare. Cybil Bennett also spots a girl and doesn't mention the girl replying to her, implying silence.

Silent hill revelation carousel of death by wordierbravo7-d5ki5jj (1)

Dark Alessa sets fire to the cultists.

She is also shown to have possession of massive pyrokinetic abilities. She can ignite fire out of nowhere, demonstrated when she catches fire in Silent Hill, and again in Revelation when she burns Heather and sets a group of cultists on fire, manipulating the fire as if it were alive with simple hand gestures. In all instances, her use of fire is symbolic of the torment of Alessa. When she catches fire in Silent Hill, she states, "Look at me, I'm burning", a clear reference to Alessa being burned alive by the fanatics. When she burns Heather in the dream sequence of Revelation, Heather's form takes on a charred appearance, very similar to that of burned Alessa. In killing the cultists with fire, Dark Alessa is visiting the same suffering upon them that they forced onto Alessa.

Darkclimb

Dark Alessa in the Otherworld, an altered version of reality created from her twisted psyche.

Dark Alessa is a reality warper, capable of changing physical reality to suit her needs, to the extent of creating entire worlds, a god-like feat. She creates the Fog World and Otherworld as manifestations of the loneliness and anger of Alessa, and fills these worlds with horrific monsters borne of Alessa's twisted psyche. These worlds are incarnations of Alessa's tortured mind, designed to represent the cruelty of a tortured child.[7]

She is also capable of possession, as she enters Rose's body and uses her to enter the church and incite the cultists.

Symbolism[]

Dark Alessa could be viewed as strongly representing the Holy Spirit, a prominent figure in Christian beliefs. This symbolism is likely intentional, given director statements about the vast amounts of Christian symbolism found in the film.[8]

Like the Holy Spirit, Dark Alessa is created by a prominent God figure (Alessa), who splits off part of themselves to exist as multiple entities. Dark Alessa also acts as a mouthpiece for Alessa, the same as the Holy Spirit is said in the Bible to speak for God. When she merges with Rose in the hospital, the scene acts as a metaphor for the impregnation of the Virgin Mary by the Holy Spirit. Further, the Holy Spirit is well recognized by Trinitarians as using the followers of God as a mouthpiece, possessing believers and literally speaking through them. This is seen when Dark Alessa merges into Rose and then speaks through her during the confrontation with the cultists.

It is also possible that Dark Alessa has a duel representation as the Christian devil, in light of her claim to have "many names", and the demonic nature of her deal with Alessa. Director Christophe Gans has stated that Dark Alessa is a Japanese representation of a devil, which consists of the dark side of the human soul.[9][10]

Actor's commentary[]

Dark Alessa is sort of the bad part of Alessa, so that's why she's so scary and strange.
—Actress Jodelle Ferland, on Dark Alessa's identity[6]

Quotes[]

Silent Hill[]

  • "Look at me, I'm burning."
  • "Did you see that Alessa was a good little girl? Even though nobody looked at her that way. Their parents told them she was bad. She didn't have a father like they did. Alessa was alone in the world. You know what can happen to little girls when they're left alone."
  • "Even her mother couldn't help, even though she loved her baby. But the rest of the family didn't love Alessa, they were just like the others and made her scared."
  • "They had met many times since the town was built, to restore innocence and purity. They had a special place for that."
  • "You know how that feels, don't you, Rose? To lose your little girl."
  • "They thought they knew how to cast out evil. But you should be careful how you fight evil. Your weapons can turn back on you."
  • "Now you know why Dahlia is broken. She tried to get help, but she went too late."
  • "There were good people in the town. People like you, Rose. People who like to help."
  • "Alessa was so lonely and hurt and scared. They should have known better than to hurt her so badly. When you're hurt and scared for so long, the fear and pain turn to hate and the hate starts to change the world. Alessa's hate grew and grew, burning inside her. Her hate got so strong, she even hurt someone who was only curious. That's when I came. I told her it was their turn. I promised they would all fall into her darkest dream."
  • "Don't be afraid. She won't hurt you. She needs your help."
  • "I have many names. Right now, I'm the dark part of Alessa."
  • "She's not your child. She's hers. The little girl is what's left of her goodness."
  • "All we ask for is satisfaction: revenge."
  • "You chose. You chose Sharon. Christabella will find Sharon, she plans to purify her."
  • "Their blind conviction repels me from their church. I cannot enter while they deny their fate."
  • "Tell them the truth."

Silent Hill: Revelation[]

  • "You cannot defeat me. Do not go to Silent Hill."
  • "Daughter... sister... self..."
  • "I gave you life so you could live my dream! You're the part of me that could be free of this pain, could live and feel love."
  • Sharon/Heather: "Do you feel nothing?"
    Dark Alessa: "Nothing but hate."
  • "Everyone has a different nightmare in Silent Hill. I am theirs."
  • "He's NOT my father or yours! And sacrifices have to be made."
  • Sharon/Heather: "GO TO HELL!"
    Dark Alessa: "Can't you see? We're already here. And you are NOT welcome!"
  • "Do you think I won't destroy you?"
  • "Time to take back what I gave you!"
  • "We are one, Heather."

