Especially using the crappy US boxarts.
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HD Collection PS3 Exclusive (Hah! 360 too) /New VAs
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Well they've already teased us with the Silent Hill 2 tidbits. Question is when will we start learning more about Silent Hill 3. Will we even get a teaser for the new voices in that game? Or do you think the reception to the recast of 2 caused them to hold back until launch? 3's my favorite game in the series so they better not do something ridiculous to the voices.
Since Mary Elizabeth McGlynn seems to be choosing actors she's worked with I had this terrible nightmare a while ago where I heard Stephanie Sheh voicing Heather. That was enough to make me wake up in fear all drenched in sweat.
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**I do not wish to double post, but this deserves its own personal spot in the thread. Here's Guy Cihi's open statement to Konami regarding the HD Collection.**
Open letter to Konami Digital Entertainment, Inc.
by Guy Cihi on Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 8:32pm
[There has been a great deal of discussion and speculation about the decision to recast the voice acting for the forthcoming Silent Hill 2 re-release. Certain comments and accusations have been made and the situation has become a mess. I issue this statement with hope that it will help set things right.]
To Konami Digital Entertainment, Inc.
Amazing as it may seem, neither I nor to my knowledge any of the other voice actors involved in the creation of Silent Hill 2 received written agreements for our work. All I have is a verbal agreement based on the various negotiations that took place between me and Konami’s representatives. I was told that I would receive a written contract but I never did. I invite anyone claiming the existence of a contract to produce a copy of it. My verbal agreements with Konami management covered the release of SH2 on the PlayStation 2 consoles. No other console releases were discussed between us, and none was agreed to.
Californian law which, under the circumstances, governs the agreement between Konami and me provides that voice actors in videogames retain all rights for reproductions and re-uses of their vocal recordings and motion-capture work unless the artist specifically conveys those rights to a second party. The implications ought to be clear enough regarding the releases and reuses of my performances on consoles other than PlayStation 2. Obviously Konami’s legal department agreed with the strength of my position or they would not have supported the significant expense undertaken to rerecord voices in advance of the HD collection re-release. It would have been much easier if someone responsible at Konami had simply talked to me and sought to resolve this amicably.
Recently some things have been said by people acting as if they are part of the Konami organization, for example, that an attempt was made to reach out to me to help get things straightened out. This isn’t true. After the production work wrapped, only one person connected to Konami has ever attempted contact me and that was Michael Ranja, Director of Licensing at Konami Digital Entertainment, Inc. in California. On October 6, 2010 Mr. Ranja sent me the following message: “Per the voice acting done for the videogame Silent Hill 2 (your role as James Sunderland), I understand that in the past it was agreed that Konami would purchase and own all rights to the voice acting. As we don’t have paperwork for this, would it be possible for you to fill out the attachment and email or fax back to me?” His second email, and the last time I have ever heard from Konami, was on October 22, 2010 when Mr. Ranja replied to my email saying that he would do his best to contact me again shortly regarding a settlement.
Let me be clear about something: my problem with Konami has never been about money. It’s always been about the thoughtless way that those involved in the production have been treated. The reuse of my material without asking me and without having a written agreement that provides for it is one example. Another example is how my contributions to the game, and my face, were purposefully erased from the ‘making of’ video. Why was that done? These are some of the issues I asked Konami to settle with me on before making any new agreements. To this day Konami has never offered any explanation.
Like everyone else, I feel it is a real shame we have come to this point. The original cast, writers, and directors of Silent Hill 2 all felt we were making something great, but I don’t think any of us realized just how successful and respected it would become. I am eternally grateful to have been selected by Team Silent to portray James Sunderland. I am equally grateful to the dedicated SH2 fans who enlightened me to fact that SH2 is much more than just an intellectual property to be bought, sold and repackaged.
After thinking it through carefully I have come to realize that I am unwilling to be part of any legal barrier or excuse which prevents a new generation from experiencing Silent Hill 2 the way the original Team Silent created it. The only way to do this appears to be for me to relinquish all my rights to Konami and so I hereby completely waive all rights to my motion capture and vocal performances in the Silent Hill 2 production without demand for additional consideration. Have your lawyer send me the proper documents required so that we can put this fiasco behind us.
I call on Konami to release the HD versions of SH2, and all subsequent re-releases, with the original vocal tracks intact. If you desire, I welcome you to include the new vocal tracks so that fans can choose which version they prefer.
