Stream It Or Skip It

Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Vast of Night’ on Amazon Prime, an Earnestly Clever Neo-Throwback UFO Thriller

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The Vast of Night

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A nifty little low-budget retro-UFO feature, The Vast of Night lands on Amazon Prime after first touching down at Slamdance and Toronto in 2019, leaving behind some impressive crop circles (so to speak). It’s the directorial debut of Andrew Patterson, who’s been labeled a newcomer to keep your eyeballs on; he seems as inspired by Richard Linklater as he is by J.J. Abrams, and recently got a stamp of approval from Steven Soderbergh. So does the movie match the hype, or should we tamp down our expectations a bit before pressing play?

THE VAST OF NIGHT: STREAM IT OR SKIP IT?

The Gist: Cayuga, New Mexico is a small town — so small, when it’s 1950-something and there’s a high school basketball game, it’s deserted to the point that a flying saucer or two could stop by to top off the tank and grab a Mountain Dew and hardly anybody would notice. But Everett (Jake Horowitz) is a radio man and Fay (Sierra McCormick) is a switchboard operator, and their jobs never sleep, so they’re gonna miss the game. They don’t seem bummed about that at all. These platonic teenage pals would rather break in Fay’s nifty new tape recorder, and banter about gee-whiz-bang gizmos of the future, like electric roads that pilot cars while drivers sleep, or tubes that whoosh people quickly across long distances, or the least plausible of them all, miniature wireless TV-phones that people will carry with them everywhere. Ridiculous!

But the movie fades in on an old tube TV set framing what we’re about to see as a grainy episode of Paradox Theater — complete with an eerie Twilight Zoned-out musical theme — so we know this isn’t going to be your typical night of spinning tunes and patching in callers’ dedications. Fay jabs a quarter-inch plug into a socket with a resounding tactile snap and hears a strange noise, a thrumming oscillation that sounds oddly like a Tralfamadorian P-920 warp drive or something thereabouts. So she plays it for Everett, who soon shares it on the radio waves, promising “a piece of Elvis’ carpet” for any caller who might identify it.

And the phone jingles and jangles as era-specific phones do. One call is from an ex-soldier who was selected for a crazy military coverup project because he’s black and nobody would listen to his wild story; he’s very sick now. Another is from an old woman with a more haunting tale that nobody likely believed because a female voice was telling it. And there’s no doubt Fay and Everett’s little saga is about to get much weirder.