Trivia[]

  • Darefspic

    Dark Alessa is based off of female spirits seen in Toby Dammit and Kill, Baby, Kill.

    Contrary to popular belief, Dark Alessa's physical appearance is inspired by Italian horror cinema, not Japanese horror.[2] Specifically, Melissa from Kill, Baby, Kill and the Devil in Spirits of the Dead were used as the base for her image.[11]
  • Dark Alessa was originally just an astral projection of Alessa, but she was later changed to a manifestation containing the dark side of Alessa's soul. Similarly, Sharon was changed to be a manifestation of the good side of Alessa.[12]
This is where it gets a bit confusing, I think, for those who only want to decipher it from a Judaeo-Christian conception of good and evil. In this scene you can understand that Alessa, in her martyrdom, is visited by the devil, who offers her the chance of vengeance. In fact, from what I know of Japanese folk traditions, which I believe inspired the game to a large extent, I think that what's really happening in this scene is that Alessa is visited by her double. In her pain she's been split into several Alessas. There's the real Alessa, suffering, there's the evil Alessa, her dark side, who's just visited her, and there's a good Alessa, who's made safe in the real world in the shape of Sharon, the little girl adopted by Sean Bean and Radha Mitchell.[1]
  • Dark Alessa is often confused as being an incarnation of the the Devil of Abrahamic mythology. The confusion is so widespread that director Christophe Gans commented on it in the film's commentary, stating that the character is meant to be seen from a Japanese perspective (the Japanese form of a devil - the dark side of the human soul), not a Christian one. Dark Alessa can be compared to a shinigami ("death god", "death spirit" or "Japanese devil").
    • In an original script, Christabella refers to Dark Alessa as "Samael".[13] In the game universe, the name Samael was used by Dahlia Gillespie as a sophism, claiming that Alessa was trying to summon a demon as a means of manipulating Harry Mason.[14]
  • Most of Dark Alessa's lines contain Biblical references.[8]
  • It is unknown why Dark Alessa cannot enter the cult's church. She vaguely tells Rose, "Their blind conviction repels me from their church. I cannot enter while they deny their fate." There are two possible explanations for this:
    • The alternate realms are a place of Alessa's delusions. Alessa was strongly indoctrinated by the cult when she grew up, and she believed that their faith was too strong to get past. Only when their faith was shaken - when they realized they had committed evil - could she finally enter the church and take her revenge. This is why Alessa needs Rose to tell the cultists 'the truth'.
    • A theory is that Alessa can enter the church anytime she wants, but she feels the cultists need to understand why she was killing them before they die. She craves both a spiritual and a physical victory over the cult, so that they do not die thinking themselves blameless martyrs.
  • Dark Alessa is not listed in the film's official cast list, with Jodelle Ferland only being credited as "Alessa/Sharon", however, her name appears in interviews, on the official website, and in all promotional materials. In the final version of the script, she is called "Dark Alessa", however, in the original script she was referred to as "Alessa" and "Young Alessa"[12]. Similarly, director Christophe Gans never calls her "Dark Alessa" in his commentary, repeatedly referring to her as "Alessa", and once as "the dark side Alessa".
  • Dark Alessa is called "the architect of the darkness" in the film's commentary, and the scene of her scribbling at her desk in the Otherworld is meant to show that her drawings are what causes the alternate reality to shift to its Otherworld variation.[3]
  • Writer Roger Avary apologized to Jodelle Ferland's parents for any mental trauma she may have incurred from playing the role of Dark Alessa.
  • Dark Alessa's teenaged appearance in Revelation is based on that of Memory of Alessa in Silent Hill 3, however, the two characters serve very different functions.

