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  • Warning: Spoilers
    I was diagnosed with a progressive hearing loss when I was about four years old and received my cochlear implants when I was eight and ten.

    While I think that this movie is fantastic when it comes to raising awareness for the Deaf community as well as highlighting its pros and cons, it fails to reach when it comes to medical information. I LOVED the fact that they show how Ruben is ostracized after he receives the surgery, as well as explaining the reasoning from the Deaf perspective. However, the surgical and actual cochlear implant information is very, very misleading.

    Number one, you may see reviews saying that healthcare does cover cochlear implants, it is more rare than you'd think because it isn't seen as a medically necessary procedure because deaf people can exist within society (in very limited and isolated ways, and their opportunities for success compared to hearing people is SIGNIFICANTLY lower, check the facts if you get mad at this).

    Number two, the surgery that they give him is absolutely ridiculous. You can't just GET cochlear implants and sign up for a surgery online, it is an extensive process that requires many pre-appointments, follow-ups, bloodwork, eligibility checks, etc. Cochlear implants are for very specific cases and are not a cure-all, as they show in the movie (to some extent, although they do talk more in depth about it).

    Lastly, and most disappointingly, the scene where the audiologist just tells Ruben he has to "learn and accept" that hearing isn't the same and that he just has to "get used to it" is complete BS. As someone who had hearing aids and natural hearing for a good portion of their childhood, I can confirm that after about a year they sound exactly the same, assuming you have a good audiologist and are doing the proper listening therapy exercises and such. They vastly oversimplified the process for mapping and programming, as he was there and was told he was set after two tweaks. I am at my audiologist for about four to six hours every time I go.

    Overall, great, great movie, but the implant misinformation, especially the last thing I mentioned, really brought it down for me. Definitely a make or break moment and for me the latter. Just be aware of that when you're watching.
  • I was incredibly fortunate to have seen Sound of Metal at the Toronto International Film Festival including a Q&A after with the director and cast. Whereas a lot of films may take the storyline into melodramatic territory, Sound of Metal explores not only the reality of those who are deaf which is so poorly represented in film and television but also the destructive nature and high cost of denial and self-deception in the face of hard truths.

    By focusing on someone whose entire existence revolves around a world of sound losing that which defines his life, it gives the viewer pause to consider what life can be like when we learn to accept and let go. There is so much more to life than the small corners of existence we live in and this film paints that reality with both tremendous empathy and a bluntness that lesser writers and directors would avoid.

    In addition, one really has to commend the direction and design of this film's audio. It is clear that a great deal of thought went into how to use sound in this film. From the in-your-face pounding of metal music at the start through the muffled reality as the protagonist loses his hearing to the sense of peace in the moments of silence, it is clear that a great deal of painstaking detail was crafted in conveying this film's reality.

    Sound of Metal is one of those films which will keep you thinking for days after about so many aspects of life such as addiction and how some relationships may simply serve a purpose in the short term for our life but ultimately must be let go. How it illuminates aspects of the deaf community that few get a chance to see is important. But there is so much more to this film that to pigeonhole it as merely being about deaf people does a grand disservice to the many fantastic qualities in every aspect of its creation. I highly recommend taking the time to watch this film.
  • evanston_dad15 December 2021
    Warning: Spoilers
    "Sound of Metal" really surprised me.

    I thought it was going to be a movie about a rock musician's struggle with suddenly losing his hearing. And that is the specific situation that sets the movie's plot in motion. But this movie is less about learning to live with deafness and more about learning to live with life in general, making peace with things as they change instead of trying to "fix" them so you can get back to where you were. That makes "Sound of Metal" one of the most relevant pandemic movies I've yet seen.

    Riz Ahmed is terrific in the main role, and he's wonderfully supported by Paul Raci, as leader of a deaf commune and support group, and by Olivia Wilde, as his girlfriend. One of the film's most devastating scenes is one toward the end where the couple decide to end their relationship, not because they've necessarily fallen out of love, but because the relationship itself is tying them both to a past they need to move on from.

    "Sound of Metal" brought home to me how much of our lives is spent absorbing noise. And that's noise of every kind -- emotional and mental as well as aural. The constant grind of news and social media and stupid politicians and advertising and capitalism clamors for our attention and keeps us distracted from things that really matter. How nice it would be if we, like Ahmed's character in the film's final scene, could just turn it off and sit in silence.

