See A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE At Home On July 30

Experience the day the world went quiet in the thrilling and action-packed blockbuster hit A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE, arriving to buy or rent on Digital July 30, 2024 from Paramount Home Entertainment

A three-movie collection including A Quiet Place, A Quiet Place: Part II and A Quiet Place: Day One will also be available to purchase on Digital platforms July 30.  A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE will debut on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray™, DVD, and in a collectible 4K Ultra HD SteelBook™ on October 8.

Certified Fresh™ with an 87% Critics Score* on Rotten Tomatoes®, A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE expands the franchise’s groundbreaking universe, taking fans back to the first day of the invasion by deadly creatures who hunt by sound in one of the loudest places on Earth: New York City.  Lupita Nyong’o and Joseph Quinn give emotional and riveting performances as strangers who embark on a harrowing journey through the eerily quiet streets of Manhattan.

Review: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2024/06/a-quiet-place-day-one-review/

Fans who purchase the film on Digital**, 4K Ultra HD, or Blu-ray will have access to over 50 minutes of thrilling bonus content.  Get a behind-the-scenes look at how the attack on New York was filmed and how the crew built and destroyed a massive Manhattan set.  Hear from cast and filmmakers as they discuss the characters’ dangerous journey of survival, plus see deleted and extended scenes not shown in theatres.

Read WAMG’s interview with Cinematographer Pat Scola : https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2024/07/cinematographer-pat-scola-discusses-his-work-on-a-quiet-place-day-one-and-sing-sing/

Read WAMG’s interview with Production Designer Simon Bowles: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2024/07/production-designer-simon-bowles-talks-creating-the-noises-colors-and-sets-of-a-quiet-place-day-one/

Bonus content is detailed below:

  • Day Zero: Beginnings and Endings—Hear from John Krasinski, cast, and crew as director Michael Sarnoski takes the reins for this character-driven prequel.
  • In the City: Chaos in Chinatown—See how the production crew recreated Manhattan from scratch in order to destroy it.  Plus, hear from some new and familiar faces from the franchise.
  • The Exodus: Against the Tide—Go behind-the-scenes of the exodus sequence that employed over a hundred extras and a clever mix of practical and visual effects.
  • The Long Walk: Monsters in Midtown—Meet Frodo the cat and the animal trainers behind the fantastic feline performance. Plus, filmmakers detail Sam, Eric, and Frodo’s long walk through the city.
  • Pizza at the End of the World—Hear from cast and crew about why a quest for pizza when the world is under attack poignantly speaks to our humanity.
  • Deleted and Extended Scenes

Synopsis

Experience the day the world went quiet in this terrifying continuation of the A Quiet Place universe. When Samira (Lupita Nyong’o) returns home to New York City, her simple trip turns into a harrowing nightmare when mysterious creatures that hunt by sound attack. Accompanied by her cat Frodo and an unexpected ally (Joseph Quinn), Samira must embark on a perilous journey through the city that has suddenly gone silent, where the only rule is to stay quiet to stay alive. Djimon Hounsou and Alex Wolff also star in this intensely suspenseful thriller.

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE is rated PG-13 for terror and violent content/bloody images.

Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” and Joseph Quinn as “Eric” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Cinematographer Pat Scola Discusses His Work On A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE And SING SING

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE is an experience where moviegoers witness the day the world went quiet in this terrifying continuation of the A Quiet Place universe. When Samira (Lupita Nyong’o) returns home to New York City, her simple trip turns into a harrowing nightmare when mysterious creatures that hunt by sound attack. Accompanied by her cat Frodo and an unexpected ally (Joseph Quinn), Samira must embark on a perilous journey through the city that has suddenly gone silent, where the only rule is to stay quiet to stay alive. Djimon Hounsou and Alex Wolff also star in this intensely suspenseful thriller.

The visual storytelling in A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE delivered a powerful and immersive cinematic journey that relied heavily on imagery to convey its narrative and emotional depth. From glimpses of monstrous forms to sound visualization of the characters, the beauty of the film literally permeated the screen through the lens of Director of Photography Pat Scola.

Scola, a New York native, began his career in music videos for artists like The Weeknd, Alt J, Flying Lotus and more, lensing a total of 5 nominations and one win at the SXSW Music Video Competition over the years. His film work is highlighted by Michael Sarnoski’s PIG, for which he received the ASC’s Spotlight Award for Outstanding Cinematography and was named in Variety’s 10 Cinematographers to watch.

His credits include the Miramax sci-fi film MOTHER/ANDROID, directed by Mattson Tomlin, produced by Matt Reeves and starring Chloe Grace Moretz. Scola also shot MONSTERS AND MEN, directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green and starring John David Washington, which won the dramatic special jury prize at the Sundance Film Festival in 2018. Other feature film credits include AND THEN I GO, an official selection at LA Film Festival in 2017 and directed by Vincent Grashaw; MAYA DARDELL, a SXSW official selection in 2017 and directed by Zachary Cotler and Magdalena Zyzak; and Sundance Grand Jury Prize nominee SOUTHSIDE WITH YOU, directed by Richard Tanne

The DP’s three recent films, WE GROWN NOW, earning him a Best Cinematography nomination at the Independent Spirit Awards (Review), A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE, and SXSW 24’ Festival Favorites, SING SING, all bowed in cinemas in 2024.

I spoke with Pat Scola after the release of A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE and coincidentally the limited release of SING SING. We discussed his multiple films with director Michael Sarnoski, his passion for the camera, a vested interest in all his projects, and his own personal message for audiences.

Interview conducted on July 12th, 2024

WAMG: Congratulations on A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE. The film just passed 100 million domestically.

SING SING is opening today and your other film, WE GROWN NOW, also opened this year, so you’ve had a lot going on. 

Pat Scola: Yeah, it’s been a busy last two years.

WAMG: Before we talk about any of your films, when did you start your career? What made you want to be a cinematographer? And once you decided that, how did you plunge in?

PS: I was speaking to somebody earlier today and they kind of joked that because I really wasn’t good at any other art form, I got into cinematography. I always had an interest in photography. I spent a lot of time in high school in my dark room. And when I went to college, the same thing. But I wanted to be an editor, and that’s what I was going to school to maybe try and do. Ultimately, I got kind of dragged onto my first sort of student film set.  I never really experienced anything like it.

I would say I knew then that I wanted to be doing something in that capacity. I didn’t know what yet. I think gravitating to photography and editing have kind of steered me down this path. I don’t think I ever could have known that it would have ended right here and where I’m at. It’s not something that ever really occurred to me. I liked shooting films. I liked having a camera. But where I am now, I‘m still not quite sure how it all happened. 

WAMG: Did you work on commercials or on music videos previously

PS: I would say my career really got started when I made this little $5,000 music video. You can kind of point to these little milestones in your life, right?  And I did this little $5,000 music video for, at that time, an unknown band called Alt J.

