Empire (UK)

THE VAST OF NIGHT

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DIRECTOR Andrew Patterson

CAST Jake Horowitz, Sierra Mccormick

PLOT 1950s New Mexico. Young switchboar­d operator Fay (Mccormick) and small-town radio DJ Everett (Horowitz) tune into a strange audio frequency that could be a clue to an alien invasion.

IF THIS WERE 2015, there is a very good chance that The Vast Of Night would have landed first-time feature director Andrew Patterson a Jurassic off-shoot, a Star Wars anthology film or at least a high-profile Super Bowl commercial. Told with assurance, style and grace, Patterson’s low-budget marvel — it was paid for by money the filmmaker made from commercial­s — mashes up sci-fi paranoia, the beginnings of TV, teen character studies and the golden age of radio into a seamless, completely cinematic cocktail. It acts simultaneo­usly as a brazen calling card yet is also controlled, mature, and in its final moments strangely melancholi­c and moving.

James Montague and Craig W. Sanger’s screenplay starts boldly, opening on a TV showing a Twilight Zone-ish show, ‘Paradox Theater’ (“You are entering a realm between clandestin­e and forgotten. Tonight’s episode: ‘The Vast Of Night’”). Set in a small New Mexico town, Cayuga, on the night of a big high-school basketball game, we zero in on the only two kids not interested in the hoops action. Working the graveyard shift on the town’s switchboar­d while simultaneo­usly listening to WOTW disc jockey Everett (Jake Horowitz), electronic­s nerd Fay (Sierra Mccormick) takes a call from a woman who tells her that three large objects are hovering above her house, before the phone disconnect­s. At the same time the WOTW signal starts getting interrupte­d by bursts of garbled audio transmissi­ons, faint, disembodie­d voices in a sea of static (Everett suggests it’s those pesky Russkies). When Fay picks up the same static, patches it through to the radio station and Everett puts it live on air, the listener reaction sends the pair on a chase around Cayuga to discover what is going on.

Patterson brings out every trick in the book to make his story, often told through long conversati­ons, eerie and compelling. At one point, as Fay works the switchboar­d, M. I. Littinmenz’s camera stays on Mccormick’s face and lets the drama play out in her eyes, framed by horn-rimmed glasses. At other times, the camera fluidly moves across landscapes strewn with ’50s Americana, including a jaw-dropping oner that starts on a street, crosses a parking lot and travels through a basketball game, before plunging through a window. On a micro budget, Patterson and crew effortless­ly evoke the ’50s, but with a clear-eyed lack of kitsch or nostalgia. You believe every minute of it.

It might be too talky and obscure for some tastes, but there’s good chemistry between the two leads (Mccormick is the break-out), and the film passes subtle notes from America’s nuclear age to today: without ever hitting you over the head with it, the callers to the radio station are from side-lined groups— Black people, women — gently reminding us to heed marginalis­ed voices. After all the chat, the film delivers on spectacle but admirably goes for something different from Spielbergi­an wonder. It’s another original note in a film that has a Donnie Darko frisson about it: small, personal, perfectly formed sci-fi weirdness that comes off a treat. IAN FREER

VERDICT The Vast Of Night is a modest film about small-town dreamers that delivers big-time rewards and announces a singular, exciting talent in director Andrew Patterson.

 ??  ?? Sierra Mccormick’s Fay makes contact.
Sierra Mccormick’s Fay makes contact.
 ??  ?? Top to bottom: DJ Everett (Jake Horowitz) tunes in; Static or aliens?; Spooked Cayuga resident Mabel (Gail Cronauer).
Top to bottom: DJ Everett (Jake Horowitz) tunes in; Static or aliens?; Spooked Cayuga resident Mabel (Gail Cronauer).
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