    "Sound of Metal" won the 2020 Oscars for Film Editing and Sound (richly deserved; the sound design for huge parts of the movie puts the audience in the position of hearing the world as experienced by a person with hearing loss). It was also nominated for Best Picture, Best Actor (Ahmed), Best Supporting Actor (Raci), and Best Original Screenplay.

    Grade: A.
  • cansarica-3487012 December 2020
    Masterpiece! I was expecting a movie like Whiplash but this one is far better. Whiplash is a story of "If you work hard, you succeed." This one is "If you work hard, you succeed, then one day you can lose everything in a second, and if you work harder, you can realize that "everything" is actually nothing." A tribute to stillness...
  • Riz Ahmed is one of those actors, you simply cannot take your eyes off. It's not solely because of his good looks. He's always intense and, most importantly, he always makes you care about the characters he's portraying. In this case, he portrays a rock drummer who is losing his hearing.

    As with most of his roles, he more than did his homework. Ahmed moved to Brooklyn for a few months and learned to play drums, he also spent a lot time with people from the deaf community. He showed the same dedication for his Naz Khan role in 'The Night Of', he immersed himself in the character's background. Expect no less from this actor.

    Having two partially deaf relatives, I could relate to this film. Especially one relative who refused to learn sign language, they would rather read lips. Thinking of my relatives initially denying their hearing loss, this film really hit home.

    Why are people bringing up Riz being Pakistani? With every role, will he continue to be defined by his background? His character was named Ruben, it's assumed his character was Hispanic. Riz can play other nationalities and ethnic groups beyond his own South Asian background. He can certainly pass for Hispanic, especially in this film. When considering Riz for a role, directors and producers should think outside the box.

    The ending was extremely effective, but not a surprise at all.

    Another excellent performance from Riz Ahmed. A few more films like this and he will finally have earned his Oscar.
  • While I think Riz Ahmed gave award-worthy performance in this film, the implant misinformation lowered my rating. Getting implants is not a quick process and a good audiologist would never tell a patient you're just going to have to get used to it. It takes multiple visits before and after surgery. That being said, I really enjoyed the scenes with the deaf community and him working with the children. I would give the acting 10/10. It has a great cast.

    I also want to point out that there's absolutely nothing wrong with a person with hearing loss getting implants if they choose to and they shouldn't be shamed for it. But, it's also okay if you don't want implants, nobody should make you feel bad about either choice.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    First off, Rizwan Ahmed is one of the best actors working right now and his performance in this film is gut wrenching, believable, and absolutely stunning to watch as you can do nothing but become engrossed in his acting and ability to make you feel exactly what his character is feeling. It's hard to believe that there was ever anyone else in mind for his role!

    The title is an incredibly clever and subtle nod, not just to the fact that he and his onscreen girlfriend are in a metal band but ultimately, the hearing that IS restored through the cochlear implants Ruben is so dead set on getting doesn't sound what he had hoped for and it all has a very metallic, tinny sound to it. It may have helped to restore most of his hearing but it sounds like metal.

    And that was the core conflict of the film; Ruben, after learning that his condition will only worsen and is told about the cochlear implants at his very first appointment to assess his hearing loss and despite the fact that the doctor is advising him to slow down and consider his options, immediately sets about trying to afford the surgery, thinking that it will restore his life to "normal" and he can just get back to living his nomadic life on the road with his wealthy-through-her-father girlfriend, Lou (played by the always enjoyable Olivia Cooke). Lou, however, can see the writing on the wall and loving Ruben, wants desperately for him to get better and accept his condition. She is the one who makes the calls and moves to get Ruben into a rehab for the deaf.

    Ruben, of course, is hesitant to participate in this because it would mean separating from Lou during his stay and actually having to learn how to live with his deafness instead of pretending like it can all be wiped away magically with the cochlear surgery. Lou winds up taking matters into her own hands and arranges to go back home to France, where her wealthy father lives, and very convincingly convinces Ruben to stay and go to the rehab for the deaf despite her love for him and her own wish for them not to be separated. She loves him, just as much as he loves her, but she knows that he needs this and is worried not only that he isn't accepting the reality of his hearing loss but that he may relapse from his heroin addiction, after having been clean for 4 years and the entire time during their relationship, when she witnesses him starting to smoke cigarettes again.

