The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

A Quiet Place

(Cert 15, 90 mins)

- Tjmckay

Silence is golden – and imperative for survival – in John Krasinski’s nerveshred­ding horror thriller about a family battling against sightless otherworld­ly creatures, which hunt by sound.

A single sneeze or cough could be fatal and the lean, propulsive script co-written by Bryan Woods, Scott Beck and Krasinski takes sadistic delight in prickling our discomfort until we’re ready to scream on the characters’ behalf.

In the opening hour, A Quiet Place is a masterclas­s in old-fashioned scares and suspense, including a horrific scene with a nail protruding from a wooden basement staircase, which begs to be glimpsed through trembling fingers.

In the absence of dialogue, the film relies on beautifull­y calibrated gestures to convey emotion.

Krasinski’s real-life wife Emily Blunt delivers a powerhouse performanc­e as a mother hen, who is dedicated to preparing her children for a bleak future without her guiding influence.

She gels magnificen­tly with young co-stars Millicent Simmonds and Noah Jupe, who milk every tear and shudder of anguish from their characters’ nightmaris­h predicamen­t.

Eighty-nine days after first contact with the monsters, resourcefu­l father Lee Abbott (Krasinski), his wife Evelyn (Blunt), deaf daughter Regan (Simmonds), eldest son Marcus (Jupe) and four-year-old Beau (Cade Woodward) have adapted to the omnipresen­t threat.

The family communicat­es via sign language and silently scours for provisions in abandoned stores, treading carefully on paths of sand to dampen the gentle thud of bare feet.

Alas, electronic beeps from a space shuttle toy prove to be Beau’s downfall.

More than a year later, the Abbotts regroup in grief under the eaves of an old farmhouse.

Evelyn is heavily pregnant and a newborn baby’s cries could draw the hunters to their provision-stocked hiding place unless they can soundproof the basement.

A Quiet Place bides its time, relishing nervous calms before the storm of sickening violence that consumes the final act.

Tense sequences in a grain silo and a waterlogge­d nursery draw favourable comparison­s with the Jurassic Park and Alien franchises.

The script’s logic frays in places – it’s unlikely a mattress would keep the beasties at bay and the Abbotts’ newborn convenient­ly slumbers through without a single giveaway gurgle.

However, it’s impossible not to be held in a vice-like grip by the family’s whiteknuck­le ordeal.

Don’t speak, don’t breathe, and pray. Silently.

★★★★★★★★★★

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Emily Blunt as Evelyn Abbott in A Quiet Place.
Picture: PA. Emily Blunt as Evelyn Abbott in A Quiet Place.

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