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IMDbPro

The Vast of Night

  • 2019
  • 13
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
48K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,234
1,396
Sierra McCormick and Jake Horowitz in The Vast of Night (2019)
In the twilight of the 1950s, on one fateful night in New Mexico, a young, winsome switchboard operator Fay (Sierra McCormick) and charismatic radio DJ Everett (Jake Horowitz) discover a strange audio frequency that could change their small town and the future forever. Dropped phone calls, AM radio signals, secret reels of tape forgotten in a library, switchboards, crossed patchlines and an anonymous phone call lead Fay and Everett on a scavenger hunt toward the unknown.
Play trailer2:07
7 Videos
82 Photos
DramaMysterySci-FiThriller

One night in New Mexico, in the late 1950s, a switchboard operator and radio DJ start hearing a strange signal over a radio frequency.One night in New Mexico, in the late 1950s, a switchboard operator and radio DJ start hearing a strange signal over a radio frequency.One night in New Mexico, in the late 1950s, a switchboard operator and radio DJ start hearing a strange signal over a radio frequency.

  • Director
    • Andrew Patterson
  • Writers
    • Andrew Patterson
    • Craig W. Sanger
  • Stars
    • Sierra McCormick
    • Jake Horowitz
    • Gail Cronauer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    48K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,234
    1,396
    • Director
      • Andrew Patterson
    • Writers
      • Andrew Patterson
      • Craig W. Sanger
    • Stars
      • Sierra McCormick
      • Jake Horowitz
      • Gail Cronauer
    • 842User reviews
    • 217Critic reviews
    • 84Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 12 wins & 43 nominations total

    Videos7

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:07
    Official Trailer
    The Vast of Night
    Trailer 2:07
    The Vast of Night
    The Vast of Night
    Trailer 2:07
    The Vast of Night
    All About Sierra McCormick
    Clip 1:30
    All About Sierra McCormick
    What to Watch: Halloween for All Tastes on Prime Video
    Clip 2:32
    What to Watch: Halloween for All Tastes on Prime Video
    'The Vast of Night' Stars Sierra McCormick and Jake Horowitz Believe in Aliens
    Clip 3:59
    'The Vast of Night' Stars Sierra McCormick and Jake Horowitz Believe in Aliens
    "A Sound Came Through"
    Clip 0:58
    "A Sound Came Through"

    Photos81

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Sierra McCormick
    Sierra McCormick
    • Fay Crocker
    Jake Horowitz
    Jake Horowitz
    • Everett Sloan
    Gail Cronauer
    Gail Cronauer
    • Mabel Blanche
    Bruce Davis
    Bruce Davis
    • Billy
    • (voice)
    Cheyenne Barton
    • Bertsie
    Mark Banik
    Mark Banik
    • Gerald
    Gregory Peyton
    • Benny Wade
    Adam Dietrich
    Adam Dietrich
    • Rodkey Oliver
    Mallorie Rodak
    Mallorie Rodak
    • Susan Oliver
    Mollie Milligan
    Mollie Milligan
    • Marjorie Seward
    Ingrid Fease
    Ingrid Fease
    • Gretchen Hankins
    Brandon Stewart
    Brandon Stewart
    • Sam
    Kirk Griffith
    Kirk Griffith
    • Lon Stemmons
    Nika Sage McKenna
    • Daisy Oliver
    • (as Nika McKenna)
    Brett Brock
    Brett Brock
    • Fred Seward
    Pam Dougherty
    Pam Dougherty
    • Mrs. McBroom…
    Lynn Blackburn
    Lynn Blackburn
    • Ruth Reynolds
    Richard Jackson
    Richard Jackson
    • Speares
    • Director
      • Andrew Patterson
    • Writers
      • Andrew Patterson
      • Craig W. Sanger
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews842

    6.747.9K
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    Featured reviews

    TheRedbanker

    Too much talking!😣😫

    I couldn't get past the nonstop chatter between the two lead characters. If that's the way people endlessly ran their mouths in the 50s, I'm grateful not to have lived then.

    The endless blabbering in the first 18 minutes ruined it for me, and I forgot why I started watching and turned it off. Two seconds never went by without aimless dialogue.

    If you like mindless chatter, this pic is for you.
    TxMike

    Late 1950s mystery with aliens.

    My wife and I watched this on Amazon streaming via Roku. It is set in New Mexico but filmed digitally in Texas and Oklahoma.

    It looks like the late 1950s, when I was a young teenager, and they mention Sputnik which was a 1957 event. The movie opens with an extended scene at night of local residents going to the school gym for a basketball game, just to set the mood of the time, and it all feels authentic.

    But things get going when the teenage girl goes to her job as phone switchboard operator and her good friend, a slightly older guy, goes to his music and talk show at the tiny local radio station. Some electricity goes out, some phone calls get disconnected, some strange sounds are heard, coming from the skys, and recorded. All leading up to a strong belief that alien beings are in the sky.

    The movie is interesting and very well made, considering it had a tight budget and a short shooting schedule. The dialog is mostly interesting and the main actors are very good in their roles. It all takes place at night on one day which adds to the mystique.
    9mikeyboy26

    This is a lesson in beautiful Film making

    This, for me, was a near perfect film. Although Its subject matter was of little interest to me, everything else from the score , the lighting the editing AND the magnificent performances were beautiful. The best i've seen for a while. It was a film with so much mood i was mesmerized after the initial 5 (annoying) minutes and was transfixed till the very end. Go see this little gem.
    7kosmasp

    When the night falls ...

