Subtitles section Play video
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Hi, I'm Michael.
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This is Lessons from the Screenplay.
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(monster lands)
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Sound always plays a particularly important role in the horror genre,
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whether it's a hair-raising score, a terrifying effect,
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or just a noise that gives away a character's location.
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(crash)
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But “A Quiet Place” takes this a step further,
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making sound itself a key element of the story.
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(noise on roof)
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As writer/director John Krasinski said:
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“The sound design is a main character in the movie...
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The guys designing the sound, Ethan and Erik,
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they're the most talented guys in the world.
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You really got to see the art form of sound design at the highest level."
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“Alright. Ethan, take one.”
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“Hi, I'm Ethan Van der Ryn.”
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“My name is Erik Aadahl.
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I'm one of the supervising sound editor-…
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…sound designers on 'A Quiet Place.'"
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Through my friend, Michael Coleman over at SoundWorks Collection,
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I actually had a chance to visit the Warner Brothers lot
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and sit down with Ethan and Erik to discuss the sound design process.
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So today, I'll be asking for their input
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as we look at the ways sound can be used to affect the emotion of a story…
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Why thinking about sound during the screenwriting stage is so important...
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And how contrast and dynamics can make or break a film.
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Let's take a listen to “A Quiet Place.”
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In his book, “Screenplay,” Syd Field says of writing sound into a script...
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...almost nothing.
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He all but dismisses it as something that will be added after the movie is finished.
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In fact, most screenwriting material has very little to say on the subject of sound.
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So when Scott Beck and Bryan Woods set out to start writing “A Quiet Place,”
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they knew they had a challenging and unusual task ahead of them.
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In a blog the duo wrote for Indiewire, they said of the process:
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“Writing a silent movie isn't easy.
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You can't use dialogue as a crutch.
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And you can't bore the reader with blocks of description…
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This process forced us to take an unorthodox approach to screenwriting,
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in which we threw formatting styles to the wind.”
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In a normal screenplay, sound is often just written plainly in the action lines,
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or sometimes it may be in all caps.
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But one glance at the original script for “A Quiet Place” immediately shows
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how far Beck and Woods took their experimental formatting,
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which includes handwritten words, pictures of props,
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and even charts and facts which may be fun for the reader
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but are pretty useless to a filmmaker.
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This screenplay breaks almost all the formatting rules,
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but I will admit that the stylized nature is particularly effective
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in its representation of sound.
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Looking at the first two pages,
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certain words are underlined to draw focus to the silence of the environment.
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These underlined words stand out and give us a clear sense
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that silence plays an important role in this family's life.
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Similarly, Beck and Woods play with caps, font size, and word placement
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to communicate silence, tension, and pacing.
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In an especially tense moment, as the monster stands between the father and his family,
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the script goes so far as to limit each page to a few words.
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With each page the font size increases, highlighting the tension and need for absolute silence.
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Ethan: “I love it when there's sound directions written into the script.
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I think that it's so important for screenwriters when they're when they're writing
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to actually be thinking about what is happening sonically in the world,
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because it's a big part of the storytelling.”
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In many ways sound is one of the most under-appreciated
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and under-utilized storytelling tools.
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Erik: “We experience movies with two senses: our sight and our hearing.
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I believe strongly that the hearing part of it is half of the experience.”
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We tend not to notice how important sound is until it's absent,
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and it's precisely because it affects us in this unconscious way that it is so powerful.
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Erik: “Walter Murch had this great saying, he said:
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'Images come in through the front door but sound comes in through the back door.'
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So you can be a lot sneakier with manipulation."
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(creature sound)
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Erik: "You can dig into that reptilian part of the human senses
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and in a way with sound become kind of in a puppet master of emotions.”
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When writing, one of the most important goals
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is to make the audience empathize with your characters,
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and the same is true of the the sound design process.
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Ethan: “Within every storytelling process there's going to be moments
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where we want to experience what the characters are experiencing in a visceral way
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and I think sound is really one of the key tools that we have as filmmakers
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to help create that experience.”
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An example of this is found in the original screenplay for “A Quiet Place.”
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There is a moment that is written in such a way
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that the reader perceives the action from a single characters perspective because the sound.
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“Exterior: woods.
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Path, afternoon.
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April gets very still.
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She turns up the volume on her hearing aid.
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Just faintly, through the high frequency static, we hear the baby crying in the distance.
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April stifles her breathing.
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The sound of something else continues breathing behind her.
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Out of focus, just ten feet away, we see it move slowly towards the sounds.”
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Writing the moment this way makes the audience experience the story events
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through the point of view of the character,
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and this technique was utilized several times in the final film.
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(heartbeat)
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Erik: “There's a number of different sonic points of view in the film from the creatures
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and the family members…”
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(monster's perspective of clock ticking)
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Erik: “One of the central ones for us, design-wise, was for the daughter
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Regan played by Millicent Simmonds,
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who, in real life she's deaf.
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And in the film her character is deaf as well.
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So for a film that is so much about sound,
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we felt it was really important to right from the beginning sequence
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put the audience into her shoes and what it's like to live with a cochlear implant.”
