
The Vast of Night
There’s something in the sky.
At the dawn of the space-race, two radio-obsessed teens discover a strange frequency over the airwaves in what becomes the most important night of their lives and in the history of their small town.
- 6.5
- 2019
- Released
- 1h 31m

Sierra McCormick
Fay Crocker
Jake Horowitz
Everett
Bruce Davis
Billy (voice)
Gail Cronauer
Mabel Blanche
Cheyenne Barton
Bertsie
Mark Banik
Gerald
Gregory Peyton
Benny Wade
Adam Dietrich
Rodkey Oliver
Mallorie Rodak
Susan Oliver
Mollie Milligan
Marjorie Seward
Ingrid Fease
Gretchen Hankins
Brandon Stewart
Sam
Kirk Griffith
Lon Stemmons
Nika Sage McKenna
Daisy Oliver
Brett Brock
Fred Seward
Pam Dougherty
Mrs. McBroom / Jane Greer / Winifred
Lynn Blackburn
Ruth Reynolds
Richard Jackson
Speares
James Mayberry
Renny
Nicolette Doke
Josephine (voice)
Grant James
Arlo
Libby Villari
Grace (voice)
Gordon Fox
Pruitt
John Gindling
Cavage
Brianna Beasley
Ethel (voice)
L.A. Young
Benson
Chamblee Ferguson
Albert Cotesworth (uncredited)
PaulaSu Grisham
Basketball Fan / Mom (uncredited)
Rebeckah Boykin
Girl on Tape (uncredited)
Released
en
- #small town
- #new mexico
- #basketball
- #ufo
- #tape recorder
- #radio show
- #phone call
- #1950s
- #telephone switchboard operator
- #audio static
Reviews

Opening with long mid-shots and seemingly unnecessary chatter, the film spends a few minutes delivering a kind of challenge along the lines of “Alright, let’s clear the floor of the kids and make room for real cinephiles—no need for unnecessary expectations!” Then, without almost a single dull moment or idle dialogue, it unfolds into one of the finest examples of contemporary independent cinema.
A throwback to the radio plays of old. The title is perfect, as it sets the exact mood for viewing. With the modern world getting brighter and more interconnected with satellites filling the sky, true darkness is disappearing. This film takes us back to a time when a few unusual happenings can shift your entire world view, when what we know to be true, just ain't so. Things like this d
The Vast of Night (2020) is a spiritual successor to Orson Welles’ War of the Worlds broadcast. This film understands the power of the spoken word (its heroes are a late night DJ and a phone operator), and puts it to great use to tell a fascinating story that relies more on the viewer’s imagination than on visual effects. This is the rare low-budget ($700,000) sci-fi flick that doesn’t strive t
Click here for a video version of this review: https://youtu.be/Sjqv6iKZTwc Growing up watching _The Twilight Zone_, _The X-Files_, and terrifying my childhood self by reading books about UFOs and aliens, its fair to say that I have a bit of a soft spot for a good story about what's in the skies above us. For this reason, the trailer for Amazon's _The Vast of Night_ caught my eye. Here's