That video was for a song called “Breezeblocks.” That record would go on to win the Mercury prize and it ended up going viral.  You know, it really spread quickly. I don’t know how many views it has today but at that time, it got me noticed in the music video community, and I started to get more calls to shoot more videos. That changed a lot for me because before that, I was living in Brooklyn, and I was shooting behind the scenes on things. I was doing anything that I could to have a camera in my hands. I thought it was a win.

It was all non-glamorous but interesting work, shooting interviews for stuff. I was happy and I felt like I was lucky I was doing something.  This kind of really changed it to me and propelled me into a proper career in cinematography.  It’s like, up until this point, I wasn’t. A year or two after that video, is when I basically started to make my income as a photographer.  That was a very interesting time. I thought to myself “Is this becoming real? A little bit, maybe? “

PIG/Michael Sarnoski

WAMG: You where the DP on PIG with Michael Sarnoski, the director.  What was that conversation like when he told you I’d like for you to be my DP on A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE, and how were you brought onto the film?

PS:  A producer that I had done a film with was doing a budget for PIG for their producers, and I think he had floated my name to them, and then at the time, that had gone through my agent and come to me. When PIG was being passed around at that point, people kept calling it “John Wick With A Pig”. My natural inclination when I got that was, I’m not really interested in that kind of story. I do remember at the time, my agent was, have a read at it, you might think differently. I did read it, and it is very different. I mean, the movie you see is there on the page. Michael’s just a beautiful writer. There’s so much sensitivity that’s hidden on the page or just plainly there, but there’s a real weight to what he does, reading one of his scripts. I kind of saw that immediately. I really felt like I knew what he was trying to do. I got really interested and then I went and met Michael and his producer Vanessa Block at a coffee shop at that time. The meeting really turned when we started talking about pig napping. We called it the pig napping, when his pig gets taken in the film, and I started to describe it this way: ‘I saw it as this sort of  where he gets hit by the door, but the camera also falls down to the floor and it kind of turns sideways and it rolls over on the ground with him.’ As I’m explaining it, Michael’s staring at me, and I’m like, oh man, he hates this. I thought, no, you’re here now, you gotta go for it.

Afterwards, he pulled out his storyboards, his hand drawn storyboards, and what he had sketched out was the same idea, very much on the same page about how this kind of should feel. That’s the moment that crystallized that we’re going to do this together. Here we are, two movies later with A QUIET PLACE.

Joseph Quinn as “Eric” and Director Michael Sarnoski in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

WAMG: When did he bring you onto A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE?

PS: The moment he got the job, that was early on. That was before he even had written the script, that being said, because with this film, he really wanted me to work on it. There was a lot of red tape from the studio that we had to get through and jump over in order to get me across the line to do the film. But Michael really stood behind me and really dug his feet in and bringing me along, and I appreciate what he did there. The studio was really happy with the way it looked, what we were doing visually.

Simon Bowles / © 2023 PARAMOUNT PICTURES. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

WAMG: I’m such a huge fan of the franchise. I spoke with the production designer, Simon Bowles, in a recent interview. He talked a lot about how much he likes Michael. They walked in Brooklyn, they walked through New York, and he mentioned Michael was like, “hey, we could just shoot on location.”  And Simon’s like, “no, I don’t really think we can. We have to probably shoot this in London, and we’ve got to have these sets where some of it’s going to be filmed, and some of it’s going to be like VR.”  From your point of view, because he said he met with you, he met with the costume designer, how did all of you work together to implement your vision for the movie?

PS:  We did spend a lot of time walking around New York City. Simon had some wonderful models all over his office. Models and models and things being built, so we would often spend loads of time kind of mulling over these models. And we talked to Simon, and we built two major models.  We built two major streets, and one minor street, and we had 260 setups to accomplish in this so it wouldn’t feel stale. Simon did an excellent job at redressing those streets from Chinatown to the lower east side to Harlem so it’s different. Michael and I were with Simon a lot, and we were quite meticulous about how, with these models that he made, how do we see the whole world in different ways all the time, so we’re not just ending up shooting on the same corners.

That was a very big part of the early process, trying to figure out how to maximize what Simon had provided for us, how to utilize every inch of that place so that it really feels like Sam and Eric are traveling from one side of the street to the other and not repeating these streets over and over again.

Nico and Schnitzel as Frodo, Sam’s cat https://www.instagram.com/lupitanyongo/

WAMG: Shooting a film with animals – you’ve worked with pigs and cats. There were two cats. What were some of the challenges for you as a cinematographer?

PS: We did a lot of tests early on with the cat and filming techniques and seeing what the cat didn’t like and did like. Here’s the difference. The pig doesn’t really care about the camera, it’s not a skittish animal. Its very food driven. There was a shot early in the movie, that we loved, that we called the “pig butt shot.’’  Wherever the camera’s following Brandy (the pig) running and waddling, and it’s on her cute little tail.  And we thought, oh man, we should echo the “pig butt shot” with the cat. We have to have the camera following the cat that way. But in our early tests we discovered we could not follow the cat with a camera. It was so aware that something was behind it. They’re totally different animals, and they bring different challenges, but with the early tests with Nico and Schnitzel we found out things we can do and things we couldn’t do, things that we should stay away from.

PIG

The thing with both animals that probably, I think Michael may say, too, is we really learned this around the second week of A Quiet Place with Nico and Schnitzel, because, again, the pig is not that worried about the camera. I mean, the pig was just food motivated and Brandy was kind of messy. She would bite me and Nick. She knocked the cameras over and it was kind of hilarious and funny, but Nico and Schnitzel were just smarter, as if to say we’re not gonna play your stupid game, man. And our trainers were just absolutely tremendous. They were incredible, but we kind of figured out early on, while trying to get these really specific cat performances, we started to realize let’s just lay off that a little bit and let them be cats a little bit more. I think there was this aha moment where the magic of the cat really started to come alive and sort of let go of that a little bit. And I think we got some really wonderful performances that way and just sort of embracing what they do and allowing our frames to incorporate what they may or may not do a lot of the time.

PIG

WAMG: I wondered how much of this is really a cat and what’s CGI?

PS: It’s all real. No visual effects cat. There’s none of that and it’s all a real cat. And if it’s not real in the moment, it’s a stuffed cat that we had made that was a freakishly, realistic stuffed cat. That was more for Lupita and Eric. When we were doing something kind of dangerous, like running a certain way, we didn’t need to use the real cat. We would use the stuffed one to give them the weight, but for the most part you’re seeing a real cat. Like, when Eric’s running down the pier at the end of the movie, that’s the cat in his arms, and when he comes up out of the water, that’s the real cat!

WAMG: I was wondering while watching, is that a real cat? Because cats would flip out underneath the water. 

