Marcus abandons his post to wander the factory and accidentally makes a ruckus. The disadvantage is the furnace is airtight and a towel must be placed where the latch would lock into place so it can still be opened from the inside. The advantage of the furnace is it can only be opened by pulling from the outside or pushing from the inside, making it essentially monster proof. His only job is to stay below ground where the monsters can’t hear and be ready to hop into a furnace for safety. Also, less than 24 hours before, Evelyn stepped on a nail and took it like a champ.Īt one point, Marcus is left to take care of the baby alone. But, at least shove your shirt in your mouth if you have to scream in a world where noise equals death. Marcus’ need to scream is probably understandable.
He then lets out a blood curdling scream without any attempt to dampen the noise. While they sprinted toward safety, Marcus made himself useful by promptly stepping into a bear trap. The Abbott family accidentally sets off a tripwire creating a loud noise attracting monsters. Here are all the times Marcus should probably have died but miraculously survived. One of the questions viewers had at the end of the first film was “How is the Abbott family going to survive without Lee?” Marcus’ sister Reagan finds creative solutions like her dad and the mother fills the role of the leader, but Marcus is still a bumbling idiot who’s only saving grace is the women around him. He was a nervous wreck at-bat and dodged balls instead of hitting them, leaving me wondering how he’d handle monsters.
#Does the baby die in a quiet place 2 movie
After the carnage, the movie picks up where it left off in the first one with the Abbott family and a newborn child in the basement after discovering how high frequency sound affects the monsters.įrom the opening baseball scene, I determined Marcus would not make it through the movie alive. Marcus plays baseball while his family watches, and then the attack happens. The movie starts with a flashback to the first day the monsters came. There were a few surprises where a dutifully quiet audience couldn’t help but wince, but the main focus for me during the movie was wondering when Marcus Abbott, the oldest child in the family, was going to die. “A Quiet Place II” stays true to the family-friendly tone, except three profane words.
There’s no sexual content, no profanity and the scenes involving death are tastefully shot. “A Quiet Place” is a rare example of a family-friendly horror/thriller movie. *This review contains spoilers, read at your own risk.*