TV Trend Watch: From Evil to Murders, There’s Only Silence in the (Streaming) Building
Creative narrative silence is having a moment.
Photo Courtesy of Hulu
For all that creative and protracted silence has long had a place in television history, there’s something about the way it’s been showing up on our screens recently—both in Evil’s “S is for Silence” (Paramount+) and now Only Murders in the Building’s “The Boy from 6B” (Hulu)—that suggests some sort of leveling-up is on the horizon.
But first, an important example from the great High School Musical: The Musical: The Series (Disney+), which aired last May. About halfway through the second episode of the second season, Olivia Rodrigo is struck silent.
Or at least, that’s what happens to her fictional alter ego, Nini, who—coming off a double-star turn as the lead of both High School Musical: The Musical (fake) and High School Musical: The Musical: The Series (real)—now finds herself at a fancy drama boarding school in a whole new state, separated from her friends, on forced vocal rest. “VOCAL REST IS ACTUALLY VERY GOOD FOR YOU,” a grimacing Nini/Olivia tells the show’s imaginary documentary crew via a series of gigantic, Love, Actually-style poster boards. “IT HELPS MAKE FOR A STRONGER VOICE.”
Funny, sure. But also, on that more meta-level HSMTMTS is so comfortable occupying, just plain true. Television, after all, is an artistic medium that relies on being both seen and heard. In that context, silence (aka, “vocal rest”) can be a powerful tool. It can also be a bit of a gimmick.
And I don’t just say this because it’s been rare, historically, for there to be more than one major addition to the Silent Episode canon every few years (although that’s also true). I say it because silence, as it’s deployed by both Evil and Only Murders in the Building (both in their seventh episodes this year), isn’t some simple, one-off stunt: It’s structural. And that, at least as far as the future of (interesting) TV goes, makes it infinitely flexible.
But gimmick or not, rendering a scene like this, or a character (The Mandalorian’s Baby Yoda), or even an entire episode (Twilight Zone’s “The Invaders,” Buffy’s “Hush,” Mr. Robot’s “405 Method Not Found”) as silent can bring important elements of a story into sharp relief. Actors have to work harder to make themselves understood. Directors, cinematographers, and editors have to work harder to be precise in their visual language. And audiences, most critically, have to commit their full attention to catching the nuances of all that hard work. (Meaning, these days at least, that we have to put down our phones.)
Anyone who’s caught up on Hulu’s Only Murders in the Building is likely to already have a sense of what I mean by this. But just to make it clear: In “The Boy from 6B,” this Silent Episode structure shows up through the episode’s point-of-view character, Theo Dimas (James Caverly), who is Deaf. In keeping with the shifting narrative framework established in the first episode, this means that the narrative—and by extension, the audience—spends the bulk of the episode inside Theo’s head. In practice, it means spending the bulk of the episode in silence.
Spoiler Warning in the next section for Only Murders in the Building’s “The Boy from 6B”
This isn’t a pure silence we’re talking about, though. Rather, it’s the muffled, rumbling kind of silence you might “hear” when you’ve sunk yourself to the bottom of a deep pool. (Or, say, if you’ve just had a massive bomb go off right next to your ear, à la Daybreak’s wildly effective series finale on Netflix.) This is the silence of Theo’s inner world, on the verge of almost being able to discern something sharper than bass thumps and pressure changes, but never quite getting there—a not-so-subtle reflection of how Theo has, under the suffocating thumb of his corpse-robber of father (Nathan Lane), learned to relate to the outer world.
This isn’t to say that Theo spends the episode shirking his narratorial responsibilities. To the contrary: When Theo needs to make the kind of narrative aside to the audience that previous POV characters have made via voiceover, he turns to the camera and signs sarcastically. “These fucking people,” his eyes and fingers say simultaneously as yet another resident of the Arconia offensively flubs what has to be like their hundredth interaction. These fucking people!! we think right back, as the episode’s ongoing silence invites our every ounce of outraged empathy. Similarly, when he needs to hand the action over to the podcast crew, he hands it over all the way: What would have been a series of muffled bangs for Theo, in one instance, becomes the click of locks and creak of hidden doors as Mabel and Oliver practice their slapstick sleuthing; in another, meanwhile, what Theo would have experienced as little more than an indiscernible buzz becomes the sexy soundtrack to Charles and Jan’s (Amy Ryan) lustily wordless Scrabble date.