Sincerely,
Guy Cihi
August 2011
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Originally posted by Smiley View Post**I do not wish to double post, but this deserves its own personal spot in the thread. Here's Guy Cihi's open statement to Konami regarding the HD Collection.**
Open letter to Konami Digital Entertainment, Inc.
by Guy Cihi on Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 8:32pm
[There has been a great deal of discussion and speculation about the decision to recast the voice acting for the forthcoming Silent Hill 2 re-release. Certain comments and accusations have been made and the situation has become a mess. I issue this statement with hope that it will help set things right.]
To Konami Digital Entertainment, Inc.
Amazing as it may seem, neither I nor to my knowledge any of the other voice actors involved in the creation of Silent Hill 2 received written agreements for our work. All I have is a verbal agreement based on the various negotiations that took place between me and Konami’s representatives. I was told that I would receive a written contract but I never did. I invite anyone claiming the existence of a contract to produce a copy of it. My verbal agreements with Konami management covered the release of SH2 on the PlayStation 2 consoles. No other console releases were discussed between us, and none was agreed to.
Californian law which, under the circumstances, governs the agreement between Konami and me provides that voice actors in videogames retain all rights for reproductions and re-uses of their vocal recordings and motion-capture work unless the artist specifically conveys those rights to a second party. The implications ought to be clear enough regarding the releases and reuses of my performances on consoles other than PlayStation 2. Obviously Konami’s legal department agreed with the strength of my position or they would not have supported the significant expense undertaken to rerecord voices in advance of the HD collection re-release. It would have been much easier if someone responsible at Konami had simply talked to me and sought to resolve this amicably.
Recently some things have been said by people acting as if they are part of the Konami organization, for example, that an attempt was made to reach out to me to help get things straightened out. This isn’t true. After the production work wrapped, only one person connected to Konami has ever attempted contact me and that was Michael Ranja, Director of Licensing at Konami Digital Entertainment, Inc. in California. On October 6, 2010 Mr. Ranja sent me the following message: “Per the voice acting done for the videogame Silent Hill 2 (your role as James Sunderland), I understand that in the past it was agreed that Konami would purchase and own all rights to the voice acting. As we don’t have paperwork for this, would it be possible for you to fill out the attachment and email or fax back to me?” His second email, and the last time I have ever heard from Konami, was on October 22, 2010 when Mr. Ranja replied to my email saying that he would do his best to contact me again shortly regarding a settlement.
Let me be clear about something: my problem with Konami has never been about money. It’s always been about the thoughtless way that those involved in the production have been treated. The reuse of my material without asking me and without having a written agreement that provides for it is one example. Another example is how my contributions to the game, and my face, were purposefully erased from the ‘making of’ video. Why was that done? These are some of the issues I asked Konami to settle with me on before making any new agreements. To this day Konami has never offered any explanation.
Like everyone else, I feel it is a real shame we have come to this point. The original cast, writers, and directors of Silent Hill 2 all felt we were making something great, but I don’t think any of us realized just how successful and respected it would become. I am eternally grateful to have been selected by Team Silent to portray James Sunderland. I am equally grateful to the dedicated SH2 fans who enlightened me to fact that SH2 is much more than just an intellectual property to be bought, sold and repackaged.
After thinking it through carefully I have come to realize that I am unwilling to be part of any legal barrier or excuse which prevents a new generation from experiencing Silent Hill 2 the way the original Team Silent created it. The only way to do this appears to be for me to relinquish all my rights to Konami and so I hereby completely waive all rights to my motion capture and vocal performances in the Silent Hill 2 production without demand for additional consideration. Have your lawyer send me the proper documents required so that we can put this fiasco behind us.
I call on Konami to release the HD versions of SH2, and all subsequent re-releases, with the original vocal tracks intact. If you desire, I welcome you to include the new vocal tracks so that fans can choose which version they prefer.
Sincerely,
Guy Cihi
August 2011
"I miss the days when we just cared how cool an enemy was rather than critiquing and analyzing everything to death." - Shield Key
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Some pretty powerful words huh? Sadly as I've told Guy I do not see Konami responding to this.
Knowing how problematic things have been we can expect Konami to chalk Guy's response up as "too little; too late". We already heard Troy Baker and Mary Elizabeth McGlynn lay blame on Guy for the recast. Whether this is what the people at Konami told them or not is anyone's guess.
