‘A Quiet Place Part II” was supposed to hit the multiplexes immediately after its world premiere in New York in March 2020, but the film went back on the shelf to wait out the pandemic, rather than become streaming fodder.
A good thing, too—it’s worthy of the big screen. Speaking professionally, I should note that no sequel could have been as distinctive as the 2018 original, a horror thriller with a powerfully dramatic premise and fully developed characters. This follow-up offers the solid satisfactions of suspense and intensity without the delight of discovery. Speaking personally, though, I feel compelled to note that the critics screening was my first time in a movie theater since the Covid-19 shutdown, and I was so excited to be there, so gobsmacked by the enormous images and immense sounds—and eerie silences—that I may not be the most objective judge of the production’s ultimate worth.
The action begins just after the first film ends. The surviving members of the Abbott family are visibly older—mainly the sister, Regan (
Millicent Simmonds
), and her kid brother, Marcus (
Noah Jupe
)—but nothing is made of that, which is perfectly fine. We’re quickly caught up in the plight of the siblings, their mother, Evelyn (
Emily Blunt
), and Evelyn’s newborn son, after a brisk and gripping preface takes us back to the onset of the post-apocalyptic plague—blind monsters who listen for the slightest sound, then devour the hapless human who made it.
The husband and father, Lee (
John Krasinski
), figures in the preface, but it’s our only chance to see him again. Lee previously gave his life for his family, and in this story dead means dead—none of those time-warpy resurrections that occasionally occur in superhero franchises. Now it’s up to the materfamilias to keep everyone safe from hideous harm in this once-picturesque rural corner of New York state. But Evelyn gets more help from Regan than she could have imagined. Among the movie’s many good ideas executed well, the one really fine idea is transforming the already brave and resourceful deaf daughter into a full-fledged action heroine, a role for which Ms. Simmonds, deaf in real life, turns out to be impressively suited. That decision is thanks to Mr. Krasinski, who directed, as before, but this time from his own screenplay, rather than a joint effort with
Scott Beck
and
Bryan Woods,
his collaborators on the previous script.
“I can save us,” Regan signs to her mother, and your heart goes with her as she marches off into the wilderness, cochlear implant in place and shotgun on her shoulder, determined to find the source of a song emanating from a radio station on an offshore island. But why would a deaf girl, however brave, choose to follow the siren call of a golden oldie? Because, I can tell you without spoiling your viewing pleasure—I mean your theater-attending pleasure—Regan takes the song, “Beyond the Sea,” to be not just any random anthem on a loop at some abandoned station but a code, or specific signal, suggesting that other remnants of civilization are still out there, waiting to be discovered. (Along the way she is joined, not always supportively, by one of her father’s friends, Emmett; he’s played with gusto and sporadic glee by the always excellent Cillian Murphy.)
My review of the original expressed gratitude for what I called sensory underload, or the artful use of silence to heighten the suspense (the tiniest sound being capable of triggering a creature’s attack), and to represent Regan’s auditory perspective. The sequel is no less artful in alternating between sound and silence—long stretches could pass for a silent movie, as before. Some of those stretches are almost excruciatingly intense, or claustrophobic. But the filmmakers’ art falls short in other respects. The pace is slow, even though the running time is only 97 minutes. (The original ran 90 minutes, but that included 6 minutes of end credits.) At one point the elegantly simple style is cluttered by garden-variety zombies, and the use of intercutting for dramatic effect is almost comically abusive.
Still, the main performances are exceptional (Ms. Blunt gives her all once again, and it’s a lot); the settings are memorable (an abandoned steel mill, a wrecked train that becomes a haunted house); and the impact of the premise is amplified, exactly as it should be, by the theater’s big screen, speakers and subwoofers. Remember theaters? To get to them you have to leave your apartment or house and go outside. Then you pay to go inside where you sit in the dark with people you may or may not know, and take in a spectacle that’s vastly bigger than yourself. It’s an amazing way to see a movie.
Write to Joe Morgenstern at joe.morgenstern@wsj.com
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