Spencer Mansion

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spencer Mansion
Official Capcom render of the exterior of the Resident Evil 5 version of Spencer Mansion
First appearanceResident Evil (1996)
Last appearanceResident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City (2021)
Created byCapcom
GenreSurvival horror
In-universe information
Other name(s)Arklay Research Facility
TypeMansion
LocationArklay Mountains

Spencer Mansion is a fictional mansion featured in the Resident Evil franchise, and the primary setting of the 1996 survival horror video game Resident Evil and its 2002 remake. Constructed by Oswell E. Spencer, the owner and co-founder of the Umbrella Corporation, within the Arklay Mountains, it was designed by architect George Trevor. Its construction was meant as a cover for a secret bioweapon laboratory known as the Arklay Research Facility. It is later encountered by the STARS Alpha team, including Jill Valentine, Chris Redfield, Barry Burton, and Albert Wesker. Despite realizing Wesker is an Umbrella agent, they are able to defeat the Tyrant he sends after them, detonating and destroying the facility and mansion for good.[1] A similar mansion is later raided by Chris and Jill in the events preceding Resident Evil 5, where they confront Wesker after he kills Spencer.

Spencer Mansion was praised by critics as an iconic video game location, its design responsible for popularizing the survival horror genre in general. Its unusual puzzle-based design, which was designed more as a security system than a residence, became a mainstay of the series going forward, and it is known as one of the most famous examples of "evil" architecture in video games.

Appearances[edit]

In video games[edit]

The mansion appears in both the original Resident Evil and its ports, as well as the 2002 remake of the game. The remake both extends the mansion and gives it a full graphical overhaul with significantly more realistic pre-rendered graphics.[2] A near-duplicate of the original mansion appears in full 3D in Resident Evil 5's Lost in Nightmares DLC as Spencer's actual residence, albeit significantly more limited in scope.[3]

In film[edit]

In George A. Romero's Resident Evil script, the Spencer Mansion was named the Arkley Mansion.

In the 2021 reboot Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City, which follows the games' storyline more closely than the previous film series, Spencer Mansion appears as a setting, although it is investigated at the same time as the events of Resident Evil 2, rather than two months before that, as in the game.[4]

Development[edit]

Director Shinji Mikami's original idea for Resident Evil was a haunted house filled with evil spirits. However, due to his fear of ghosts, he changed the enemies to zombies, envisioning a scenario where the protagonist would be able to use skill and ingenuity to survive. In order to make players feel trapped, he surrounded the mansion with a thick, dark forest that made players relieved to get back indoors. The mansion's fixed camera angles were purposely given blind spots to increase tension.[2]

Reception[edit]

Mike Mahardy of Game Informer called Spencer Mansion "iconic" and "a memory that can't be easily forgotten". Describing it as standing in stark contrast to its wooded surroundings, he noted that its layout initially seems simple, but slowly becomes more complex as the player explores. Its routes soon overwhelm the player, causing them to rack their brain to connect the different, interlocking passageways. Saying that "every shortcut and stairway burns itself onto your mental map", he described the mansion as compelling the player to create a "mental dictionary", granting them a "sense of ownership that few games have approached today". Calling the mansion's puzzles "clever", and its inhabitants "adrenaline-pumping", he nevertheless singled out its sense of isolation as what made it a memorable setting.[5]

Ewan Wilson of GamesRadar+ described the mansion as "the most famous haunted house in video games" and called it "a building born bad", noting that it was constructed for malicious purposes rather than simply becoming haunted over time. Calling it "a materialist spin on old genre tropes", he emphasized the fact that its monsters were created by "hard science". Giving an overview of the mansion's "surreal and labyrinthine" layout, he singled out its crushing ceiling trap as its most memorable early moment. Comparing it to Star Wars' trash compactor scene, he called it the first sign that the building itself wanted to murder the player. He also pointed out the mansion's similarities to the Overlook Hotel from The Shining, calling it "uncanny".[6]

Ed Smith of Kill Screen criticized the 2002 remake's more detailed mansion, calling it dim, dark and more boring in comparison to the mansion's original appearance. Calling Spencer Mansion's original design "leaner" and more fantastical, he remarked that it "wasted" less space.[7] Jamie O'Neill of Push Square called the mansion an "achievement in visual design", saying that it became an "archetypal structure" for future survival horror games.[8] Andy Kelly of PC Gamer called "that creepy, puzzle-filled mansion" one of gaming's best horror settings.[2]

The re-appearance of the mansion in Resident Evil 5 was called "almost a parody" by Samuel Claiborn of IGN, citing its "geeky, self-referential humor". He recommended the DLC to "die-hard fans", saying normal players may not enjoy it as much.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Resident Evil timeline". Official UK PlayStation Magazine (27): 61. January 2009 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ a b c Kelly, Andy (2016-03-22). "Dawn of the Dead: The making of Resident Evil". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  3. ^ a b Claiborn, Samuel (2010-02-19). "Resident Evil 5: Lost in Nightmares Review". IGN. Retrieved 2023-05-10.
  4. ^ Keane, Sean (2021-12-03). "Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City is the faithful movie adaptation the games deserved". CNET. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  5. ^ Mahardy, Mike. "Places: Spencer Mansion". Game Informer. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  6. ^ Wilson, Ewan (2021-04-16). "Hostile Architecture: Resident Evil's Spencer Mansion wants to kill you". GamesRadar+. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  7. ^ Smith, Ed (2016-03-10). "The desolate mansion of Resident Evil". Kill Screen - Previously. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  8. ^ O'Neill, Jamie (2022-06-23). "Review: Resident Evil: Director's Cut (PS1) - Iconic Survival Horror". Push Square. Retrieved 2023-04-22.