    One of the most important things in thrillers but even more so in horror movies, is that things happen at night. At least when it's dark (outside), because that is more likely to reel viewers in and make them easier to be susceptible to be afraid and scared.

    Now this is more of Science Fiction touch, still works with many of the things I mentioned. Having said that, mostly this works in your head. There is not so much visually (scary), but what you hear and what you think and imagine happening. And maybe you're just imagening? Or our main characters are ... well played and acted, this is low budget and the pacing is not something everyone is willing to endure. Whoever is and likes that, will be thoroughly entertained though.
    8TwistedContent

    If You Love Everything That's Ominous and Twilight-Zone-esque

    Just yesterday's evening I turned yet another page on my journey through Rod Serling's "The Twilight Zone", and even though I was anticipating "The Vast of Night", I did not predict it to be so pleasantly and thickly atmospheric, beautiful and just plain awesome, as well as inspired by everything that's twilight-zone-esque. So, fans of such vibes, assemble, because we got an unlikely modern gem on our hands.

    Things that'll follow are impressive, and become even more impressive in the light of the fact that "The Vast of Night" is the very first voyage into cinema by its director Andrew Patterson and both writers, James Montague and Craig W. Sanger - three names to look forward to in the future. The cast is quite unknown as well, and the budget is micro, allegedly pulled together by the director. On the foreground of these factors, this already well-oiled lo-fi modern sci-fi classic-in-making glows even more brightly.

    In the first couple minutes the movie makes it known its served as if it was an episode of a fictional 50's sci-fi fantasy TV show called "Paradox Theather", an obvious and acknowledged "The Twilight Zone" knock-off. The first act we spend following the lively and lovely main characters through their small home town of Cayuga (another nod to Rod Serling) - they are local radio DJ Everett (Jake Horowitz) and young switchboard operator Fay (Sierra McCormick). Quickly enough we see and feel the many qualities of "The Vast of Night" that'll stay with us till the end. One of them is the setting of 50's, which is fulfilled with great attention to detail, both visually and mentally, it's the time where small towns seemed more intimate and unified, and when future seemed like an endless and uncertain stream of far-reaching possibilities. Another point of great charm is the cinematography, perhaps one of my favorite examples of this art in a long time. There are many long takes, some mostly static, some moving one-takes, one of which might prompt a silent "whoa". The longest take was, I believe, about 9 and a half minutes long. Cinematographer M. I. Littin-Mentz ("Hands of Stone", "Resistance") has made the camera a presence of sorts, a force of intimacy and uneasiness. In regards of editing, there are some choices that might prompt some why's, but there's nothing that'd really take away or take out much of anything. The sum of the elements come out on the far positive side, providing an atmosphere that immerses, you'll be a citizen of Cayuga before You know it.

    The main story kicks into gear at the start of the second act, as both our heroes encounter an eerie radio signal floating on the local waves, and start trying to unspool the slow descending mystery. "The Vast of Night" pays homage to multiple sci-fi and horror classics, yet it constantly feels original and inventive on its own, somehow mixing together sticky and sweet feeling of nostalgia with a breath of fresh creativity and originality, letting the latter lead the show at all times. Same can be said about the haunting original score, composed by Erick Alexander and Jared Bulmer, to whom this is also the very first endeavor in movies. The movie, for the most part, is essentially a talking piece, and the overall idea is as ominous and ambiguous as you'd probably guess, so action sci-fi fans and lovers of structured and concluded stories might find themselves frustrated.

    Props also have to be given to the previously mentioned Jake Horowitz and Sierra McCormick. "The Vast of Night" is Jake's very first full feature acting debut, and I'd never guessed that while watching the movie, for both he and Sierra do a terrific job in their roles and carry on with the night's vibes in admirable synchronicity. I'm not the guy to know, but I felt like even the accents, the language and way of talking of the 50's was generally nailed.

    It's one of those movies where it's better to go in blind, yet I believe it's healthy to estimate what not to expect - and so we've got that out of the way. As the credits were rolling, I found myself happily thinking that the sense of wonder still exists, there are secrets to uncover, and that creativity, as well as some forgotten and amazing vibes, is alive and well. My rating: 8/10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The radio station call letters "WOTW" are an homage to "War of the Worlds", a novel by H.G. Wells and, more aptly, its radio play adaptation by Orson Welles.
    • Goofs
      Whilst it's strictly true that geographically the radio station would begin with a 'K' - as it's a fictional station the WOTW station is undoubtedly a homage to the best radio/aliens show ever produced.....War Of The Worlds.
    • Quotes

      Mabel Blanche: I think at the lowest level, they send people on errands, and play with people's minds. They sway people to do things, and think certain ways - so that we stay in conflict, focused on ourself - so that we're always .. cleaning house, or losing weight, or dressing up for other people. I think they get inside our heads and make us do destructive things, like drink and over eat. I've seen good people go bad, and smart people go mad.

      Mabel Blanche: I think at the highest level they do things that cause nations to go to war. Things that make no sense. And I think no one knows they're being affected. We all work out other reasons to justify our actions. But free will is impossible with them up there. I've had an entire life to think about this. Years alone. And that's what I think.

    • Connections
      Featured in Chris Stuckmann Movie Reviews: The Vast of Night (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      A School Burnt Down
      Traditional Composition

      Performed by Andy Moor and Yannis Kyriakides

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Vast of Night?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 3, 2020 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Đêm Định Mệnh
    • Filming locations
      • Whitney, Texas, USA
    • Production company
      • GED Cinema
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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