    There is tension between Ruben and the main guy who runs the rehab. And this is due to a very real split within the deaf community about the feelings surrounding cochlear implants and whether being deaf is something that needs "fixed" or is even a disability. Deaf people have managed just fine for many years without cochlear implants and have formed communities and relationships that don't define them as being disabled...so for Ruben to be so gung ho about getting the implants while also attending this rehab, learning how to be deaf, forming bonds and relationships with other deaf people, and then lying and deceiving all of those people to run off and get the cochlear implants causes an irreparable rift between him and the rehabilitation facility, especially the main guy who runs the place. He tries to explain these feelings to Ruben, but Ruben is still so hopeful that this surgery will have fixed everything and still refusing to accept that perhaps deafness isn't as bad as he seems to think it is that the words never really sink in and he leaves the rehab in a very hurtful and curt manner.

    After going back to the doctors to test out and adjust his new implants, it is only THEN that he realizes that cochlear implants, while an amazing solution for some, is not the cure-all he assumed it would be and this is the first time he seems to realize that he will never hear again the way he once did, that everything he hears now will be filtered through this metallic, tinny sounding implant, hence The Sound of Metal working so well as a movie title.

    Ruben makes his way to France to find that his girlfriend, Lou, looks and acts vastly different than she did when she was living her bohemian life with him in the RV; instead of having bleached eyebrows, her hair is now soft and natural brown, she is living back at home with her father, their relationship seemingly repaired (with her dad even thanking Ruben for being there for Lou at one point), and she has clearly moved on and up from whatever situation she and Ruben were in before. It is at this point that Ruben realizes that because he truly does love Lou, he must let her go and be the woman she was meant to be, not tied or bogged down by him, and that he must deal with his issues himself. He packs his things and leaves while she is sleeping to spare her any further pain and then the movie ends on a rather ambiguous note; we go through portions of hearing nothing at all, hearing things as they are through the implant, and Ruben spends the final moments of the movie looking up at the sun through the trees before the credits roll.

    Did Ruben finally accept that his deafness wasn't necessarily the life-ending disability he thought it was? Is he dedicated to working on improving his hearing with the implant? Does he feel guilty over the way he left things at the rehab? Does he feel like he made a mistake by getting the surgery?

    I feel like the ending hints at the last of those being true. Perhaps if he had stayed at the rehab and learned to accept his deafness, he would have found that inner peace that the guy who ran the place kept trying to help him find; he kept giving Ruben the tools he needed and Ruben just kept refusing to use them. There was one point where Ruben even realized be could keep time and still play drums without hearing the music and he's teaching this skill to a class of deaf children but again, Ruben's inability to see beyond his immediate desire of getting those implants leaves him unable to fully appreciate all the help that he's receiving and all of the people he's ultimately hurting by making the choice he does.

    Additionally, I've got to agree with everyone else that the use of sound in this film was absolutely fantastic and incredibly artful. You very much feel like you are living in Ruben's headspace. At many points throughout the movie, we hear things exactly as Ruben does, whether that means hearing nothing at all, very muffled sounds, or the metallic sound of his cochlear implants and it makes it all the more easy to empathize with his struggle and to perhaps understand his motives and choices even if they aren't necessarily the ones we would choose for ourselves if we were in his shoes.

    This was an excellent movie and I liked the ambiguity of the ending. It leaves open the possibility for people to take away from it what they want and as another poster mentioned, depending on your opinions or views on cochlear implants and deafness/deaf communities, it will definitely make you feel something one way or the other.
  • The sound of trees, the sound of distant traffic, the sound of coffee dripping into a pot, Darius Marder's directorial debut Sound of Metal is a study on the sounds of humanity, beauty and growth.

    The film opens with a punk rock performance featuring only two musicians; the scene is loud and energetic with handheld camera movements capturing a woman vocalist and a man on the drums, resting behind them like a gunner sits before a 50 caliber turret. Darius Marder, being the writer of the 2012 punk masterpiece The Place Beyond The Pines, feels like a director with punk-rock origins in his veins, and a keen sense of sobering humanity within every frame. To be frank, I don't think anyone other than Tyler Durden himself or Ryan Gosling could have helmed the leading role of this picture to the degree that the spectacular Riz Ahmed has. He turns the story of Ruben Stone, a drummer going deaf, into something eerily real and relatable.