PS: We did a lot of water training with them, and there’s obviously, we were, you know, there are very serious rules in place for getting a cat wet. I don’t remember they are specifically, but it’s like, once they’re wet, they can’t do anything for another 45 minutes. We had our animal people there that were keeping us all very honest and on the clock about it. And everything was always talked about in taking a lot of great care and making sure the animals were cool. But what was really fun to watch was Nico and Schnitzel, over the course of the film, came to really trust Lupita and Joe, so by the end of the movie, you have Joe sprinting down the boardwalk, and the cat’s just chilling, just like, okay, we’re doing this. You know, we’re cool. It’s kind of fun to watch that relationship grow and that trust between the animals, and it’s something you can see on screen quite a lot, too.

Joseph Quinn as “Eric” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

WAMG: Your other film, Sing Sing, (Review) a totally different film, opened today in limited release and then wide August 2. From what I have seen, I think Colman Domingo will be nominated for the role. Just wow.  How did you join this film and did you and the directors look into filming at Sing Sing or was there another real prison that you guys could shoot in?

PS:  We were working with the New York State Department of Corrections. The directors, Greg Kwedar and Clint Bentley, and producer Monique Walton were working very closely with them, so we have a lot of help and cooperation from them. We have a lot of establishing shots in the way that is truly Sing Sing from the outside and some things on the grounds there, but because films have been photographed in Sing Sing before, but I think mostly like scenes, I think with the amount of density and the amount of work we had to do photographing in Sing Sing, plus we had COVID protocols on set, we knew this was something that wasn’t going to happen for us inside there.

What we ended up doing is shooting at two other decommissioned prison facilities. It’s sort of a mix of these two decommissioned prisons. A lot of establishing work at Sing Sing on the Hudson River, looking back at it and on the grounds and then we do a lot of our theater work, specifically just a sort of laddering piece of the film at Deacon High School, actually a kind of fake Deacon High School stage or the stage inside of Sing Sing’s chapel, which is a space that we use in the film.

WAMG: To get that kind of authenticity, that kind of honesty, did you shoot on film or did you shoot on digital?

PS: We shot on film. About 85% of our actors were formerly incarcerated inside of a theater program in Sing Sing called RTA, Rehabilitation Through the Arts, that’s what the film is based on.  These are all alumni that have gone through the program inside and come out on the outside.

They came back into act as versions of themselves or tapping into some sense of their past and their history and their truth to put on screen for us. We felt that from a very early point, that film was the correct medium to tell this story for a couple of reasons. That was something I had seen early on in the research. Clint and Greg had all of these amazing zooms and hours of talking with a lot of the guys who ended up in our film. We were listening to one of their stories, and one of them described how they used to wear a watch, but the time was always wrong. It was something that shook me a little bit how time functions in a place like this for the people inside and maybe extending that to our viewers a little bit in the sense that there’s a very specific time period, but we really don’t show it to you. If you look closely, you’d be able to find out. But there’s not a lot of things that really tell you when this takes place and that’s kind of by design a little bit. We were kind of chasing something, a look that felt not like something that was necessarily made today, maybe something that was made in the late 1990’s or early 2000s, something that just didn’t feel digital and modern, like, wanted to feel like this is something that did happen or maybe still could be happening, and it’s still happening, by the way, and will continue to happen, but I’m still keeping it out of dating it out of a time style that feels modern, you know?

And a lot of the film is about men finding their humanity inside of this place behind these walls and it’s about to the joy and warmth and heartbreak of everything that these men go through inside. When you’re in the room with these guys and you’re in the room with them performing, you’re in the room telling their stories, feeling like there’s this same feeling that you try to capture. It’s just so warm and that was something that we really wanted to make sure we got on screen.

It was a really great choice to shoot on film, leaning into the warmth and the skin tones that we get out of that, versus something that was a little bit colder and maybe more sterile feeling. I look at the film now and I think, unequivocally, it was correct to do.  I’m proud that on such a small film, we were able to kind of achieve that, which is not always, you really have to have great partners, great producing partners, great director partner that is willing to stand up for that kind of format, you know, on such a small budget.

WAMG: I read The Hollywood Reporter story where the filmmakers said they paid everyone on set the same. It was part of their pitch. They paid everyone from the PA’s to the stars the same wage just to give that kind of equity. You’ve worked on independent films, you’ve worked on a big studio films. Do you have a preference?

PS: I can’t fully form that opinion just yet. There are things that I really like about both. With A Quiet Place and a budget that size, comes a lot of oversight. I’ve never had that much, I don’t know how to phrase this, other than, movie magic potential right around you because you have such a large crew of people that you can kind of do anything. Can we set this on fire, can we improv this shot that maybe, like, on an independent film, I wouldn’t necessarily have the crew or staff to be able to achieve something as fast or that way.  That part is quite interesting.

With all that comes the other stuff and it’s par for the course, but there’s this thing, in an independent film that happens where it really does feel like there’s two or three people at the head of this thing, and you’re really making the choices on the ground every day. They belong to this very core group of people making those choices. And I feel like, as a result, a voice can be stronger in an independent film that way. I think that’s what I prefer on that side. I just really prefer a singular vision and a feeling this is taken from one person.

The dream is that you can transcend an independent film across that platform and find a way to have the mainstream care about those stories. Typically, marketing is really where independent films lacks its financing more than anything. You can get a movie made for a million bucks if you really want to, but being able to get it out in front of people who end up seeing it and creating a buzz around it.  That’s the hard part. I think that when Sing Sing, for example, A24 is an incredible partner and have been doing incredible work to create a word of mouth and a buzz around the film.  Conversely, A Quiet Place just puts a tremendous, massive billboard every major city everywhere, it’s impossible not to think about it. We seldom talk about how marketing affects the vision of a film or what can be seen by the public.  

WAMG:  I loved A Quiet Place: Day One. I loved the way it was shot. There were so many parts of that film that were just so intimate, and you just really felt for all those characters during that alien invasion.

PS: That was a big part of that film because as much as it’s this invasion, the core of that story is about Sam and her taking death back on her terms a little bit. It was really important for us to be able to balance both that scope and that scale that I think you want an audience expecting to kind of see there, while also keeping it quite subjective and relevant to Sam’s point of view and her feelings.  I think that there’s a nice balance there. If you’re looking for, it’s got something you appreciate. If you get a chance, Sing Sing is out in New York and LA, and in August elsewhere. If you get a chance, it’s worth the watch.

WAMG: Are you taking a break or working on more projects?

PS: I just finished one, Lurker. It is Alan Russell’s directorial debut.  He was a writer on “The Bear” and “Beef,” both Emmy winning shows. This is his first film that he’s directed. It’s finished. We shot that earlier this winter.

