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In upstate New York, a couple and their two children must remain silent in their isolated farmhouse to avoid mysterious creatures that use sound to hunt their prey. Using sign language and eye contact to communicate, the family members must rely on one another -- and their wits -- to live to see the next day.
A gripping, edge of your seat thriller that's tight and effective in generating the scares by manipulating those old reptilian parts of our brains we still carry around with us. (Full Content Parental Review - Violence, Scares, etc. - also Available)
The key to the tightly paced, compellingly acted horror film A Quiet Place is the unceasing tension, a kind of persistent creepiness that burrows under your skin.
"A Quiet Place" is a bold experiment in fear with a triumphant payoff. It will chill you to the bone, and the quieter it gets, the more noise it makes.
Best horror movie in a couple of decades. Some scenes are so terrifying and intense that you'll find yourself unable to breath. In the end you'll need your own quiet place.
This is the kind of film that delivers on about 75 percent of its promise and has you looking forward to the time when the director hits something all the way out of the park.
It may not make the masterpiece cut, but this taut horror thriller is enormously entertaining, because it's organized around a terrific idea-the necessity of absolute silence.
A tension machine with a tender mien. If all you care about is creature design, imagine all of your sharp-edged anxieties given teeth, pincers and an abnormal sense for finding you no matter how well you hide. Scary enough for you? It should be.