    As we get to know Ruben better, we learn that his partner on the stage is also his partner in crime and sweetheart Lou or Lulu (Olivia Cooke). Together, the two stir up astounding emotions and recall of our own young love and the stories that proceed it.

    But this is Reuben's story, and with each passing moment, his hearings fleeting disappearance becomes the main antagonist of the picture. Despite the brief takes of Rueben and Lulu's hardships, which include faint hints of suicide, nothing is as hard as the reality of his own inevitable deafness. Yet, no matter how sad or trouble both of these protagonist's life before the start of the film may be, I found it interesting and impressive that the director choose not to touch too much upon their backstories, and allowed these little nuances to add to a film telling a very clear and present, almost magnetic story about people in the now, present at this very moment.

    While the film centres on the relationship between the two punk rock lovers, Sound of Metal begins unearthing the trails and tribulations of how a broke and passionate couple deal with such traumatic and realistic health scares.

    While Reuben's deafness worsens and his health rapidly begins to decline, his options are quite simple; either deal with his deafness and adapt his life to it, or perform an implant procedure that could resurrect his hearing, the latter, costing upwards of eighty thousand dollars.

    Reminiscent of the first time I ever saw 127 Hours, the film's sound is as crucial a characters as Rueben or Lulu. Vibrations throughout the film really gives the audience a sense of Rueben's sonic displeasure and fleeting health-this fact alone gives worth to seeing Sound of Metal in a theatre. It is no surprise that the sound mixing and sound editing of the film is top notch, easily being comparable to Damien Chazelle's debut feature film Whiplash.

    Using very clever filming techniques, including cutting back and forth between regular dialogue and muffled ambience from Ruben's perspective, Marder's directorial choices seem very confident and seasoned, providing audiences with a cinematic movie-going experience. Truly heartbreaking and constantly upsetting, the film is as resilient as Rueben's will to continue being a musician. Avoiding the advice of his doctors to omit loud noises, Ruben stubbornly ignores all caution, quickly and almost abruptly by showcasing a medium shot of him on stage, mid-show, raging on a drum solo; sweating with passion and the brass villain known as Rueben's drum symbolls.

    There are scenes of real heart in Sound of Metal. Rueben's confession to Lulu being one of them, but also, the whole process of recovery is truly a humanistic milestone and cinematic feast of human endurance and love. Communicating via notepads, words and writing, Lulu and Rueben begin a journey together that they both know could depart their love for something that has made them closer, and ultimately, who they are as people. Bleak, brazen and loud as heck, Sound of Metal is also an optimistic energy rush of a film.

    While Sound of Metal is, first and foremost, a love story, the story of love becomes unclear whether its towards that of Lulu, or the will to be a performer; a love of entertaining, a longing of drumming. Much like Whiplash, and Miles Teller's finale scene in the film, the film is doused in the constant condensation of the dum set and Reuben's tattooed body. This is a strong ode to the love of music, a love letter to the loud and obnoxious sounds of rock and roll and hard core metal.

    Joining Ahmed and Cooke in this passion project, is the ultra-talented Paul Raci, a confidant to Rueben and Lulu seeing to recovering his health. Raci's Joe provides the film with an outsiders look into the love and strong will Rueben has towards his craft and the people who trusts the most.

    Marder's debut feature is truly a wonder to behold. Showing confidence in every frame, Marder's camera is placed frequently behind his protagonist's shoulders, constantly heightening his profile and Rueben's silhouette during his performances. This unseen method of capturing live music, along with his decision to capture their performances with the use of the documentary style shaky cam, adds a sense of uncertainty to the character and to the narrative as a whole.

    Yet, as loud and vibrated Sound of Metal really is, there is a sense of tranquility to it. Clarity and intense scenes plagued in silence are some of the most captivating and devastatingly powerful, throughout. The quiet stillness that Rueben adapts as the film progresses, not only adds to the evolution of the character, but also the progression of the narrative and strength in Abraham Marder and Darius Marder's script.

