Raccoon City
Template:Resident Evil locations
Raccoon City is a fictional midwestern american city depicted in the Resident Evil series of survival horror video games created by Capcom. It serves as the primary settings for Resident Evil 2, Resident Evil 3: Nemesis, Resident Evil: Outbreak and Resident Evil: Outbreak: File 2. It also serves as the main setting in the film adaptions of the series.
Geography and characteristics
In video games
Raccoon City is a fictional city in the United States and serves as the setting for the first three Resident Evil video games. The city and its outlying areas house several bioengineering laboratories belonging to the Umbrella Corporation. These laboratories develop viruses that can mutate humans and animals into zombie-like creatures. One of the laboratories, the Hive, is located under Raccoon City and is the producer of the G-Virus. These viruses are the plot devices driving the story behind the games; sabotage and security failures have unleashed these viruses and infected creatures on Raccoon City, and players have to escape the city.
In the ending of Resident Evil 3: Nemesis, the United States government deploys strategic weapons to destroy Raccoon City and its inhabitants. No survivors are found in its ruins, although traces of the T- and G-Viruses are discovered. As a result, the city is declared a restricted area and a biological hazard.[1]
In films
Raccoon City is depicted in the films as a 21st-century cosmopolitan city with an infrastructure largely funded by the Umbrella Corporation. Similar to the games, the first two films feature the Hive existing as a secret underground laboratory under the city. Housing more than 500 employees, the facility has an artificial intelligence, the Red Queen, controlling its security.[2] The theft and deliberate release of the T-Virus starts the chain of events depicted in the opening of the first film. Although the Hive is sealed off at the end of the film, it is reopened in Resident Evil: Apocalypse by the Umbrella Corporation. Infected creatures spread out of the re-opened Hive into Raccoon City and Umbrella placed the city under quarantine. Near the end of the film, the city is destroyed with a missile.
Instead of creating large sets for Raccoon City and the Hive, the film crew filmed on location at Toronto, Canada; and Berlin, Germany. Due to the fictional city being located in the American Midwest, the film's director Paul Anderson chose Toronto to serve as the fictional city in the film. The city was filmed untouched, and many of its prominent features, such as its City Hall and the CN Tower, are visible in the films.[3][4] For the underground train station in the Hive, Anderson chose to film in the Berlin U-Bahn. He said that the atmosphere of the underground labyrinth structure was conducive to the acting and promoted a sense of realism and mood in the production.[3] Resident Evil: Extinction features another Hive in Death Valley, which is used for the research of a cure to the T-Virus and of the Tyrant Program. This Hive is taken over by the protagonist Alice at the end of the film.
In popular culture
This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. (July 2008) |
In Lust for Puppets, an episode of the animated Cartoon Network show Robot Chicken, Raccoon City is briefly referenced.[5]
References
- ^ Damien Waples. Resident Evil: The Umbrella Chronicles Official Game Guide. California, United States: Prima Games. pp. pp. 58–73. ISBN 0-761-55845-4.
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ignored (help) - ^ a b Patrick Lee (March 18, 2002). "Paul W.S. Anderson reanimates a game group of zombies in Resident Evil". Sci Fi Weekly (256). Retrieved 2008-07-16.
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(help) - ^ Dave Kehr (2004-09-10). "Call to Arms, With Trouble Right Here in Zombie City". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-07-17.
- ^ Seth Green (Writer and Director) (2006-11-05). "Robot Chicken". Cartoon Network.
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