Movie · 2021 · Science Fiction, Thriller, Horror · 1h 36m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 4.8/10 (1.2M ratings)
Silence is not enough.
Overview
Following the events at home, the Abbott family now face the terrors of the outside world. Forced to venture into the unknown, they realize that the creatures that hunt by sound are not the only threats that lurk beyond the sand path.
Ratings
Curator score: 4.8/10
IMDb: 7.2/10
Letterboxd: 3.41/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 91%
Metacritic: 71
TMDB: 7.4/10
Director
John Krasinski
Production
Paramount Pictures, Platinum Dunes, Sunday Night Productions
Cast
Emily Blunt, John Krasinski, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe, Cillian Murphy, Djimon Hounsou, Okieriete Onaodowan, Scoot McNairy, Zachary Golinger, Blake DeLong, Stefania Warwick, Alycia Ripley, Cristalis Bonilla, Domonic Taggart, Silas Pereira-Olson, Alice Sophie Malyukova, Ashley Dyke, Dean Woodward, Barbara Singer, David Lundy
Where to watch
Netflix, Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential, Netflix Standard with Ads
Curator Review
Verdict
A tense, efficient sequel that broadens the world without losing the franchise’s stripped-down survival suspense. It’s strongest as a lean creature thriller with strong sound design, physical storytelling, and a few standout set pieces, even if some plot logic is stretched.
Best for
fans of suspenseful monster movies
viewers who like survival thrillers with minimal dialogue
people drawn to post-apocalyptic family drama
fans of tightly staged action-horror set pieces
Skip if
you want airtight world-building
you dislike sequels that expand the mythology
you prefer gore-heavy horror over tension-driven scares
you’re not interested in family-centered genre drama
Overview
This sequel smartly shifts from the intimacy of the first film into a broader survival story, while still treating silence as a weapon. The opening sequence is especially effective, and the movie keeps finding ways to turn ordinary movement, noise, and panic into suspense. It’s a polished piece of mainstream horror craftsmanship with strong visual storytelling and excellent sound design.
Worth noting
What keeps it working is the family dynamic, especially the way the film uses the children’s point of view to make the world feel dangerous and unstable. The expansion of the outside world gives the story more momentum, even if some of the logic is more convenient than convincing. It’s less original than its predecessor, but still a well-made thriller that knows how to stage fear.
Bottom line
If you liked the first film for its tension and emotional clarity, this is a solid continuation. If you need every rule to hold up under scrutiny, the movie may test your patience. But as a suspenseful creature feature with real craft, it lands well enough to recommend.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Madfrieza (3★) · 12670 likes
I relate to the creatures in A Quiet Place because I too want everyone to shut the fuck up.
liam f (4★) · 9726 likes
it's getting pretty hard to suspend disbelief when there have been two films about quiet places and somehow not one character has even suggested living in the library
Patrick Willems (3★) · 8111 likes
More close-ups of bare feet than Tarantino’s entire filmography
Molly (4★) · 6558 likes
someone walked into the movie theatre, took a singular picture of cillian murphy with the flash on, and then left
2016 · Thriller, Science Fiction, Drama · 1h 44m · PG-13 · Curator 5.8/10 (1M ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
A tightly controlled survival thriller that builds dread through confinement, uncertainty, and shifting threat levels.