Right now, I’m just kind of treading water until November where I will start on Michael Sarnoski’s next movie, The Death of Robin Hood.  Not much we can say about it, obviously but that would be the next thing for sure.

“The film follows an aging Robin Hood grappling with his past after a life of crime and murder who finds himself gravely injured after a battle he thought would be his last. In the hands of a mysterious woman, he is offered a chance at salvation. Production on the film is set to begin in February 2025.”

https://deadline.com/2024/05/a24-death-of-robin-hood-hugh-jackman-1235925982

Follow Pat Scola on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/patscola/

Production Designer Simon Bowles Talks Creating The Noises, Colors and Sets Of A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE

In 2018, John Krasinski’s A QUIET PLACE turned silence into the building blocks of fright and forged from the horror-thriller genre a modern fable of family love, communication and survival. With its mix of relentless tension and layered storytelling about a tightknit clan fending off an immensely destructive, sound-attuned alien force, the film became a startling hit and cultural phenomenon.

Starting the second chapter quite literally mere seconds after the first movie ends, Krasinski wanted A QUIET PLACE PART II to again be more than a visceral sensory experience. It had to also drive the Abbott family’s emotional journey forward—this time, towards both independence and community.

Playing in theaters now is director Michael Sarnoski ‘s A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE. A prequel to A QUIET PLACE, the film takes place on the day the creatures arrived on Earth. Set in New York City, audiences witness the devastation of the invasion and how people were thrust into a survival mode of “If they hear you, they hunt you.”

Jim Batts wrote in his review that “Sarnoski captures that feeling of doom and dread, especially as we get several hints early on (jets in formation) that all Hell was soon “break loose”. While there are grand, epic “set pieces” of the aliens scurrying up buildings, Sarnoski really focuses on the folks at ground level. This is best highlighted in a mass exodus street scene in which the smallest noises alert the beasts who zip through the crowds, picking off the marchers with swift efficiency. It’s nightmare imagery, building on the hopelessness hinted at as the bridges to the city are taken out hinting that the feds think that our greatest metropolis is a “loss”. review.

Sitting at 87% on Rotten Tomatoes, A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE has done well at the box office, grossing $178.2 million worldwide (as of July 7, 2024). It had a strong domestic opening of $52.2 million, the highest in the franchise’s history.

Recently WAMG spoke with British Production Designer, Simon Bowles. From historical dramas to comedies to horror films, Bowles has designed for films such as THE DESCENT, DOG SOLDIERS, HYDE PARK ON THE HUDSON, THE SON and PRIDE. He has collaborated twice with director Amma Asante on BELLE and A UNITED KINGDOM. The last time we spoke was 2017 for his work on CROOKED HOUSE.

Bowles has created some of the most memorable sets in recent cinema and during our conversation after the film opened, we talked about how he designed a silent movie set showing the events that led up to the alien invasion, creating models and using virtual reality in creating a world full of monsters.

WAMG: Congratulations on the film, it’s amazing! How did you get involved and when were you brought onto the project and what kind of collaboration did you have with the director Michael Sarnoski (Pig), the cinematographer Pat Scola and especially the costume designer Bex Crofton-Atkins?

Simon Bowles: I worked on a movie called Apartment 7A, which is also for Paramount. It’s a prequel for Rosemary’s baby. It comes out premiering on Paramount plus in October.

The psychological thriller Apartment 7A stars Julia Garner, Dianne Wiest, Jim Sturgess and Kevin McNally and is directed by Natalie Erika James and produced by Platinum Dunes/Sunday Night in association with Paramount Pictures and premieres exclusively on Paramount+ in the fall, 2024. Photo Credit: Gareth Gatrell/Paramount+.

I was designing that and the producers said, “we love your work on this movie, and we would love to set up a meeting with you and A Quiet Place: Day One’s director, Michael Swarovski, which is amazing because it wasn’t just the producers asking me.  He wasn’t there at the time, but it was also John Krasinski, because this is totally his baby. I was really bowled over and so grateful for the opportunity even just to speak to Michael about the project.

I’m a massive fan of the first two movies. I joined the BAFTA jury years ago because the films I’d worked on, like The Descent and Dog Soldiers, never got a look in at award season because they’re horror genre. I was so delighted to see that the first movie did so well, not just at the box office, but also critically and in the awards season. I was really, really eager to meet Michael and talk about the project. I read the script and put together some design movie boards and color boards and texture boards and destruction boards to create a real kind of visual feast of how I would see the movie.

Also kind of respecting, you know, the connection to the first two movies. But this one has got such a big contrast to the other two movies. You know, it’s the same world and it’s the same creatures and it’s just so fantastically… the end atmosphere is different, the cast obviously are different, but the setting of the first two movies was kind of mostly in the countryside. It was really about big open vistas and the grasses that the creatures are running through and seeing them coming nearer. There are a few interiors, obviously, but this big open rural environment. Whereas reading through Day One, that script was in Manhattan, it’s all about a vertical. You can see very little sky, but it means that the creatures can be anywhere. They can be on the rooftops, they can be in the buildings.

There are creatures in the subway as well and they burst out from underneath you as well, so it’s all about the vertical rather than the horizontal from the first two movies. I put all those balls together and lovely juicy ideas and met with Michael and we got on so well, so fantastically well. And we were laughing and talking about the gore. He’s a big fan of my horror movies, so he was asking me lots of questions about those, which is fantastic. It was just such a wonderful environment. We became best friends straight away.

It turned out that he didn’t want to meet anybody else. Actually, I think the first time I physically met him, I flew to New York to spend some time with him, but also to take the journey to kind of like we met up in the morning that we went out and about. We met in Chinatown and we walked the journey, up through the lower east side, you know, which is why there are really key elements of the story. You know, like it wasn’t in the script, but, you know, it’s really important for Samira to start her journey like heading underneath the Manhattan Bridge, because as we know, that first bit north of that’s the first connective bit of architecture that joins Chinatown Lower east side. Michael’s standing there under the Manhattan bridge saying, “we must do this. And there should be like a truck that’s kind of like the creatures have attacked and it’s hit the rail and then it’s going to burst through the rail, and the cab is kind of like half hanging up.” Just small things like that on that 1st day together, we kind of pulled out so many little elements and also things like exploring the neighborhoods.

Chinatown is so different. It connects right up to the Lower east side, but it’s so different and I wanted to be so truthful with the sets that we really represent those neighborhoods truthfully, authentically, respectfully, not make a kind of cliche of each of them. As we were going through, I was photographing my favorite stores. Obviously, there are some stores which are fairly well known in each of the neighborhoods. But I thought it would be great to really reference them, not only the color and the type of stores and what they’re selling and things, but also just a squint at it, see what the color scheme is for that neighborhood.