    Sound of Metal is a rapturous, soulful, wildfire of a film that isn't easy to tame, or ease, or really forget at all. A truly transitional, transcendent and soul-searching cinematic experience, that will devastate you, crush you and echo throughout your memory, well after the credits begin to roll. Metallic, brilliant and raw, Sound of Metal along with Ahmed's sobering as an ice-bath performance is a kinetic and electrifying cinematic movie-going experience. Spellbinding, atmospheric and alluring, Sound of Metal is a triumph in art.
  • Taking the auditory experience of film to a brand new and original level, Riz Ahmed signs an immensely authentic performance as a drummer locked from sound without warning. The film builds around the way he learns to come to terms with the challenges his disability presents, through the discovery of who he really is as life, meaning and purpose graft perspective to his being. With a great supporting cast, this is a landmark piece of cinema to be savoured.
  • When I thought about how Ahmed's character was acting a bit like a drug addict for the first time in the movie, based on his mannerisms and the way he was speaking, and then 30 seconds later a character said "you're acting like an addict," I almost rolled my eyes.

    A very strong lead performance by Riz Ahmed, interesting sound design, and what feels like a grounded and intimate portrayal of how it feels to be deaf is somewhat letdown by the film's screenplay. I didn't think events unfolded in a particularly compelling way, and it feels strangely bloated at 2 hours, owing to the relative simplicity of the premise.

    Apparently there is a 100-minute long cut though, which could be a good deal better, in all honesty (but on Amazon Prime Australia at least, I could only see the 2-hour version).
  • My husband has hearing loss and this movie made him weep. It also helped me to understand what he was experiencing. The script is extraordinary as is the acting. I hope they do well that the awards, they deserve it.
  • Riz Ahmen is Ruben, a drummer in a hard rock "band" (which is just him and his girlfriend, Oliva Cooke). They share a strangely quiet, gentle existence living out of an old Air Stream and travelling the country. Their music is loud and angry; their lives are restrained. We learn that Ruben is a recovering addict and we soon learn that he is suddenly and quickly losing his hearing. It's a devastating diagnosis. To lose his hearing is to make who he thinks he is (a drummer & overall musician) nearly impossible. He is encouraged to go to a home for newly deaf adults who are also addicts. (One of the faults of the movie is that we aren't told exactly why or how this decision is reached. One day, he's just going there.) Ruben works to fit in and gradually finds a place for himself. But in the back of his mind, all this is a "holding pattern" while he tries to come up with the funds to get a cochlear implant to regain his hearing.

    Ahmed is never less than amazing. The awards season recognition he's getting is well-deserved. He is pretty quiet through most of the movie, yet never totally peaceful. He is a deeply decent person, even gentle...yet he has demons he must wrestle with. Ahmed can convey these battles and contradictions just by sitting there and letting us see his face and eyes. You can feel how cheated he reckons himself to be. You can see when he's drawn to simple things like teaching a deaf child how to drum his hands rhythmically. You can see his battle to contain his anger and confusion. His first "AA" meeting at the center, where everyone speaks in a sign language he hasn't begun to learn yet, is quite arresting because you can see how overwhelming it all it, yet he barely moves. His performance is worth seeing, 100%. (I would also point out that the sound design is EXCELLENT and so critical.

    But the events of the movie are shown so frustratingly. We have no real idea of how much time is passing? When he learns sign language, has it been a week or a year? Olivia Cooke's character (and performance?) give us almost nothing to go by. We initially like her because Ruben does, but we really don't know her at all, and the script and actor give us little to go by. And strangely, as arresting as Ahmed's performance is, I found myself not actually caring all that much about how everything turned out. Key events in the character's journey seem to be skipped. Major plot points (and there aren't many) are presented in a sketchy manner. It all led to a movie that feels like less than the sum of its parts.

