International Horror: Quiet Comes the Dawn (2019) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Planeta Inform
The feature film directorial debut of Pavel Sidorov, Quiet Comes the Dawn, is a Russian horror film that has clearly studied the leagues of Canadian science-fiction horror ala David Cronenberg with enough visually ravishing imagery to make the likes of Italian giallo maestro Dario Argento blush.  

Though set within a Russian apartment complex, a familiar setting for contemporary Russian pictures, this curious and confounding yet picturesque psychological/survival horror journey feels more overtly influenced by Western and Eastern-European cinema than anything.  Unlike the recently released Why Don’t You Just Die! which felt like an indigenous but relatable story with Western appeal, Quiet Comes the Dawn is much closer to being like a Nicolas Winding Refn film where the imagery takes precedence over the story being told, if there is one.

 
Young Svetlana (Aleksandra Drozdova) is still grieving over the recent and still unsolved death of her older brother Anton (Kuzma Kotrelev) and the disappearance of her mother Maria (Russian veteran actress Oksana Akinshina).  Plagued with recurring nightmares of herself being buried alive or her brother returning to life, she enlists in a sleep study program (Come True?) in an effort to get a handle on her insomnia.  Induced to sleep medically with several other patients, they each share a collective lucid dream.  But upon reawakening, however, they find themselves in a labyrinthine waking nightmare when all of the doctors seem to have abandoned the hospital, 28 Days Later style. 

 
From here the film becomes more interested in phantasmagorical psychedelic surreal survival horror as we find ourselves led along until neither we nor the film’s protagonist know where we are anymore.  On the one hand this can be frustrating for those looking for an answer, but in recent years with such mindbenders as Mandy, Possessor, Come True and the COVID inspired In the Earth, that subgenre of science fiction horror has become more common than not.   There’s also, with Svetlana as the film’s resourceful heroine, more than a bit of a Heather Langenkamp vibe to Aleksandra Drozdova’s performance and the film’s proceedings.  If the film’s director proclaimed this to be a Russian remake of A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, that would not be an incorrect description.

 
Sonically the film is equally rich thanks to a pulsating score by British musician Garry Judd, best known for The Forest, The Bride and an upcoming Disney documentary.  Ordinarily a composer for British television, his involvement in the project only further signifies Quiet Comes the Dawn as, like Hardcore Henry before it, a Russian production clearly geared towards Western moviegoers and particularly horror fans.  Of course none of this would be spoken of were it not for the film’s cinematography by Ivan Burlakov.  Incidentally the same cinematographer as the aforementioned The Bride and Salyut-7, Burlakov’s visuals are so lush and so neon-fluorescent kaleidoscopic in presentation you could just marvel at some of the vistas being conjured up here.  Quite possibly the most visual Russian horror film since Mister Designer and just as intriguing, Quiet Comes the Dawn is simply put an audiovisual treat.

 
The screenplay by Yevgeny Kolyadintsev is conventional survival horror fluff augmented by the film’s arresting look and sound and its refusal to provide easy answers will no doubt frustrate some moviegoers.  From my perspective the picture starts out a lot stronger than how it ends, but nevertheless this was such a fun film to look at and hear I didn’t find myself caring that it didn’t all make sense.  Oksana Akinshina is always a welcome presence onscreen, having recently starred alongside Danila Kozlovsky in Chernobyl 1986, and is no stranger to horror.  Moreover, Quiet Comes the Dawn shows such promise in a new filmmaker and pays such homage to the Italian-American subgenres that influenced it you can’t help but feel a little tickled pink watching it. 

--Andrew Kotwicki