Obviously, Chinatown was, you know, it’s great to start with Chinatown in the movie because it’s so fantastic with the colors of the reds and the golds and the greens. Even the fire escapes are those colors and such great restaurants. I noticed the graffiti in Chinatown was very kind of dirty and layered and quite crudely done. Whereas you go into the Lower east side and suddenly they’re like murals and they’re using silver in the spray as well to add reflective quality to the graffiti. Things like the cycle lane, it’s a big green strip, so already there’s a different approach to color and texture and aging and things, so that was really great fun.

Simon Bowles / © 2023 PARAMOUNT PICTURES. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

But we spent a really good day just doing that walk and then we came back to London. It was interesting talking to Michael because he’d come from kind of indie movies where you shoot everything on location and he was really like, “can we not shoot it here?” And it took me back. I had to actually, like, maybe we could, you know, let me have a look. You know, afterall, that’s not gonna work.

I did a film, The Son, with Hugh Jackman, a few years ago and it was set in New York where we shot it all in London. And then we did a little bit of location work of him getting in and out of cars and walking along and things and even just doing that was a complete nightmare because we just have no control. Luckily, everybody knows Hugh Jackman lives in New York, so all the locals just ignored him, so it was quite easy in that way, but to have somebody covered with dust and the control we would need was impossible. I put together an idea of how we would take all that information and those stores and bring it to London and build a backlot set. We built that so early on and had the fantastic Pat Scola, the DP, and Bex Crofton-Atkins, who’s the costume designer.

Director Michael Sarnoski and Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Initially it was just Michael and I and we came up with all these ideas, and I was producing visuals, and I even kind of started building the street, designing all the buildings on the computer. And then it was like, it’s a very small step to put it into a virtual reality headset, so I had Michael walking around the backlot setting before we started building it, which was fantastic for him, again, as an indie director, to be able to come into this massive world of visual effects movies, to be able to walk into the environment and see it. You know, my team is amazing. We put on the controllers, we put a button that you press, and it kind of adds the top up so all the visual effects, all the extended stories, because we only built the lower two stories grounds – first and second and then we could build four blocks. When you stand in the middle, you always see the end because even though it’s a couple hundred feet away, you don’t see the end. It’s great for him to be able to walk around and understand that there will only be two stories on set.

To be able to switch that on and off so that when he walks on the set, it’s not like he has to just stay within the two stories. He can shoot off because it can be extended. But then bringing Pat Scola in on that and talking through the lovely sets and the research that we’ve done and the walking around New York.

Pat brought so much to it as well, with lighting and just the warmth of those first scenes. You know, we shot it at the wrong time of the year in a different country, different temperature, but we shot it in February, so we had to have massive lights on, massive cranes to really bring in the warmth of those early scenes and then bringing Bex in as well was fantastic and she comes from an interesting place as well.

Her idea for Samira’s costume, with texture of the Cardigan and the color of the cardigan and the beanie and all that stuff was fantastic and extended through into everybody’s costumes, obviously, and even the supporting artists, the extras in the background, the crowds. We wanted to really choose colors all between us, choose the colors and how they all work together and the grade and try and work all of that into the pre production period so that when we were shooting, you know, we’d watch the monitor, and that’s pretty much exactly as it appears in the movie, with very little grading. It graded it in the prep, in the design process, in the pre production period altogether. The color of the dust, the gray, what kind of color temperature that gray was, you know, worked with Denise Kum’s, the makeup design, the hair and makeup.

Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

WAMG: There were such subtle details in the original that built such tension, and it’s the sound, or lack thereof, that was such a crucial element to the first film. How do you go about designing for something that’s supposed to be really quiet and how are your set design choices taking into account the film’s focus on this kind of sonic horror? 

SB: When I was walking around Chinatown, especially Chinatown, it’s where I thought, it’s going to be so important to have those sounds at the beginning – fire trucks and noise and stuff to sell the volume. But actually, I felt that it was the lighting. I have little practical lights everywhere on a set to give the Director of Photography something to light with, to give an excuse to give a reason for having a light on someone’s face, you know, in a set. I wanted to give something for the sound department as well, something that they could use on the set, so when I was walking around Chinatown, I noticed the number of noisy things, big things and little things, 

There was a busker who was playing instruments and hooked up to a little amplifier. There was a games arcade, you know, like the pinball and things. And as I walked past that, it was really noisy. All that kind of music and beeping and even the money going in and the coins rolling down inside, and you can hear all of that really loudly. I photographed that, and they were like. There were the garbage collecting guys with these big kinds of chin height, blue plastic containers with wheels on the bottom, and they were kind of pushing them along, and the wheels were all a bit jammed and squeaky. And so they were making a noise and they kind of dump it onto the street and then push it across the street and then bang it up onto the other side.

I was photographing all these noisy things everywhere and I gave those to my set decorating and props department and said we need all of these, so I did a whole big thing on the wall of all the noisy things and they all appear in the movie and they’re all in my kind of, like, visuals for the set design as well. That’s why it’s important to see all those, partially because just to be able to play the noise level, but also it’s important to see them afterwards. When we see where the busker was, the blood smears and his equipment, the store with the arcades and with the music, with the games arcade. We actually liked it so much, we put the camera inside, so when Samira walked past, we panned with her and all you can see is all the machines all twisted and broken and all the lights are dim and you’re looking through a kind of broken void of the store and there’s blood all around it, like the creature reached in and pulled someone out and all the noisy stuff, they just smashed it all up.

We put a lot of things in there like rubber glass, broken glass and things on the streets. I pointed it out to the cast, there’s some noisy things here you might want to avoid when you’re walking through. You know, we wanted to do a lot of signs of life. People had been there like a walker for an old person and a stroller, the little teddy bear with its head torn off and blood on it. All those little elements that are in there, but, there were signs of noisy things that have been taken away.

WAMG: Even though the film was shot in London you worked with virtual reality. How did that affect your job, which is so tactile and tangible, and all of a sudden you’re having to visualize and create this world. How did that come into play as opposed to when you were working on The Descent, when you were working on Dog Soldiers, and all of a sudden, here you are with VR, putting on the goggles and having two hand controllers. Did this help you with visuals and creating New York City and Chinatown and Harlem? 

SB: Yes, it really did. It’s interesting because in my design process, there’s a very small window when virtual reality is useful, and it works really well before we start building the scenery so that the director and the director of photography can be on the set to see it. And because it’s stereoscopic, you can see what is near and what is far away.

Virtual reality isn’t a separate thing. It’s part of one of the tools that I use. On The Descent, I built scale models where the people were that big. They’re inch and a half high, and a big model of every single cave on The Descent and they were all colored, and the caves that were wet had a varnish spray on them, so there was a little kind of shininess to it. And that was really important because there were loads of caves on The Descent, 25 models, and we put them in this room with all the curtains closed, the blinds were shut, and we gave the director of photography some torches and some table lights and things. Put lights on every single one of those sets, but left them switched off so the DOP and his gaffer could go in there and they could experiment. And even actually, the little plastic figures, I put a little LED in their hand and then ran a cable off so you could stand somebody on the set to see how the set will be, so I’m still doing that.