    By all means, see if just for Ahmed's performance. But I think the film itself is SO specific (a rock drummer addict who is suddenly deaf and must adjust but also wants surgery because he thinks it will be a cure-all to return him to his old life) that it forgets to clarify things that those of us who haven't had this specific experience are sometimes left in the dark. It's an overall miss for me.
  • Confession: I'm a total sucker for recovery stories - maybe it is the former social worker in me. Now, some people might suggest this movie's about music or the deaf community, but I honesty believe it is about saving (and accepting) ourselves. It is about the addictions that define us, whether we're embracing or surrendering them...and the people that help heal us along the way. In other words, it IS a recovery story. And it is also flawlessly done. The performances are intimate, the sounds/silences keep drawing you in, and the moments of stillness are absolutely breathtaking. Marder's crafted something that feels so personal and authentic, an invitation into these characters' lives and experiences. When the credits rolled, I just sat there taking it in.
  • nfancher4 December 2020
    This movie rocked me to my core. I'm struggling to gather the words to adequately express how profoundly this film moved me. It's such a specific story, brilliantly captured and conveyed, yet it's one shared by every human that's lived. The struggle to find meaning in the madness. The peace in the chaos. Hope amidst the bleak monotony of daily life. It also trusts that the viewer has a brain and can pick up on nuance. It's subtle. It's layered. It's patient. It's perfect.
  • I like the acting and the sound work is really great (these alone make the movie worth watching), but without delving into spoilers (this is something that became clear to me early on), I think the movie argues that by trying to find a cure for a condition you're betraying those that have no option but to live with it.
  • ferguson-619 November 2020
    Warning: Spoilers
    Greetings again from the darkness. Many of us have attended concerts and experienced a ringing in our ears for a while afterwards. Have you ever thought about the musicians who are playing that music night after night? It's a risk requiring precautions ... and even then, disaster can occur. The first narrative feature from writer-director Darius Marder uses the hearing loss of a heavy metal drummer to explore what happens when the life we know is suddenly snatched away.

    Riz Ahmed (TV mini-series "The Night Of") stars as Ruben, the aforementioned drummer. The film opens with Ruben drumming on stage as his lead singer/girlfriend Lou (underrated Olivia Cooke, THOROUGHBREDS, "Bates Motel") screams out the lyrics punk-style for their band, Blackgammon. We witness Ruben's euphoria in the moment, with his "Please Kill Me" tattoo visible across his chest. Afterwards, we see the couple in their RV living a happy life of veggie juice, yoga, and slow dancing between gigs. The first crack in the armor is Lou's scratching her arm from anxiety, and the next is devastating for Ruben and the couple.

    Ahmed is terrific in the most important moments, and he's assisted by top notch sound design from Nicolas Becker (GRAVITY, 2013). This allows us to feel and experience the moment Ruben realizes he has a problem, and how he begins to process this. Director Marder utilizes subtitles/closed captioning throughout, both for the deaf community and to make Ruben's situation visceral for viewers. When the doctor explains hearing loss, frustration and defiance kick in for Ruben. He becomes focused on the $40-80,000 cochlear implant option, and views it as a way to maintain his normal life.

    Lou becomes worried for Ruben's well-being, and we learn he's a recovering heroin addict. He reluctantly agrees to a remote deaf community/rehab facility run by Joe (Paul Raci). It's here that Ruben learns sign language and begins to adjust to his new reality. Joe is a very patient and sage advisor, and preaches that being deaf is not a handicap - it's not viewed as something to fix. Implants are considered an affront to the deaf culture, and the film neither shies away from this conflict, nor magnifies it.

    The clash between Joe's patience and guidance, and Ruben's desire to get his normal life back comprise much of the film. The final scene between the two is gut-wrenching thanks to extraordinary acting from Ahmed and especially Raci. Supporting work in the film is provided by Lauren Ridloff (a hearing-impaired actor) and Matthieu Amalric as Lou's dad. The final act is quite something to watch. The director says the film is about the finality of life changes, and letting go of what we can't fix. Joe urges Ruben to appreciate the stillness, and we also see a love story that served its purpose and run its course. Will the distortion lead Ruben to find peace in the stillness? Depending on your stance in regards to the debate within the deaf community, the ending either works for you or it doesn't. Either way, it's well done and well-acted. Amazon Studios will release this in theaters November 20, 2020 and on Prime Video December 4, 2020
  • After years of loud concerts, rock drummer Ruben suddenly loses his hearing. With his world falling apart, his girlfriend and bandmate finds him a spot in a deaf community. Here he will learn to cope with being deaf and commune with other deaf people. In addition Ruben holds out hope for surgery that will restore his hearing.

    A quite novel film: there's not too many films that cover deafness, certainly not ones where we see a character lose their hearing and how they learn to live with the change. Quite engaging as we see Ruben deal with it after in an instant his whole world has changed.

    Quite confronting too, as, through this engagement with Ruben, you're forced to think about how you would handle it if something like that happened to you, and how easily it could happen. This makes the first half or so of the movie quite an ordeal, though in a positive way as it helps you empathise with people who suffer something like this.

    However, having set up the plot the movie does drift towards the end. The conclusion ties things together quite neatly, though fairly predictably.

