An incredibly gifted pianist makes a Faustian bargain to overtake her twin sister at a prestigious institution for classical musicians.An incredibly gifted pianist makes a Faustian bargain to overtake her twin sister at a prestigious institution for classical musicians.An incredibly gifted pianist makes a Faustian bargain to overtake her twin sister at a prestigious institution for classical musicians.
- Awards
- 2 nominations
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- Writer
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe word nocturne is defined as a short composition of a romantic or dreamy character suggestive of night, typically for piano.
- Quotes
Dr. Cask: Her technique is no better than yours.
Juliet: That's not...
Dr. Cask: Take the compliment. Her technique is no better. Her efficiency is worse. So, what makes Vivian the star and you the... whatever you are? She plays like the devil is at the door.
Juliet: What about Moira?
Dr. Cask: Moira?
Juliet: She beat Vi the first time around. Is that how she played?
Dr. Cask: She played like the devil was in the room.
- ConnectionsReferences An American in Paris (1951)
Having just viewed The Wolf of Snow Hollow, which combines the satiric with the traditional horror genre, seeing writer-director Zu Quirke's Nocturne made me realize that a horror film with no digitized scares or much blood to boot can be a most terrorizing rendition of that durable formula. The scare is in the mind, you see.
Juliet (Sydney Sweeney) and her more talented sister, Vi (Madison Iseman), compete at their high-class music school for the chance to play in the school's final concert. They both choose Saint-Saëns' Piano Concerto No 2 (remember the concerto competition with the demanding Rachmaninov 3rd in Shine?). Although Vi wins the right to play it at the concert in the end of the year, Juliet makes an implied Faustian pact with the devil, whom she found in an old playbook, to reverse her sister's fortunes and enhance her own.
What is so impactful is the lack of blood and screams; in fact, there are few, if any, jump scares. The terror is in Juliet's head, her obsession to win, her jealousy as the guiding principle. It's all very sotto voce, so to speak, a quiet doom tamped down by beautiful music and feelings kept just low enough to allow effective dialogue and feel the presence of a malevolent force, which may be the devil but surely is the "green-eyed monster which doth mock the meat it feeds on." In some sense, I am reminded of the rivalry in Black Swan
About the Saint Sens, pianist Lise de la Salle wrote: "The highly lyrical first movement is an expression of late Romanticism. The second movement is as effervescent as a glass of champagne. And the final movement, a real whirlwind, a fantastic ride (wonderfully captured in this quasi-perpetual movement in triplets), is quite dizzying." These elements could be found in Nocturne.
"Welcome to the Blumhouse" is a "program of eight terrifying genre movies coming to Prime Video," and if the other seven are as good as this one, Halloween viewing will have matured to an intelligence and psychology worthy of a genre rarely this high class or intellectually satisfying.
- JohnDeSando
- Oct 19, 2020
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Welcome to the Blumhouse: Nocturne
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1