And that’s 20 years later. I’m still holding big models and actually, the biggest model I’ve built so far is the Quiet Place: Day One. It must have been a six foot long model of the intersection, the big backlot set and you can see all the New York ones that we built. I still have big models with little toy cars, because actually, it’s still the best way to look at it and to get down low and look down the street and understand that. And it’s much easier to change things on a big model.

We get a pair of scissors in there and cut a bit off and then bend it back on itself and say, yeah, there’s this new rewrite with a little alleyway. Let’s cut that there and there, and let’s cut that little bit of store away and let’s make that. Let’s get some card here. Make a little alleyway set, that would work really well because then you come around and you would see up the street. A physical tabletop model is still invaluable, but everything is digital, so my team are drawing up. I’ve always done, in the last 15 years, it has become the norm that we’re drawing up everything in a computer but kind of elevations and plans and things for the construction team, but it’s very easy. It’s a small step to make those into something three dimensional.

And then to color it and then give that model to my concept artists. And they kind of photoshop all the textures and all the photographs I’ve taken of the noisy people and all the photographs I’ve taken of the colors of the fire escapes for different neighborhoods and things like that. They’re building a beautiful 2d visual like a piece of concept art.

We’ve got the tabletop model. We’ve got kind of beautiful visuals with cars on fire and all the things that you can’t do on a tabletop model and you can’t really do quickly, then having the virtual reality as well, you’ve understood what the set is, but now let’s kind of go onto the set and let’s walk around and understand that scale. On the back lot set, a lot of the stores had interiors, like the interior of the corner store, the bodega, so they took my quick model that I built of that, put that into the virtual reality model, so you could kind of walk in. You could go right in, and there was the guy standing behind the counter there and he had the ginger cat on the counter curb. You can walk around all the shelves and look around.

We put a couple of Humvees outside, so that shot of Samira watching the Humvees going past, I could adjust the height of the shelving and everything. We did all that in virtual reality. This was before we started building the backlot set, so this is three months before we started shooting, which is great because then, Michael and Pat and I, we’re all walking around on the backlot set seeing it come together and it seems very familiar and it was very important for all of us to be able to feel like we know what’s coming. It’s not scary. It’s a big step, but it’s not scary because we know what it looks like. We walked around on it three months ago. That’s why I think virtual reality is very useful. I’ve been using it for, I think, seven years.

I used it first on the tv show called Avenue Five because we had the same thing that Armando Iannucci had always insisted on shooting everything on location, everything, and suddenly we’re doing science fiction. I designed this massive atrium on the spaceship that was twelve stories high. This beautiful atrium you could look up inside, but we were only building three. He walked onto the set with the virtual reality goggles and went, “Wow!” I told him when you’re on set, you’ll be looking up at lighting guys having sandwiches up in the roof, but remember in the final thing, you’ll see all those stories and see people crossing and walking around, people looking down at you, you know, eight stories above you. (Trailer)

WAMG: So now you have your VR tools, the sets and you have your miniatures and models for Day One, how did you design that horrific tunnel scene with the water? I was thinking, he’s done this with The Descent because it’s in a cave and it’s claustrophobic. He’s done this with Dog Soldiers at the farmhouse and that’s very claustrophobic. And all of a sudden the tunnel’s getting smaller and smaller. There’s less room, less air pockets. It’s dark, and there’s the color palette of just grays and blacks. How did you design that tunnel scene as you did with the rest of the movie? 

SB: It’s funny, because that wasn’t originally in the script. And Michael came to me and said, I’m thinking about doing this tunnel scene, and I said let me show you a little bit of a movie I designed called The Descent. He knew my movie and asked, “how did you do that?” So I told him, and I was standing there in my office acting out, getting stuck in tunnels, and the roof getting lower, and he’s like, “so how do you do that? Do you kind of raise the water and you fill it with more water?” And I was like, no, no, we do the opposite. We bring the roof down to make it even less and less space, and you’re just sucking a tiny bit of air from a tiny bubble. And that’s how we did it on The Descent. We only built half of a cave for that scene in the water, so he’s like, we must do that. So we did. It was kind of written around our meeting about how those emotions are so raw and there’s no hope. When you know that there’s a creature behind you, you can only go forward, but you can see the roof is going down, but also the water level is rising, and it’s kind of swirling around. It was easier on The Descent because everybody had lights on them and torches and flashlights and things, whereas in this world, we know they have a small flashlight, but we must have some daylight. I came up with the idea of having these grills in the ceiling, so every now and again we all know those grills in New York, when you’re walking along, you almost see the train. You can see and hear it right under you, so let’s almost give them hope. It’s daylight and they just can’t get through the grill and it’s fixed on, and you just want to see that. Actually, we didn’t shoot it, but we talked about being able to see their fingers coming up through the grill, to get that sense of claustrophobia. I’m not claustrophobic which is why describing it to somebody is much more fun, because then you see their claustrophobia kicking in and then you know you’re onto a good thing.

WAMG: The whole film is such a triumph. What are some of the takeaways for you from working on this movie that you could bring to possibly future projects or future projects in this cinematic universe?

SB: I’m so lucky to have all the movies I’ve designed. I’ve learned so much and picked up so many things. It’s not just taking things from The Descent, it’s also taking things from movies like Hyde Park On Hudson, the Bill Murray movie, I learned so much from that as well. There’s character things that I take from everywhere. Some of them I’m aware of and some of them I’m not. I collect two feet of books, sitting on my bookshelf, on every movie. And I love to be surrounded by inspiration and enjoy taking things onto other projects.

I’ve never really been pigeonholed. I have initially in horror movies, but every horror movie was so different from the other one that it’s a joy to look back on what I’ve worked on, what I’ve learned from those, and taking it forward and also just working with amazing crews as well. It’s just so much fun. I love my job and I do love the research part of it as much as the making of it as well.

WAMG: All the Quiet Place films, including this one, they’re just known for sparking fan theories and those of us sitting in the theater, we were hoping for an Easter egg of sorts. After the credits, we were hoping that maybe we’re going to see them on the island from the second movie. Maybe we’re going to see the Abbott’s farmhouse from the first movie.

Are there any design elements that maybe you included that you hope will inspire the interest of the audience or something that they’ll discuss going, maybe this is a key to something else. Do you ever try to drop things in there? 

