A Quiet Place Part II (2020)

£0.00


Country: US
Technical: col/2.39:1 97m
Director: John Krasinski
Cast: Emily Blunt, Millicent Simmonds, Cillian Murphy, Noah Jupe

Synopsis:

The Abbotts leave their battered home and find a former neighbour living in an old factory. He may not be their most committed ally, but he does receive a radio signal that appears to come from an offshore transmitter.

Review:

Part II teases audiences with an opener that flashes back to Day 1, then resumes where its predecessor left off, introducing another weakness in the genre's latest variation on Tremors. A kind of carnivorous bull in a china shop, the creatures are fortunately less numerous than many of their cinematic kind, and the makers wisely condense things down to a handful of confrontations, adroitly cross-cutting even at points of simultaneous action to prolong the sense of peril.

Add To Cart


Country: US
Technical: col/2.39:1 97m
Director: John Krasinski
Cast: Emily Blunt, Millicent Simmonds, Cillian Murphy, Noah Jupe

Synopsis:

The Abbotts leave their battered home and find a former neighbour living in an old factory. He may not be their most committed ally, but he does receive a radio signal that appears to come from an offshore transmitter.

Review:

Part II teases audiences with an opener that flashes back to Day 1, then resumes where its predecessor left off, introducing another weakness in the genre's latest variation on Tremors. A kind of carnivorous bull in a china shop, the creatures are fortunately less numerous than many of their cinematic kind, and the makers wisely condense things down to a handful of confrontations, adroitly cross-cutting even at points of simultaneous action to prolong the sense of peril.


Country: US
Technical: col/2.39:1 97m
Director: John Krasinski
Cast: Emily Blunt, Millicent Simmonds, Cillian Murphy, Noah Jupe

Synopsis:

The Abbotts leave their battered home and find a former neighbour living in an old factory. He may not be their most committed ally, but he does receive a radio signal that appears to come from an offshore transmitter.

Review:

Part II teases audiences with an opener that flashes back to Day 1, then resumes where its predecessor left off, introducing another weakness in the genre's latest variation on Tremors. A kind of carnivorous bull in a china shop, the creatures are fortunately less numerous than many of their cinematic kind, and the makers wisely condense things down to a handful of confrontations, adroitly cross-cutting even at points of simultaneous action to prolong the sense of peril.