Frankly I don't buy it, and the simple fact is because they recast the voices for Silent Hill 2 AND Silent Hill 3. Why would they do that if their conflict was over one voice actor? The only reason I can gather is that someone in Konami did botch up here, and now all the people involved with 2 and 3 are in the same legal position as Guy. They have the right to sue over residuals for their performances being used outside Sony's playstation 2 if they so desired. But since Guy is the most outspoken about it they're placing fault with him. To me, this is wrong if that's the case.
Konami should own up to their mistakes and seek settlement instead of ignoring the issue. I would like to know what Heather Morris and the others think as well. Guy is willing to settle with no financial gain. The problem is if Konami owes to more than one person then Guy waiving his rights will still be meaningless because they would have to have consent from all the other talented artists as well. An impossible feat in some cases since the voice actor for Douglas in Silent Hill 3 passed away back in 2003. If there's any way around it I'm sure Konami would rather save themselves the effort and spend the money to replace each individual actor.Last edited by Smiley; 08-29-2011, 03:30 AM.
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Argh, I swear to my Dark Overlords, if Konami ignores this and keep trying to pour the blame on Guy Cihi for this bullshit I will punch them in the face. And probably not buy any of there games new again, if they annoy me much further. I can get all your shit second hand, Konami, just like I do with Capcom.
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Originally posted by Darkmoon View PostArgh, I swear to my Dark Overlords, if Konami ignores this and keep trying to pour the blame on Guy Cihi for this bullshit I will punch them in the face. And probably not buy any of there games new again, if they annoy me much further. I can get all your shit second hand, Konami, just like I do with Capcom.
"I miss the days when we just cared how cool an enemy was rather than critiquing and analyzing everything to death." - Shield Key
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"Amazing as it may seem, neither I nor to my knowledge any of the other voice actors involved in the creation of Silent Hill 2 received written agreements for our work."
"I call on Konami to release the HD versions of SH2, and all subsequent re-releases, with the original vocal tracks intact."
"It’s always been about the thoughtless way that those involved in the production have been treated. The reuse of my material without asking me"
Assuming everything he says is true, I like how he just ignores the rights of the other VAs involved by calling for Konami to use the originals. Exactly what he complains about.Beanovsky Durst - "They are not pervs. They are japanese."
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Konami has been blaming him, and pretty much solely him, for this whole clusterfuck. Konami has never said the others are part of this whole legal mess, so now that he's willing to give away his rights to the stuff, Konami should be able to go ahead with the old voice track. According to what they've been saying, anyway. If they're telling the truth, Guy Cihi signing off will allow them to go ahead, regardless of the rest of the voice cast, since Konami has put the blame squarely on him.
...of course, if this situation actually did include the rest of the cast, as Guy mentioned, and Konami doesn't have the right to there voice stuff they still can't do it, but they can't blame him either. Oh no! They'll need a new scape goat to cover there legal blunder. Let's seem them blame it on Akira Yamaoko or something equally exciting.
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Originally posted by KylieDog View Post"Amazing as it may seem, neither I nor to my knowledge any of the other voice actors involved in the creation of Silent Hill 2 received written agreements for our work."
"I call on Konami to release the HD versions of SH2, and all subsequent re-releases, with the original vocal tracks intact."
"It’s always been about the thoughtless way that those involved in the production have been treated. The reuse of my material without asking me"
Assuming everything he says is true, I like how he just ignores the rights of the other VAs involved by calling for Konami to use the originals. Exactly what he complains about.
"Donna continues to work with Konami and I believe she has already signed a release. Dave was in line with me and has not signed anything that I know of. I don't know how Monica reacted. She was the heart of the original voice perfomances IMHO, and so I hope she will agree and let it go if she hasn't already..."
Guy Cihi
When has Konami ever blamed him? I cannot recall them saying anything, his replacement VA blamed him though claiming he doesn't understand VA rights.
And while I'm on here I was just reading this quote from Lisa Garland's voice actress in the original Silent Hill.
"The scoop is when I did Silent Hill I was only paid $500 flat rate. They stole my voice for SH3 and my agent threatened to sue and got me a couple grand and that’s it. There are no residuals for videogames -never have been and it’s a major bummer. Video game companies are out only for themselves and to make money. The first budget they cut is voiceover. I have been taken advantage of, knowingly, by many videogame companies, but I’d rather work for a small amount than not work at all."
Thessaly Lerner (Voice actor for Lisa Garland in the first Silent Hill)Last edited by Smiley; 08-30-2011, 11:17 AM.
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