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Most people forget that before he was made STUPID famous with the Insidious and Conjouring series, James Wan cut his teeth on the horror genre by making the first Saw movie (back before it became an over the top and worn out franchise), and just after Saw, he and co-creator Leigh Whannell made a little known throwback horror flick called Dead Silence. At first glance from the cover one might assume that Dead Silence was a 1980s or 1990s killer doll flick, and that was kind of the point. Whannell and Wan both wanted to make a creepy atmospheric doll flick like the movies of old, and the attempt was actually rather good even though the movie was a box office “meh” for the most part. It’s creepy all right, and got a VERY atmospheric tone, but somehow didn’t manage to capture audience hearts when it came out in 2007, even though the 2004 Saw was a smash “gorefest” hit.
Years later, Dead Silence has gained an almost cult like following (especially with the mildly superior unrated cut), but still is not exactly widely known to the public. It instead is relegated to cult horror collectors and genre fans who have a love for Wan’s earlier work. The film starts out creepily enough, with a young couple named Jamie (Ryan Kwanten, a year before he became famous as Jason Stackhouse in True Blood) Lisa (Laura Regan) who are young and in love. However, a late night delivery changes their lives forever when a ventriloquist dummy shows up on their doorstep, only for Lisa to be brutally murdered with her tongue ripped out.
Dead Silence is a genuinely creepy movie that has a lot of things going for it. Wan and Whannell (say that 5 times fast) do a great job of creating a throwback ghost story involving dolls, and does so in a way that doesn’t feel like it’s a copy cat, or an homage to the past. Instead it feels fresh and new, yet strangely like it’s from a completely different era. The visual aesthetics are heavily stylized, and the twist at the end is disturbingly creative. Sadly Scream Factory only put the Theatrical cut on 4K UHD, but the unrated cut (and theatrical cut) is included on the Blu-ray to enjoy. Personally I have to give the nod to the Unrated cut as the superior version of the film, but not by a whole lot. There’s not much different between the cuts outside of a CGI added body part that makes for an incredibly awesome (and disturbing) scene at the ramshackle theater. It’s just a personal “ahhhh, bummer” fact that the Unrated cut isn’t on the 4K disc as well.
Rating:
Rated R for Horror Violence and Language
4K Video: Video:
Audio:
Extras:
• NEW Dead Assignment – an interview with writer Leigh Whannell
• NEW No Children, Only Dolls – an interview with ventriloquist dummy creator Tim Selberg
• Unrated Cut of the Film
• Alternate Opening
• Alternate Ending
• Deleted Scenes
• The Making of Dead Silence featurette
• Mary Shaw's Secrets featurette
• Evolution of a Visual Effect featurette
• Theatrical Trailer
Final Score:
Dead Silence is heavily underrated by the general horror audience, and I forgot just how much fun the 89 minute flick was until I reviewed it this week. Wan and Whannell showcase some amazing atmosphere, and a few winks and nods to previous generations of films (also, as an Easter egg, one of the dolls in the run down theater is a Jigsaw doll for you Saw fans). The 4k UHD looks and sounds amazing, and the new extras are well worth it, making this a big upgrade over the 2015 Universal Blu-ray. Great Watch
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Ryan Kwanten, Amber Valletta, Donnie Wahlberg, Bob gunton, Michael Fairman, Judith Roberts
Directed by: James Wan
Written by: Leigh Whannell, James Wan
Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1 HEVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, English DD 2.0
Subtitles: English SDH
Studio: Scream Factory
Rated: R (Unrated)
Runtime: 89 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: March 28th, 2023
Recommendation: Check it Out