A Quiet Place

Family lack of planning


Seeing its moderately clever premise heavily squandered may anger some who like movies to be 'good' or 'not make you fall asleep'.
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Reported on 7th of October, 2018

A Quiet Place is not scary or entertaining. Seeing its moderately clever premise heavily squandered may anger some who like movies to be ‘good’ or ‘not make you fall asleep’. If you enjoy characters that act intelligently in dangerous situations, go elsewhere, and, given 2018, elsewhen as well.

But ‘story’ or ‘vague interest’ was not Mr. John Krasinski’s goal. Clearly. It couldn’t be. Instead, he wanted to show us the logical terminus of Our Modern Age, a time where children decide how to raise themselves. Sure, there are aliens that have nearly wiped out humanity, and can kill you at any moment, but what really matters is that the feelings of the young will never be bruised. A staggering indictment of the philosophy ‘I’d rather die than set boundaries for my children. Wait. You’re saying they’re the ones that die? This is a win-win! I mean, I love my kids!’

There is no other explanation.

A Quiet Place

3 July 2018 @ The Gaumont Rennes


-$2.50 or, if one must be quotidian, and one must... 
☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆

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One facet of this obsession, as demonstrated more prominently in Searching, is to reassure the parents that it’s not their fault. Don’t worry! No one is to blame! Mr. Krasinski underlines this by 1) Making it so the parent’s fault and 2) having the parent whose fault it was say ”It was no one’s fault!!!!’

The parents (‘Who are we, if we can’t protect them?’) are transformed, then, according to the film, and not me interpreting the film, the film, into ‘no one’

Brilliant.

The Gaumont Rennes has stopped tearing the tickets, and instead scans them to send to the Home Office as to whether or not I’ve actually seen the film. I’m too scared to tear them myself, the only emotion the film was able to convey

In another film where making a noise means you die, you would, for example, check to see if something was actually soundproof. Or not act like comic screaming boneheads. Nay, says Mr. Krasinski! Instead, the characters, lost in the fog of ‘family’ forget all these things.

The plot, if one can indeed say a film that is really an essay has a plot, is set around Ms. Emily Blunt’s pregnancy. Unlike Fargo, where a pregnant woman is not defined by the actual birth, in this film, we know that the Woman Will Have Baby.

The audience is not inculcated in the bizarre alternate diegesis of the film; we know that giving birth is painful and that babies are noisy. We assume, and the film plays with these assumptions, and is not incompetent genre filmmaking, no, this had to be strictly intentional, have their characters – again as an attack on modern life, and in no way a subconscious expression of it – not check life-saving soundproofing, and simply plan to have a baby that doesn’t cry.

Whew!

That’s not an expression of actual earned tension, but of admiration at laying modern life bare for all to see! Whew!

The ultimate tragedy of this philosophy of child-centrism is underlined when Mr. Krasinski is seen constantly trying to contact people in other continents by radio, but not, say, check on his neighbors, clearly visible in the distance. Instead, the lights of neighbors’ homes disappear, their seeming purpose to indicate the family is alone. Never has the nuclearization of the family been so terrifyingly realized. They can’t reach out…because they don’t feel like it.

We’re in a hysterical time about children, who represent one of our most crucial identities, in the same way were about masculinity in the 1950s. We’re also in crisis about masculinity now. Huh. And also had a significant crisis about kids in the 1950s. I thought once you recognized a problem, you just fixed it, and that was that.

That could happen. But only with great essay writing.

The Take

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Profits!
The baby is rescued by a floating coffin of cotton. The metaphors! Which were totally planned!
$3.00
Total Profits
$3.00
Losses!
Fine, this film was not very interesting, and certainly overrated. It relies – heavily – on
jump-scares (@ $.50 per)
$2.00
and accidents (@.50 per)
$1.50
Wanting so desperately to have a moment, the film allows Mr. Kransinski go to a waterfall to actual be able to speak with his child, begging the question, why not live by the waterfall? Because then there is no danger for our children. Which we totally love and protect and stuff!

$1.00

As we remember, fondly, Newt, the thing is traumatized kids are interesting characters. Transplanting the modern spoiled bratty version to a dangerous environment fails utterly.
$1.00
Total Losses
$5.50

-$2.50

Thoughts on A Quiet Place

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  1. Maire says:

    Sweet (as in ‘cool,’ not ‘kind’), review. Ignoring it, I want you to know, as a (still) former university instructor, something like 90 percent of most people out there would not be able to understand your brilliant (yes, I said it again), thoughts, and while this is of course a complement, I recognize that the majority of your readers here are likely in the other 10 percent, merely for being your friends. Anyway, I really like ‘elsewhen’ and the natural use of ‘inculcate,’ because intellectualism is obviously fucking dead these days, so yours is like breathe of Icelandic aire to someone just escaped out of say, a sewage plant on fire.
    Sorry no letter. Life’s been nuts. Don’t have an address anyway. Love.

    1. Scott Scott says:

      Don’t be silly. I write for the common man. As long as they take ocean liners, wear topcoats and compare The Wreck of the Medusa to eyes spewing out of skulls in Mandy. I’m glad you thought it sweet, and no, there are no non-friends here. And possibly a few ex-friends once it’s been read. A letter? What kind of universe is this? Just say ‘Scott King (Breton) – Brittany’. Actually, that might work. I’m the only Scott King in France. It’s not like I’m named Margot Kim in Orange County. Sorry that’s a reference to something I just wrote. Doesn’t the internet just ‘link’ things?

  2. Jay says:

    I thought the plan was that she would have the baby in the heavily sound-proofed basement? Which was fine until it got flooded….

    A bigger flaw for me was that these things had got as far as they had laying waste to the earth yet NO-ONE else on earth had made the relatively simple disccovery that a bit of amplfied feedback fries the aliens’ brains?

    1. Scott Scott says:

      If we’re going to go down the plausibility rabbit hole, yes, they were the only ones to try sound. Which would have happened at some point during various battles as, things make sounds. It’s what things are designed to do.

      Re: soundproofing, and from what I remember, I think it’s because I was waiting for them to test the basement. Something you do when you’re soundproofing. And when making a noise would kill you and your family. I think I kept waiting for the brilliant plan to appear and then it didn’t, or at least be shown to the audience so we could delight in its going wrong. Instead, things just went wrong.

      Plus would water really ruin soundproofing? Not if it was Anodyne industries Bass Trap 703! The thick plush fabric dampens sounds and reduces echo! And is totally alien/waterproof! Buy the 703s (and the slightly more expensive DD40/60s) from your local Anodyne panels…today!

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