SB: Well, okay. So the writers have done their job and the producers have done their job. I hope that there will be more, but to answer your question, on Easter eggs, yes, there are things hidden in there for sure. The funniest thing is that actually so often people spot things. It was especially in The Descent, for some reason, there were elements in The Descent that people said, I see what you did there, what you were referencing. And I was like, what was it? There was like an eight track player, like on this really old cassette tape. There was a piece of dressing that I just liked this really old, like from a car, hooked up to a car battery. Like to be able to listen to old eight track sets. And somebody said, ah, that’s referencing some other classic movie that the eight track cassette player is in and they were like, you reference that, didn’t you in The Descent and I was like, you’ve got it. You get extra points for that.

And in Avenue Five, actually, as well, quite a few people have spotted things that I had put on purpose, that did actually reference another movie, another science fiction movie. I think that’s more exciting than people spotting what we have put in.

WAMG: Congratulations on the movie. It’s an amazing prequel and another really fantastic chapter in the Quiet Place universe. 

Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE – Review

After a weekend with some original (though nostalgic) content at the multiplex, we’re back with a new installment of a very popular SF-thriller franchise that’s now six years old. It’s the third follow-up, though not a continuation of the last one from 2020. That’s because this is not a sequel, but rather a prequel, giving us the “backstory” to the event of the original. And since there are no characters from that flick, this could be considered a “spin-off”. Not to worry as this is no confusing “hybrid” unlike a similar action blockbuster (which didn’t “bust many blocks” at the box office) from a few weeks ago, FURIOSA: A MAD MAX SAGA. While that one certainly tested many theatre sound systems, the decibel level should be much lower when in use for A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE. Shhhh…

The setting for this cinematic “flashback” shifts to the Big Apple, although the opening scenes take place a few miles away, in the NYC suburbs at a hospice facility. A senior nurse, Rueben (Alex Wolff) conducts a group therapy session for several of the terminal residents. But one of them is not “into it”. That’s Sam (Lupita Nyong’o) who has no filter (“This place is s*#t”) and would rather just wait for the end with her beloved cat Frodo. Rueben thinks he can get her out of her “funk”. He’s organized a field trip into Manhattan for a (short) theatrical presentation. Sam strikes a deal that she’ll come along if, and only if, they grab some pizza in the city. On the bus ride there she observes several fighter jets zooming overhead. Finally, they arrive for a (oh no) puppet show. When Sam and Frodo duck out to grab a snack at a nearby bodega, sirens are heard. They run into Rueben as he tries to hustle everyone back on the bus as per the loud warning messages from several rapid military vehicles (no pizza). The trip is cut short as objects from the sky (maybe bombs or meteors) explode onto the street. Sam’s knocked down during the chaos and awakens back inside the theatre. The city is under attack, overrun by huge spider-like sightless creatures that destroy anyone that makes a sound. Helicopters using loudspeakers (agitating the monsters) blare out a message that all survivors should make their way, silently, to the south dock area where boats will ferry them to safety since the aliens can’t swim. As the throngs march quietly through the streets, Sam goes against “the tide” to Harlem for her favorite pizza. On her journey, she and Frodo become part of a trio when a lost British law student named Eric (Joseph Quinn) joins them, much to Sam’s chagrin. Does she have the strength to evade the invaders? And can she and Erik make it to the boats in time?

The script brings a great challenge to the cast as they must communicate and express their emotions mainly through their eyes and body language, harkening back to the early days of silent cinema. And the compelling Ms. Nyong’o is more than up to the challenge, though she’s also terrific in the opening, pre-attack sequences as she verbally tosses snarky spears at nearly everyone around her (and then there are the eye-rolls as she discovers the type of show she’s agreed to see). Yes, she conveys the wide-eyed fear and panic, while never letting us forget that Sam is also pushing through agonizing pain as cancer ravages her body. Later, there’s her frustration as this “dufus in a suit” just won’t be on his way, which finally melts into admiration and real, and probably final, human connection. As her unlikely sidekick. Quinn also must temper the terror with his need to forge that connection and dissolve Sam’s “steel wall” of negativity. Plus he proves to be an unorthodox action hero as he ventures into the scary empty city in search of the meds that will ease Sam’s suffering (and discovers the monsters’ secret lair). Wolff is very good as the “by the book” official who secretly is amused by the defiant Sam. Kudos also to the impressive supporting work of Djimon Hounsou as the powerful father figure who’s the big “carryover” character in another part of the series. The scene where he must do the unthinkable to protect his son (while hoping that he’s not seeing it) is heartwrenching.

Aside from the new central characters in this entry, a big “player” behind the scenes has stepped away from the director’s chair. John Krasinski was busy with a more pleasant vision of the Big Apple full of friendly beasties in IF, so he’s handed over the helming reigns to Michael Sarnoski (PIG), though they teamed up on the script. Sarnoski captures that feeling of doom and dread, especially as we get several hints early on (jets in formation) that all Hell was soon “break loose”. When it does the city blocks are covered in white ash, almost as though a sudden blizzard has stopped everything (and reminding us of that fateful September morning in 2001). And while there are grand, epic “set pieces” of the aliens scurrying up buildings, Sarnoski really focuses on the folks at ground level. This is best highlighted in a mass exodus street scene in which the smallest noises alert the beasts who zip through the crowds, picking off the marchers with swift efficiency. It’s nightmare imagery, building on the hopelessness hinted at as the bridges to the city are taken out hinting that the feds think that our greatest metropolis is a “loss”. Yet amidst the carnage we’re really drawn into the dynamic of Sam and Erik as she finally finds something to live for just as everything seems to be over for humanity (and her rejoining it). Sure, it’s an “end of the globe” spectacle (with splendid CGI effects of the insect-like “rippers”) much like the variations of I AM LEGEND, but it’s the blossoming friendship that offers a glimmer of joy and hope in the truly original origin story at the center of A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE.

3 Out of 4

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE is now playing in theatres everywhere

Everything You NEED To Know Before Watching A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE And See The Final Trailer

Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” and Joseph Quinn as “Eric” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Paramount Pictures has released one final trailer for A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE. Experience the day the world went quiet.

Director Michael Sarnoski’s A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE stars Lupita Nyong’o, Joseph Quinn, Djimon Hounsou and Alex Wolff.

Over on X, Collider’s Steven Weintraub wrote:

Watch below to catch up on the series before seeing the film this weekend.

And check out this behind the scenes look at the movie with the filmmakers. A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE is based on characters created by Bryan Woods & Scott Beck and a story by John Krasinski and Michael Sarnoski, with the screenplay by Michael Sarnoski.

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE IS ONLY IN THEATRES, DOLBY CINEMA, AND IMAX THIS FRIDAY!

AND INSTANTLY CREATE YOUR PERSONALIZED VIDEO FROM A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE AT STORIES.AQUIETPLACEMOVIE.COM

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE HAS BEEN RATED PG-13 FOR TERROR AND VIOLENT CONTENT/BLOODY IMAGES

Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Joseph Quinn as “Eric” and Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Djimon Hounsou as “Henri” and Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

GIVEAWAY – Win A Fandango Code To See A QUIET PLACE: DAY 1

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE is an upcoming American apocalyptic horror film written and directed by Michael Sarnoski, based on a story he conceived with John Krasinski. It serves as a spin-off prequel and the third installment in the A Quiet Place film series.

