A QUIET PLACE PART II (2020)

Studio:     Paramount/Platinum Dunes
Director:    John Krasinski
Writer:     John Krasinski
Producer:  Michael Bay, Andrew Form, Brad Fuller, John Krasinski
Stars:     Emily Blunt, Cillian Murphy, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe, Djimon Hounsou, John Krasinski

Review Score:


Summary:

The Abbott Family’s struggle to survive against creatures attracted to sound takes new turns after they’re forced to flee their farmhouse.


Synopsis:     

Review:

Especially when one considers how to-the-point the two-film franchise’s limited mythology is, “A Quiet Place Part II” is probably about as strategically conceived and efficiently executed as mainstream sequels can get. Even when the movie follows expected conventions, it does so creatively, and always with an eye for maximum cinematic suspense.

“A Quiet Place Part II” starts with a big bang that echoes how the first film expertly exploited sight and sound, or the lack of the latter, to become a nerve-wracking nail-biter. A fast flashback shows Lee Abbott (John Krasinski) joining the rest of his family for a Little League baseball game, but not before the camera devilishly lingers on a store shelf’s space shuttle toy to squeeze out a mournful memory for Part 1’s heart-ripping prologue. Not long after, fire appears in the sky, causing a commotion that erupts into full-blown pandemonium when creatures suddenly start flipping cars while tearing apart townspeople like tissue.

We don’t get a beefy origin story for the movie’s monsters. Why should we? What’s important for the film’s eerie entertainment value is their effect, not their cause. Boom. They’re here. And now they’re causing chaos amidst the splendid spectacle of explosions, crashing vehicles, and plenty of panicking people plowing into each other, as well as into the mouth of mayhem.

“A Quiet Place Part II” puts up this immediate reminder that its premise inherently lends itself to perfect pop scares with substantial panache. These aren’t cheap spells of silence punctuated by loud music cues, even though it might look that way out of context. Other movies employ clichés like hiding with a hand over someone’s mouth or tiptoeing down a dark corridor, then they use a volume knob to make the audience react. Both “A Quiet Place” movies use similar sequencing, except their scares are woven directly into the fabric of how the film’s fiction functions. The rules governing these sound-driven creatures require ratcheting tension with silence that doesn’t get released until a meaningful moment bursts from the building pressure. Many horror films can only accomplish this effect with false jolts or quick cuts. “A Quiet Place” merely sows the seeds scattered by its brilliantly minimal setup.

“A Quiet Place” (review here) left off at the end of the alien takeover’s 473rd day. “A Quiet Place 2” immediately picks up on Day 474. Ever since the original “Halloween II” (review here), I’ve always loved sequels that start as soon as their predecessors end. As a continuity nerd, it’s just appealing to imagine that these storylines never stop, only pause.

I also love that “A Quiet Place II” commits to “A Quiet Place’s” semi-unhappy conclusion by choosing not to take a comic book route in resurrecting Krasinski’s dead dad character. There’s no “oh, he actually survived like a serial killer in a slasher” rewriting at work here.

I say that, although “Part II” kind of cheats by transposing Krasinki’s role to Cillian Murphy as Emmett, a former family friend. Early scenes set on Day 474 establish Emmett as a man jaded by the deaths of his own loved ones. He survives on his own, caring nothing for others, even his neighbors the Abbotts, whose signal fires he ignored for multiple months. Initial hemming and hawing and one major misdirect seem to set up Emmett as a typical apocalypse a-hole who believes it’s “kill or be killed.” But he ultimately ends up filling the fatherly function as a surrogate for what Krasinski’s character probably would have been doing had he survived.

What I appreciate about how “A Quiet Place Part II” handles commonplace characters like these though, is that the film doesn’t let them overstay their welcome by overplaying the obvious. Excellent actors instead emote to overcome slight staleness in the scripting. At one point, Murphy and Millicent Simmonds encounter a cutthroat cabal of potentially murderous survivalists, but these villains only appear for a few minutes. By his own admission, writer/director John Krasinski isn’t “a genre guy” as he previously put it. Yet somehow he appears well aware that horror audiences have overdosed on countless Negans and “Dawn of the Dead” biker gangs, and don’t need to spend time with another. “Part II” throws the good guys into this threat, then rapidly resolves it so the movie can move on to another milieu in its constantly moving frying-pan-to-fire formula.

As part of that formula, Krasinski’s tactics for spreading out danger results in a roller coaster track with as many slow valleys as intense peaks. Several sequences can be reductively described as “so-and-so walks around for awhile.” Devil’s Advocate could rightfully argue that’s an unavoidable consequence of having so little dialogue since speaking can result in instantaneous death. “A Quiet Place” has to be activity-oriented, and not every activity can run at a breakneck speed, otherwise intermittent action wouldn’t be as exciting.

Although everyone essentially travels on connect-the-dots trails to achieve each parallel plotline’s respective goals, I’ll take the people inside the world of “A Quiet Place” over anyone in “The Walking Dead.” In this district of dystopian horror, these are comparatively conflicted characters with clearly defined purposes that sidestep most arroyos of drawn-out dreariness. I’m not sure how many more movies the simplicity of “A Quiet Place” can sustain since both entries thus far have gone down comparable paths with little deviation from their directness. That’s a problem for “A Quiet Place Part III” to solve. For the time being, “A Quiet Place Part II” knows exactly what’s needed to put together a quick little adventure into straight-shooting thrills.

Review Score: 75