
Welcome to The Queue — your daily distraction of curated video content sourced from across the web. Today, we’re watching a video essay that looks at the sound design of Jordan Peele’s 2022 sci-fi movie Nope.
Sound design in horror films is as, if not more important, than the visuals. How many times have you shielded your eyes only to realize that visual was one thing, but the popping cartilage and splitting skin is much, much worse?
Jordan Peele’s latest feature, Nope, is an excellent example of the power of sonic horror. More specifically, the difficult-to-describe but definitively felt difference between horror and terror. And as Matthew Morgan writes in this extremely good read from earlier this year, ambiguity, imagination, and uncertainty are the fuel that feeds the fire of fear.
Nope‘s sound design team actively tries to make our imaginations run wild. We often hear things long before their context is made plain to us. We’re invited to hear genuinely frightening screams amidst shrieks of delight. We hear uncertain rumbling in the wind.
As a result, we’re left, much like Nope‘s protagonists, in a position where we’re sonically scanning our environment for threats. Unable to get a proper look at the source, we’re left to lean in, listen, and let our imagination fill in the blanks.
Be warned: visual and story spoilers are in the video essay below.
Watch “How Nope Tricks Your Ears”
Who made this?
This video essay on the sound design in Jodan Peele’s Nope is by Virginia-based filmmaker and video editor Thomas Flight. He runs a YouTube channel under the same name. You can follow Thomas Flight and check out his back catalog of video essays on YouTube here. You can follow him on Twitter here.
More videos like this
- Here’s Thomas Flight’s other video essay on Nope, which explores the film’s metaphorical takedown of the Hollywood machine.
- We’ve covered loads of video essays in this column that take a deeper look (or rather, listen) at cinematic sound design, from the filmography of David Fincher to the notion of “Expressionistic” sound design to how a film like Sound of Metal represents the subjective experience of hearing loss.
- Want to see more of Thomas Flight’s work? Can’t say we blame you. Here’s a look at the social media-specific format and structure of Bo Burnham’s comedy special Inside.
- And here’s Flight on the intricate visual details of Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch, which should have scored a visual effects Oscar nomination, but that’s neither here nor there.
- Finally, here’s Flight again, with a breakdown of how Daniels’ latest film, Everything Everywhere All At Once, tackles the feeling of being Very Online all the time.
Related Topics: Jordan Peele, Nope, sound design, The Queue
