John Krasinski is still pinching himself over the critical and financial success of his experimental thriller A Quiet Place, but the Cinderella year is not over yet.
With awards season heating up, A Quiet Place has found its own spot in the conversation. Krasinski, who co-wrote, directed and starred in the film opposite his wife, Emily Blunt, is only humbled.
"It's nothing short of overwhelming," Krasinski said recently. "Emily and I really are still digesting the fact that we made this small little special movie that some people really connected to. This was literally a meditation on parenting!"
A Quiet Place is a mostly silent horror film about a family (Krasinski, Blunt, Noah Jupe and Millicent Simmonds) trying to live among creatures that attack and kill at the smallest sound. It became a surprise box-office phenomenon when it was released in April, grossing US$338.6 million ($517.7m) in worldwide ticket sales off a production budget of only US$17m, and a sequel is in the works.
Krasinski said he studied the opening of the Paul Thomas Anderson-directed There Will Be Blood and other modern films that employ silence to figure out how he would approach it in his film. He also looked at Jaws, Rosemary's Baby and the films of Alfred Hitchcock for ideas in tension-building.