The films stars Lupita Nyong’o, Joseph Quinn, Alex Wolff and Djimon Hounsou.

Directed by Michael Sarnoski, with a story by John Krasinski and Michael Sarnoski and based on characters created by Bryan Woods & Scott Beck, A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE IS ONLY IN THEATRES, DOLBY CINEMA, AND IMAX ON JUNE 28, 2024.

WAMG is giving away to TEN of our lucky readers Fandango Codes – GOOD FOR TWO TICKETS.

EMAIL michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com to enter.

WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. MUST LIVE IN THE CONTINENTAL U.S.

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE HAS BEEN RATED PG-13 FOR TERROR AND VIOLENT CONTENT/BLOODY IMAGES.

TEXT ‘BE QUIET’ TO 929-202-SHHH (7444) OR TAP HERE TO EXPERIENCE DAY ONE: HTTPS://PARAMNT.US/TEXTAQP

Alex Wolff as “Reuben” and Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Paramount Pictures Presents

In Association with Michael Bay

A Platinum Dunes / Sunday Night Production

“A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE”

Tickets On Sale Now For A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE

In A QUIET PLACE PART ONE, we witnessed the aftermath of the alien invasion, with some flashbacks interspersed with the “Death Angels” arrival on the meteorites, emergence and the subsequent non-stop attacks on anything that made even the slightest noise. We came to love the Abbott family and mourned when husband and father Lee Abbott was killed when saving his children from the claws of the monsters.

In A QUIET PLACE PART II, audiences saw The Abbott family and their little town decimated. As the Abbotts, Evelyn and her children, hunt for any viable refuge from the sounds that draw the omnipresent creatures, they stumble upon an old acquaintance turned into a determined loner whose past makes it difficult for them to trust his true intentions. This is Emmett portrayed by Cillian Murphy. As was briefly referenced in PART II in a conversation between Murphy (Emmett) and Djimon Hounsou (Man on Island), the two spoke of how people tried to escape New York City after the initial invasion. The film starred Emily Blunt, Cillian Murphy, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe, Djimon Hounsou, and John Krasinski.

Now audiences will get to experience the day the world went quiet in director Michael Sarnoski’s A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE. Paramount Pictures has dropped a new featurette with the stars of the film, Lupita Nyong’o, Joseph Quinn, Djimon Hounsou and Alex Wolff discussing their roles and the film.

The director of 2021’s PIG is once again working with composer Alexis Grapsas as well as cinematographer Pat Scola. A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE is based on characters created by Bryan Woods & Scott Beck and a story by John Krasinski and Michael Sarnoski, with the screenplay by Michael Sarnoski.

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE is only in THEATRES, DOLBY CINEMA, and IMAX On June 28, 2024.

https://www.fandango.com/a-quiet-place-day-one-2024-234520/movie-overview?cmp=SocialOrganic~Fandango~AQuietPlaceDayOne

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE HAS BEEN RATED PG-13 FOR TERROR AND VIOLENT CONTENT/BLOODY IMAGES.

FOLLOW A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE ON SOCIAL FOR ALL THE LATEST MOVIE NEWS AND TEXT ‘BE QUIET’ TO 929-202-SHHH (7444) OR TAP HERE TO EXPERIENCE DAY ONE: HTTPS://PARAMNT.US/TEXTAQP

“Shelter In Place. Wait Further Instructions” Watch The Scary New Trailer For A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE

“It’s the end of days. No more people.” It’s time once again to stay totally silent and totally still in the cinema when you go to see A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE. Just as audiences did in 2018 when director John Krasinski unleashed his horror film A QUIET PLACE on an unsuspecting public, everyone in the theater went dead quiet so as to not give away the Abbott family’s hiding places.

A QUIET PLACE: PART II showed the aftermath of the deadly events at home and the new terrors the family faced in the outside world. The sequel starred Emily Blunt, Cillian Murphy, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe, Djimon Hounsou and John Krasinski. From the opening moments of the film, the family was on the run, beyond any semblance of security and searching for refuge in a town gone mad with fear. In a time when empathy and connection had nearly vanished from the world, the Abbotts strived not only to protect each other from the threat of sound but to find hope in the terrifying hush around them.

As was briefly referenced in PART II in a conversation between Murphy (Emmett) and Hounsou (Man on Island), now comes A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE – the day the world went quiet. “That day, we got here the same way as you. We were in the city when we heard the hurricane sirens. Once they knew they couldn’t swim, the National Guard were told to start loading the boats. Any boat they could find. So as soon as people saw they got out safe, everyone just started pushing forward. And that’s when the screaming started. They had 12 boats lined up on the dock that day. Only two got out.”

Starring Lupita Nyong’o, Joseph Quinn, Alex Wolff and Djimon Hounsou, Paramount Pictures has released an unsettling new trailer for the upcoming film from director Michael Sarnoski.

The film is based on characters created by Bryan Woods & Scott Beck and a story by John Krasinski and Michael Sarnoski, with the screenplay by Michael Sarnoski.

A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE is only in theaters, Dolby Cinema, and IMAX on June 28, 2024

FOLLOW A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE ON SOCIAL FOR ALL THE LATEST MOVIE NEWS AND TEXT ‘BE QUIET’ TO 929-202-SHHH (7444) OR TAP HERE TO EXPERIENCE DAY ONE: HTTPS://PARAMNT.US/TEXTAQP

Djimon Hounsou as “Henri”, Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” and Alex Wolff as “Reuben” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Watch The Super Bowl Spot For A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE – Only In Theaters June 28

Experience the day the world went quiet in the first trailer for A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE – only in theaters on JUNE 28, 2024.

Check out the new Big Game TV Spot.

A QUIET PLACE grossed $188 million in the United States and Canada, and $152 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $341 million. A QUIET PLACE PART II grossed $160.1 million in the United States and Canada, and $137.3 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $297.4 million.

The third film in this latest chapter stars Lupita Nyong’o, Joseph Quinn, Alex Wolff and Djimon Hounsou.

The story is by John Krasinski and Michael Sarnoski and is helmed by Michael Sarnoski.

FOLLOW A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE ON SOCIAL FOR ALL THE LATEST MOVIE NEWS 

AND TEXT ‘BE QUIET’ TO 929-202-SHHH (7444) OR TAP HERE TO EXPERIENCE DAY ONE: HTTPS://PARAMNT.US/TEXTAQP

Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” and Djimon Hounsou as “Henri” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.

Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” and Joseph Quinn as “Eric” in A Quiet Place: Day One from Paramount Pictures.