She doesn't just spoon-feed you the next scene coming up; she peels back layers of meaning. Reijn is obsessed with that *space* between people – the unspoken thoughts and feelings crackling underneath polite conversation or dramatic silence. Think about it: why do characters often say so little? Or maybe more accurately, what are they leaving unsaid?
"I learned," she shared recently while promoting her film, "that a lot of tension isn't built through dialogue at all." It’s not about *what* they’re saying aloud, but rather the weight in their silence. The absence of words can be just as heavy.
And here's where things get particularly interesting: Reijn suggests weaponizing this technique. What does that even mean? Maybe it means using silence strategically to make your audience feel uncomfortable or intrigued by what *isn't* being communicated beneath the surface. It’s a subtle way to pull viewers closer, forcing them to ask themselves those nagging questions about hidden motives.
Honestly, thinking like Reijn changes how you watch movies entirely – especially dramas where conflict is pivotal. You start noticing pauses and unspoken looks instead of just hearing lines. Does silence *speak* louder than words? She thinks so anyway.
Leaving it all out there in the open, wondering if your last awkward dinner conversation was secretly a slow burn towards romance makes you question everything after watching her film or any movie employing this tactic. It’s got to be done right; otherwise, it just feels cheap and manipulative.
Categories:
Reijn, Silence, Thinks, Especially, Tension, Watching, Unspoken,
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