WT

A Quiet Place

2018 · Directed by John Krasinski

🧘42

Woke Score

82

Critic

🍿74

Audience

Woke-Adjacent

Critics rated this 40 points above its woke score. Among Woke-Adjacent films, this critic score ranks #30 of 151.

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Synopsis

A family is forced to live in silence while hiding from creatures that hunt by sound.

Consciousness Assessment

A Quiet Place arrives as a technically proficient horror exercise that, despite its merits as cinema, remains largely indifferent to the constellation of progressive sensibilities that have come to define contemporary cultural discourse. The film's central conceit, a family navigating an alien apocalypse in enforced silence, offers no commentary on systemic inequality, environmental collapse, or the economic structures that might have prevented such catastrophe. John Krasinski's screenplay, co-written with Scott Beck and Bryan Woods, concerns itself almost entirely with familial survival and parental anxiety, themes that predate the current cultural moment by decades.

The film's most substantive claim to progressive credentials rests on its casting of Millicent Simmonds, a deaf actress, in the role of Regan Abbott. This represents genuine neurodivergent representation, with Simmonds bringing authentic deaf sensibility to a character whose deafness is not played for sympathy or inspiration porn. The film incorporates American Sign Language naturally into its narrative, and Krasinski reportedly fought to ensure this casting rather than hiring an able-bodied actress. This is commendable, though it functions primarily as an artistic choice that serves the film's formal constraints rather than as an explicit statement about disability justice or systemic ableism.

Beyond this single marker, the film offers little to satisfy those seeking contemporary progressive sensibilities. Emily Blunt's character exists almost entirely in service to her role as protector and nurturer, with critics noting her near-total absence of interiority beyond maternal function. The film presents no racial diversity, explores no queer dynamics, engages in no critique of power structures, and lectures about nothing. It is, in essence, a craftsman's work of genre entertainment that happened to make one thoughtful casting decision, a choice that elevates it marginally above complete cultural neutrality but scarcely constitutes evidence of deeper ideological commitment.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

82%from 55 reviews
Village Voice100

A Quiet Place is full of fabulous, virtuoso action set pieces, but mere hours after seeing it, what I’m already flashing on the most are the ways in which each member of this family, children and adults alike, tries to carry the weight of their central burden, which isn’t fear and dread, but guilt and grief, two monsters no third act plot twist can ever quite vanquish.

Chuck WilsonRead Full Review →
Los Angeles Times100

The pleasures of this story are the pleasures of watching people think, quickly but methodically, through a situation. To the very end, where a different picture might have devolved into a routine bloodbath, the movie clings to its intelligence like a protective amulet; it keeps the viewer in a state of heightened alertness throughout.

Justin ChangRead Full Review →
Washington Post100

As a celebration of the physical expressiveness and visual storytelling of silent cinema, A Quiet Place speaks volumes without a word being uttered.

Ann HornadayRead Full Review →
Chicago Tribune63

My favorite moment, an encounter between Regan and one of the monsters in a cornfield, plays with sound and image and tension, creatively. Other bits are more shameless.

Michael PhillipsRead Full Review →