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "This is where, I think, the film gets a bit complicated for those who only want to decipher it from a Judaeo-Christian conception of good and evil. In this scene you can understand that Alessa, in her martyrdom, is visited by the devil, who offers her the chance of vengeance. In fact, from what I know of Japanese folk traditions, which I believe inspired the game to a large extent, I think that what’s really happening in this scene is that Alessa is visited by her double. In her pain she’s been split into several Alessas. There’s the real Alessa, suffering, there’s the evil Alessa, her dark side, who’s just visited her, and there’s a good Alessa, who’s made safe in the real world in the shape of Sharon, the little girl adopted by Sean Bean and Radha Mitchell. I think that’s the explanation for how she becomes a multi-faceted character, with different faces and different ages. It’s something that’s in the game, which intrigues players: why Alessa exists in different guises, at different ages… Both evil guises and guises that are… “human”. I think that’s the explanation. In Far-Eastern religions, good and evil aren’t exterior to us. We contain our own good and our own evil. We are our own god and our own devil. I think this is the explanation for what’s happening here in the film. Alessa splits into several Alessas. That was a very Japanese idea." Gans, Christophe (2009). Silent Hill: Metropolitan Édition Haute Définition [Blu-Ray; Disc 1/2].
  2. 2.0 2.1 "In this scene, Radha Mitchell is confronted with an incarnation of Alessa, who takes the appearance of a little “Italian-style” ghost, with this baroque aspect, the rotting uniform, the strange face and so on." Gans, Christophe (2009). Silent Hill: Metropolitan Édition Haute Définition [Blu-Ray; Disc 1/2].
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Here we see the first encounter between Radha Mitchell and… the Alessa character, who’s the double, the original, of her daughter, and therefore the brains behind the mystery of Silent Hill. In fact, we’re in her head. She’s drawing what we can see happening. The idea is that she wildly scribbles a drawing in the same way as she tortures the décor. It’s a massacre with crayons. So the idea, at this point, is that we not only see the décor, but its architect too." Gans, Christophe (2009). Silent Hill: Metropolitan Édition Haute Définition [Blu-Ray; Disc 1/2].
  4. 4.0 4.1 "One moment that was important to get right was when Alessa confronts Sharon, when the dark Alessa, her evil side, meets her good side, Sharon, and the two fuse together again." Gans, Christophe (2009). Silent Hill: Metropolitan Édition Haute Définition [Blu-Ray; Disc 1/2].
  5. Jodelle Ferland speaks to Bloody Disgusting
  6. 6.0 6.1 Jodelle Ferland radio interview
  7. "Here we’re getting to the core of the definition of the town Silent Hill, which is that it’s a tormented, tortured place. The reality of this little town has been, in a way, tortured by a child. Like a little girl using a lighter to melt her doll. Well, the character of Alessa has done the same to the entire town, held a flame to it, in a way." Gans, Christophe (2009). Silent Hill: Metropolitan Édition Haute Définition [Blu-Ray; Disc 1/2].
  8. 8.0 8.1 "This scene shows how mature Jodelle Ferland is. Her lines were very complicated, full of biblical references, very symbolic and so on." Gans, CHristophe (2009). Silent Hill: Metropolitan Édition Haute Définition [Blu-Ray; Disc 1/2].
  9. Silent Hill Movie Interview: The Director's Cut
  10. Silent Hill Director's Blog
  11. "It’s not a reference to J-Horror, it’s a reference to the little ghosts in Italian horror and fantasy, especially in Bava’s Kill Baby… Kill!, which I mentioned earlier, but also in Fellini’s sketch, Toby Dammit, in Spirits of the Dead, an important film." Gans, Christophe (2009). Silent Hill: Metropolitan Édition Haute Définition [Blu-Ray; Disc 1/2].
  12. 12.0 12.1 Silent Hill screenplay, October 2004.
  13. [1]
  14. http://silenthillchronicle.net/shkgb.htm

Gallery[]

For a complete list of images of Dark Alessa, please visit the Dark Alessa images category.

Silent Hill[]

Silent Hill: Revelation[]

v · e · d
Characters
Major Characters
Rose Da Silva - Christopher Da Silva - Cybil Bennett - Dahlia Gillespie - Thomas Gucci - Anna - Christabella - Sharon Da Silva - Alessa Gillespie - Dark Alessa
Other Characters
Sister Margaret - Eleanor - Adam - Colin - Lisa Garland - Jennifer Carroll
Monsters
Armless Man - Colin - Creeper - Dark Nurse - Grey Child - Red Pyramid
Locations
Brahms - Brookhaven Hospital - Church - Da Silva House - Gans County - Grand Hotel - Midwich Elementary School - Nathan Drugs - Pete's Bowl-O-Rama - Sacrificial Chamber - Silent Hill, West Virginia - Smitty's - Toluca County Archives - Toluca County Mining Museum - Toluca County Orphanage - Toluca Lake
Terms
The Brethren - Monster - Flashlight - Manifestation - Otherworld - Fog World - Real World - Siren - Great Knife - Welcome Sign - Brethren Symbol
Archives
Soundtrack
v · e · d
Characters
Major Characters
Heather Mason - Christopher Da Silva - Vincent Cooper - Claudia Wolf - Leonard Wolf - Dark Alessa - Douglas Cartland - Alessa Gillespie
Other Characters
Rose Da Silva - Dahlia Gillespie - Suki - Travis Grady - Order Soldier - Detective Santini - Mannequin Girl
Monsters
Armless Man - Delusion - Leonard Wolf - Lobotomy - Mannequin Monster - Memory of Alessa - Missionary - Nurse - Pyramid Head - Valtiel
Locations
All Hallows High School - Brookhaven Asylum - Central Square Shopping Center - Jacks Inn - Sanctuary - Silent Hill, West Virginia - Lakeside Amusement Park
Terms
The Brethren - Halo of the Sun - Monster - Manifestation - Otherworld - Fog World - Real World - Robbie the Rabbit - Seal of Metatron - Siren - The Order - Great Knife - Welcome Sign
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