With A Quiet Place, we’re injecting that fear into the worst situation possible.įilmmaker: I want to avoid giving away too many plot details about the film, but let’s see if we can’t talk around the opening scene a little bit. That very much injected itself into the hypothetical fear of being a parent.
A QUIET PLACE PLOT MOVIE
įilmmaker: And Bryan, you don’t have kids?įilmmaker: How did two guys who didn’t have kids at the time write this movie that captures all the anxieties of parenthood so perceptively?īeck: Back in 20 during the writing process, I was confronting the idea of having children. And then we went right into the edit of Haunt, which we are currently working on, so it’s been a whirlwind last few months. I met them while working in the camera department on their most recent directorial effort Haunt, which wrapped production on Kentucky in November.įilmmaker: As Haunt was wrapping up, Scott, you were about to have your first kid.īeck: Yeah, I had my first kid the week after we wrapped Haunt, so the whole month of December was very on theme with A Quiet Place, trying to keep this kid alive and keep my sanity. The interviewees: Screenwriters Bryan Woods and Scott Beck, who grew up in Iowa together and have been making films as a team since junior high. Starring Emily Blunt and John Krasinski, who also directed. The plot: A family struggles to survive in silence on a rural farmstead amid a flock of sonically acute creatures that attack upon hearing the slightest sound. The movie: A Quiet Place, which served as the opening night film of the 25 th South By Southwest Film Festival
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In Columns, Festivals & Events, Interviews, ScreenwritersĪ Quiet Place, Bryan Woods, Haunt, John Krasinski, Scott Beck, SXSW Film Festival, SXSW Film Festival 2018