Actress Emily Blunt breaks silence to talk smash hit horror film ‘A Quiet Place Part II’

The film has become the biggest pandemic-era hit in the US to date. (Supplied)
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Updated 02 June 2021
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Actress Emily Blunt breaks silence to talk smash hit horror film ‘A Quiet Place Part II’

LOS ANGELES: Over a year after its red carpet premiere, director John Krazinski’s “A Quiet Place Part II” has released in theaters as one of a number of films postponed by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The horror movie picks up where its award-winning 2018 prequel left off, with the Abbott family trying to stay silent in order to survive in a world where making a sound means certain death as terrifying monsters roam the streets relying on auditory clues to catch their next victim. 

British actress Emily Blunt, who plays a mother in both films, spoke to Arab News about why the stakes are higher in the sequel.

“Now I think the stakes are even higher because Evelyn, as their mother, has three children to protect including a newborn baby who she’ll go to the ends of the Earth to protect. Who’s going to help her and do you trust the people who are left?” Blunt said. 

Blunt’s husband both off screen and in the movie, Krazinski, returns as the writer and director for the latest film, after acting in the first. 

“I think John didn’t know what to expect because it was such a unique idea, a completely different way to make a film,” Blunt explained. “I don’t think any of us anticipated the sort of meteoric life that it took on and the impact it had on people.”

While the film delivers more audio-centric tension, some critics are questioning if the second installment does enough to add to the original.

“John just said ‘you know, there’s so much mileage to be had with this concept of ‘if you make noise you die,’” Blunt noted. “He’s like ‘I’m going to go all the way.’”

And it certainly paid off, with Variety reporting that the sequel collected $48 million at the North American box office between Friday and Sunday, exceeding expectations and posting the biggest three-day haul of the pandemic era.

The new film clearly sets up a third installment, which will not feature Krazinski as the head writer. How “A Quiet Place” will continue to survive the transition from film to franchise will leave audiences once again in silent suspense. 


‘The Rip’ — Damon and Affleck reunite for slick action thriller

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‘The Rip’ — Damon and Affleck reunite for slick action thriller

DUBAI: Hollywood’s greatest bromance (no, Pitt and Clooney’s Noughties’ partnership doesn’t come close) is in the spotlight again in Netflix action thriller “The Rip,” in which Matt Damon and Ben Affleck star as — what else — best friends, Dane Dumars and JD Byrne.

They are cops. Specifically, officers in the Tactical Narcotics Unit of the Miami police force, so not your run-of-the-mill street cops. These guys are mavericks, as are their crew, Numa Baptiste (Teyana Taylor), Lolo Salazar (Catalina Sandino Moreno) and Mike Ro (Steven Yeun). We know they’re mavericks because they do things like put their feet on tables, drink beer, and have nose rings and tattoos.

TNT captain Jackie Velez has just been murdered, and rumors abound of dirty cops robbing large amounts of money from drug houses. Suspicion for both these crimes falls on TNT — now headed by Dane.

When Dane receives a tip about a house where a stash of drug money might be, the team head there and discover $20 million of drug cartel cash in the attic. They know that they have to count the money on site (as per regulations) but also know they’re likely to be attacked by the cartel at any minute. Rather than calling the haul in, as protocol dictates, Dane demands his team hand over their phones. Is this because he knows they’re in a high-risk situation and doesn’t want them to attract attention from the rumored dirty cops? Or does he have something more nefarious in mind? His team aren’t sure (not even JD). And director and co-writer Joe Carnahan cleverly keeps the audience guessing for a good while. As the clock ticks, trust between the TNT members starts to fray.

Carnahan adeptly ratchets up the tension and maintains the tricky balance between revealing too much and removing the stakes entirely, and revealing too little and frustrating viewers. The chemistry between Affleck and Damon is — as you’d expect from a pair who’ve been friends since they were 10 — entirely convincing and central to the film’s believability. The rest of the cast hold their own, credibly portraying the camaraderie between colleagues constantly required to have each other’s back.

The plot twists (and there are many) work well —surprising without being too far-fetched — and Carnahan’s slick direction, and the Affleck-Damon special sauce, make “The Rip” an enjoyable distraction.