• Home
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Lists
    • Yearly Top Tens
    • Trailers
    • Contact
    • Hire Me
    • About
Menu

World of Reel

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Home
IMG_6245.jpg
‘Army of One’: Larry Charles Uploads His 2-Hour 40-Minute Director’s Cut on YouTube — Nic Cage-Starring Bin Laden Comedy
IMG_6243.jpg
Ranking Danny Boyle’s 14 Films
IMG_6240.jpg
Russell Crowe to Star in Chad Stahelski’s ‘Highlander’ Reboot
IMG_6238.jpg
Rebel Wilson’s ‘Bride Hard’ Destroyed By Critics — Razzie-Worthy Reviews
IMG_2551.jpg
‘Clayface' Will Be Rated R, $40M Budget
Featured
Capture.PNG
Aug 19, 2019
3-Hour ‘Midsommar' Director's Cut Screened in NYC
Aug 19, 2019

This year’s 12th edition of the Scary Movies festival at Film at Lincoln Center premiered Ari Aster’s extended version of “Midsommar” this past Saturday.

Aug 19, 2019

World of Reel

  • Home
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Lists
  • More
    • Yearly Top Tens
    • Trailers
  • About
    • Contact
    • Hire Me
    • About

‘The History of Sound’ Is Beautiful, But Barely Audible — ‘Brokeback’ Lite [Cannes]

May 21, 2025 Jordan Ruimy

“The History of Sound” is a film of quiet longing—about two men bound by music, war, and unspoken love at a time when such connections could never be named aloud.

Set during World War I and the years surrounding it, the story follows Lionel (Paul Mescal) and David (Josh O’Connor), young musicians whose romance blooms in silence and restraint. They meet in a Boston conservatory, eyes locking over a folk song, and without fanfare or tension, they fall into each other’s lives—and beds. The film’s defining trait is its refusal to overstate or dramatize; its emotions, like its dialogue, are subdued, nearly whispered.

Director Oliver Hermanus constructs this world with a painter’s eye: the palette muted, the settings almost hushed. Working from a screenplay by Ben Shattuck, adapting his own short story, Hermanus leans heavily into atmosphere—twilight walks, whispered exchanges, landscapes drenched in fog. The approach is elegant, sometimes beautiful, and emotionally restrained.

This is where the film begins to falter. While the premise suggests a sweeping inner life, the movie seems hesitant to truly inhabit it. It gestures at deep feeling without always expressing it. O’Connor brings a charismatic complexity to David—he’s sly, sharp, vulnerable beneath the charm. Mescal, by contrast, plays Lionel with a stillness that borders on blankness. His performance feels muted to the point of abstraction. The romance, then, never quite combusts—it smolders but never burns.

There are clear echoes of “Brokeback Mountain,” and some scenes here feel like outright ripoffs. “The History of Sound” is too careful, too composed. When the moment comes for Lionel to make a choice—to risk a future with David—his refusal is delivered without the emotional architecture to support it. The scene is pivotal, yet it lands without weight.

The story continues to drift. The years pass. Letters are written and go unanswered. Lionel wanders through Europe and into other relationships, but the ache for David lingers. It should feel tragic, but instead it feels faint. Even the presence of Chris Cooper as an older Lionel adds little weight; it’s as if the film, like its protagonist, has spent too much time holding back.

“The History of Sound” is never less than tasteful, and it occasionally reaches for something poetic. But it’s so reserved, so unwilling to push past suggestion, that it never quite earns its emotional payoff.

← Dwayne Johnson to Star in A24’s Psychological Thriller ‘Breakthrough’‘Automatic Trucking’: Mike Judge’s Next Film to Star Jack Quaid →

FOLLOW US!


Trending

Featured
Screenshot 2025-06-19 101207.png
David Lynch’s Producer Says ‘Unrecorded Night’ Was “The Best Thing He Ever Did”
Screenshot 2025-06-18 102731.png
Nolan's ‘The Odyssey' Hits Iceland For Two-Week Shoot, 1000+ Extras — Teaser in July?
Capture.png
Bond 26 to Shoot Next Year — Still No Director Attached
Screenshot 2025-06-13 115928.png
Paul Thomas Anderson’s 'One Battle After Another' Test Screens in Midwest: Two Cuts, Same Chaos
Screenshot 2025-06-13 091046.png
Critics Poll: ‘Breaking Bad' Named Best TV Series of the 2010s

Critics Polls

Featured
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘Vertigo’ Named Best Film of the 1950s, Over 120 Participants
B16BAC21-5652-44F6-9E83-A1A5C5DF61D7.jpeg
Critics Poll: Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ Tops Our 1960s Critics Poll
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘The Godfather’ Named Best Movie of the 1970s
public.jpeg
Critics Poll: ‘Do the Right Thing' Named Best Movie of the 1980s
Critics Poll: ‘Mulholland Drive' Named Best Film of the 2000s
g4.jpg
Critics' Poll: ‘Goodfellas' Named Best Movie of the 1990s
Critics Poll: ‘Mad Max: Fury Road' Named Best Movie of the 2010s
World of Reel tagline.PNG
 

Content

Contribute

Hire me

 

Support

Advertise

Donate

 

About

Team

Contact

Privacy Policy

Site designed by Jordan Ruimy © 2023