A Quiet Place Review: 9 Ups & 1 Down

Ups

9. It Commits Fully To Its Silent Premise

A Quiet Place John Krasinski
Paramount

Though the marketing made it abundantly clear that the film would be largely dialogue-free, you wouldn't be blamed for suspecting that this "gimmick" was really just a small part of the movie, and after the first half-hour or so, the central family would somehow be able to speak to each other.

There are words spoken in A Quiet Place, yes, but these moments are incredibly infrequent, with characters only speaking when their words can be masked by, say, a loud, roaring river or a special soundproofed area of their rural home.

The film is incredibly dialogue-light from beginning to end, totally trusting audiences to get involved in the story and not become restless while the characters communicate primarily through sign language and lip reading.

It's a gamble that pays off spectacularly well, and even the most inpatient, artistically-averse audiences should have no problem getting wrapped up in the family's fight for survival.

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Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.