The Power of the Unheard
Alfred Hitchcock, the undisputed master of suspense, once said, “There is no terror in the bang, only in the anticipation of it.” That anticipation is often built not with a swelling orchestra, but with a sudden, unnerving quiet. Modern filmmaking is a loud business, filled with explosive sound mixes and wall-to-wall scores designed to dictate every emotional beat. But a select group of auteurs, often championed on the French Riviera, have built their careers on weaponizing silence. This isn't merely the absence of noise. It’s a deliberate, suffocating quiet that forces the audience to lean in, their ears straining for the creak of a floorboard or the click of a lock. The silence becomes a canvas onto which we project our own fears. It transforms
the viewer from a passive observer into an active participant in their own anxiety, and it’s a high-wire act of filmmaking that demands immense control and confidence.
The Cannes Pedigree
While Hollywood often rewards the “bang,” the Cannes Film Festival has a long history of awarding the “anticipation.” Look no further than Jonathan Glazer’s *The Zone of Interest*, which took home the Grand Prix in 2023. The film is a masterclass in auditory horror. By focusing on the idyllic domestic life of the Auschwitz commandant’s family, Glazer refuses to show the atrocities happening just over the garden wall. Instead, he lets us hear them: the faint, constant hum of the crematoria, the distant shouts, the unsettling industrial noise of mass murder. The horror is entirely sonic and peripheral, creating a chasm of dread that is far more disturbing than any explicit imagery could be. This is a direct descendant of the kind of austere, punishing artistry Cannes has long celebrated, seen in the work of Palme d'Or winner Michael Haneke (*The White Ribbon*, *Amour*), whose films are famous for their chilling silences and sudden, unexplained acts of violence that leave the audience reeling in the quiet aftermath.
Forcing the Audience to Listen
Why is this technique so effective and critically lauded? Because it respects the audience’s intelligence. A jump scare gives you a cheap, fleeting jolt. A carefully constructed silent sequence, however, trusts the viewer to connect the dots and build the tension themselves. Think of the Coen Brothers’ *No Country for Old Men*, a film that competed at Cannes and feels spiritually aligned with this ethos. Anton Chigurh’s methodical, nearly silent pursuit is terrifying precisely because of its lack of fanfare. The scenes are stripped of a non-diegetic score, leaving only the sound of footsteps on gravel, the crinkle of a candy wrapper, or the chilling *pffft* of his captive bolt pistol. The silence creates a vacuum, and in that vacuum, the audience’s own heart rate becomes part of the soundtrack. This is active filmmaking, and it creates a much deeper and more lasting impression than a simple loud noise.
Beyond the Thriller
This mastery of silence isn’t confined to thrillers or horror films. The tension it creates can be emotional and psychological, not just physical. In Céline Sciamma's *Portrait of a Lady on Fire*, which won Best Screenplay at Cannes, the long, quiet stretches are not about a killer lurking in the shadows, but about the unspoken longing and forbidden desire between two women. The silence is filled with glances, hesitations, and the sound of breathing. The crackling of a fire or the brush of a charcoal pencil on canvas become monumental events. Here, silence isn't about fear, but about intimacy and repression. It demonstrates the versatility of the technique. Whether building dread or desire, withholding sound is a way of focusing the viewer’s attention on what truly matters: the human element at the center of the frame. It’s a testament to the power of pure cinema.











