year_pattern = r'(19|20)\d2' quality_pattern = r'(1080p|720p|2160p)' source_pattern = r'(bluray|web-dl|webdl|hdtv)' codec_pattern = r'(x264|x265|h264|h265)' group_pattern = r'(?<=x264)([a-zA-Z0-9]+)'

year = re.search(year_pattern, cleaned) quality = re.search(quality_pattern, cleaned, re.I) source = re.search(source_pattern, cleaned, re.I) codec = re.search(codec_pattern, cleaned, re.I) group = re.search(group_pattern, cleaned)

By: SceneWatch Archive | Posted: May 1, 2026

In the murky, fog-drenched world of horror cinema, few sequels have been as visually ambitious yet critically polarizing as Silent Hill: Revelation 3D (2012). Almost fourteen years after its theatrical release, the film has found a second life—not in streaming aggregates or studio re-issues, but through the enduring underground ecosystem of high-fidelity encode groups.

For collectors, home theater enthusiasts, and die-hard fans of Konami’s game franchise, one specific file name continues to surface in Usenet indexers and private trackers: silenthillrevelation20121080pblurayx264alliancemkv new.

But what makes this particular encode the gold standard? Why is a nearly 15-year-old movie still generating searches for this specific release? Let’s descend into the fog and break down the technical artistry, the provenance of the ALLiANCE group, and why “new” still matters in the world of static H.264 encodes.

  • Guess movie title
    silenthillrevelationSilent Hill: Revelation

  • Look up metadata (via OMDB, TMDb, or local DB)

  • Suggest new filenames
    Example:
    Silent Hill Revelation 2012 1080p BluRay x264-ALLiANCE.mkv

  • Optional: Auto-rename + move to organized folder
    Movies/Silent Hill Revelation (2012)/Silent Hill Revelation (2012) [1080p].mkv


  • silenthillrevelation20121080pblurayx264alliancemkv new