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(toy beeping)
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Erik: “So we get these shifts in the sound..."
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(toy beeping)
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(sound cuts out)
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"...that I think helped connect the audience to her character.”
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(silence)
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Experiencing the film from the sonic perspective of Regan
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helps the audience empathize with her character,
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but it's also the fact that these shifts are so stark that helps make them so powerful.
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Erik: “We wanted to do really nice, hard cuts into it.
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So you could really feel the shift of contrast between:
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'here's atmospheric sounds that the other characters would be hearing, and woosh—
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now we go into her head and there's this sort of low tone going under it.' ”
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This underscores the idea
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that whether you're designing the sound for a film, or the plot of a film,
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it's important to remember the need for dynamics.
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When Beck and Woods began working on “A Quiet Place,”
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it didn't take them long to realize it couldn't just be a movie devoid of sound.
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Scott Beck said of the process,
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“You had to figure out the pacing,
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because you couldn't constantly have silence permeate the entire film.
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You had to envision where there might be sound design moments."
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But why?
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Why was that such a crucial part of the development of the story?
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Ethan: “Imagine a wavelength, of little difference between the top amplitude and the
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lowest amplitude.
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Everything starts to flatten out,
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and what that does is it starts to flatten the experience out for the audience.
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You start to disengage, and you push back from the screen,
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and you push back from the experience.”
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If every sound in a movie was played at a loud volume from beginning to end,
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not only would it be really annoying,
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it would prevent any particular loud moment from being impactful.
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So in “A Quiet Place,” the sound is designed to be dynamic.
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Sequences often begin at a low volume, and increase over time.
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(yell)
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What's important to note is that this mirrors the plot design of these sequences as well.
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As tension builds, the sound builds...
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...until they both reach the climactic breaking point...
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(screaming / explosions)
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But even then, neither the plot or sound stays at 100% for long…
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(explosions trail off)
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as the volume drops low again as the tension is reset.
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This dynamic flow can play out not only over the course of an entire sequence,
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but within a few moments of a scene.
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Erik: “My favorite moment there is at the very end of the film where
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the two kids are in this pickup truck.
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Regan's hearing aids starts 'fritzing' and she switches it off.
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Complete digital silence.
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She's looking at her brother, who's looking past her,
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and his face just blossoms into this look of sheer terror…
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(crash / snarling)
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…and that counterpoint—having this incredible performance, this really intense situation,
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but just nothing supporting you, sound-wise it's just…
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silence.
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To me, that's like the most terrifying thing I've ever experienced.
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So that was really fun.”
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This is a good reminder that sometimes silence is the best way to create suspense,
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but after a long period of tension,
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it's good to give the audience some catharsis before they're ready for more.
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(muffled hoot)
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Erik: “I think the best movies are scripted with sound in mind.
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If you can build sound into the into the DNA of your script
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then you're just gonna have a better movie every time.”
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Scott Beck and Bryan Woods's unconventional approach to screenwriting
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may not supplant the decades-old formatting we're used to,
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but it is a good example of what storytellers can do
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when they appreciate the importance of sound.
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It can connect us to a character in an emotional way,
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making us immediately empathize with their situation.
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And just like any element of filmmaking,
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sound is most effective when it's utilized in dynamic ways to create moments of contrast.
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(clanging)
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And it underscores the power of dynamics—
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reminding us that the plot of a film should flow between emotional states,
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and that the loudest sound can only come
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from a quiet place.
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When I sit down to watch a movie,
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it's often hard to turn off the analytical part of my brain and just enjoy it.
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But when I listen to a story,
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the emotion bypasses my conscious self and is often a much more moving experience.
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Which is why I love listening to Audible.
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Audible has the largest selection of audiobooks on the planet,
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and since I just released a video on No Country for Old Men,
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I think its the perfect time to recommend checking out the book.
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While the film is fantastic for many reasons,
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the amazing story all came from Cormac McCarthy's book.
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And you can get the audiobook for No Country for Old Men for free
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when you start a thirty-day trial by going to audible.com/lfts
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or texting “lfts” to 500500.
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Once again that's audible.com/lfts or text “lfts” to 500500
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to start a thirty-day free trial.
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Thanks to Audible for sponsoring this video.
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Hey guys, hope you enjoyed the video.
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I want to say a big thank you to Ethan and Erik for taking time out of their very busy
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schedules to talk about the importance of sound.
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I also want to thank my friend Michael Coleman for connecting me with Ethan and Erik.
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If you want to learn more about sound for film, you should definitely check out this
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website, soundworkscollection.com.
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He has a ton of awesome blog articles, and an audio podcast, and video profiles—
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all filled with great information about sound for film.
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Thank you, as always to my patrons on Patreon and supporters here on YouTube
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for making this channel possible.
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If you enjoyed the interviews consider supporting the channel on Patreon so I can do more,
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and as extra content, I'll be sharing the full interview with Ethan and Erik
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with all my supporters and patrons.
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Thank you for watching, and I'll see you next time.