Re: When Silence is Golden...
Grishny, on host 12.29.132.98
Monday, December 9, 2002, at 06:42:33
Re: When Silence is Golden... posted by Sam on Monday, December 9, 2002, at 05:00:23:
> 7. The Man Who Knew Too Much (1955 version). There's a footsteps-only hand-held shot, taken from Jimmy Stewart's perspective, as he walks down a sidewalk. Another moment I don't remember the context for but which was effective enough that the emotions and tension burned itself into my memory.
Oooh, yeah.
I'd never seen that film until a few years ago when my wife brought it home from the library. That scene definitely set my skin crawling. I think the context was that Jimmy Stewart was following a lead to a deserted part of London, and thought someone was following him. He kept hearing other footsteps behind him.. so he starts walking faster, and faster, and faster, until finally he whirls around to confront the person tailing him and scares the crap out the poor guy who just happens to be going the same way as him.
> The only contemporary director I can particularly think of that is so *consistently* brilliant with silence is M. Night Shyamalan, who built memorable scene after memorable scene in "The Sixth Sense" and "Unbreakable" with very little sound at all.
I was wondering if you'd mention him. I've only seen "Unbreakable," but I remember thinking when I watched it that it seemed so strangely appropriate that there was almost no music.
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