    Ultimately, very original and reasonably thought-provoking but it misses that something extra, especially towards the end, to make it brilliant.
  • The Sound of Metal is definitely one of the top films this year and it has everything to do with the steak kar performances of the lead actor Riz Ahmed. With blond hair it's hard to even place him as a Pakistani playing the role. Ahmed is an intense actor and takes us into the world of a tormented drummer trying to come to terms with losing his hearing not long after overcoming addiction. This new battle takes him into an unfamiliar world where the sound design helps the audience feel what the protagonist must feel. This film selves into experimentation with the auditory experience of cinema. An absolute must-watch.
  • Some things trouble me about this movie. I think the acting was not an Oscar performance. I would like Ruben to have some trouble with controlling his voice level while he is talking. However, I liked his performance in a way. He handled to demonstrate his hopes about his condition and inner conflicts without directly showing it to us. I can say that Riz Ahmed did a great job at that.

    I did not like the story. I like it when movies have strong beginnings and calm endings. But, in this movie, nothing happens in between (Act 2). I did not also understand what it really tries to tell the audience. I now it shows us the deaf community and how Rubert's life changes. But it was just so long and slow that you can't really follow after a moment. I did not also understand Lou. I do not want to give spoilers, but I just didn't understand what is her deal. I guess this movie just isn't for me.
  • Heavy metal drummer Ruben's life falls apart when he begins losing his hearing.

    It's incredibly easy to empathise with Ruben, for a musician to load his hearing, it must be like an artist losing their sight, it's an incredibly thought provoking watch.

    You could argue that movies are meant to entertain, and I suppose that is their key reason for being, but when a movie can make you feel, make you think, put you in a place where you have to empathise with a character, then it's gone one step beyond merely serving to entertain, Sound of Metal did just that.

    Riz Ahmed is a favourite actor of mine, and he is awesome here as Ruben, you will see him experience all manner of very real emotions, frustration, hope, anger, joy, heartbreak, it is a captivating performance.

    I am a metal addict, if I'm honest, I've never once contemplated the effect of the music on the musicians, this film truly made me think.

    Awesome movie.

    10/10.
  • One of my biggest fears is losing my hearing. This film handles the subject incredibly well. Provides perspective with moments of terror, anger, frustration, desperation and peace.

    It easily deserves awards for sound design and acting. Riz Ahmed was great in Nightcrawler, and he's even better here.

    Easily recommended if the topic interests you and you're in the mood for a drama.

    7/10.
  • My wife is and has been a ASL (American Sign Language) interpreter for over 15 years. I wrote this by her knowledge of the Deaf Community. The file does show the real struggles of someone who looses their hearing. BUT the film does it wrong in several areas. Deaf schools encourage those family members that can hear to also partake in learning sign language (Side by side). When someone gets the operation, it costs $5000-$7500 for each side. Usually it's one side at a time then six months of adjusting. About a year passed and continuous adjustments have to be done before the other side is operated on. By standard, it is encouraged for one side to only be done. The chaos of having two implants done at once has lead many to commit suicide. The movie does show the noise and craziness, but fails about the warnings. I gave this movie a five out of ten stars for not enough study and understanding for the Deaf. This film could have been amazing.
  • While it does start with music and a band and performances (live), this movie is not so much about music .. it is about one of our senses! Many of us don't even realize how precious they are (our senses), because we have them and see them as a given. It is therefor quite incredible what the movie achieves by taking us on a journey.

    Riz Ahmed is an incredible actor and it is amazing every time he can and is allowed to show his range. Actors are being cast by their looks and it is obvious what roles Riz gets offered most of the time. In this case it is different and the character is relatable to say the least. And that is something that the movie and its director achieve also. The way this is shot and the sound design ... I mean I can't stress out how important that is. If you like human drama you cannot go wrong with this one. It is thoughtful and then some ... not easy to digest, but so important in many respects.
  • A movie so well made, it makes you fascinated and at the same time frightened by experiencing deafness. The sound mixing is top notch, as well as cinematography and the direction.

    This is the high time that Riz Ahmed got a limelight and he really shines in here. Through his superb acting, we experience his despair, joy and conflicted feelings. Supporting cast brilliantly supplements him.

    This movie was one of kind experience and totally recommended to watch with best headset you got if possible.
  • Rob-O-Cop2 December 2021
    Not quite sure what this film was meant to be about.

    Firstly it's hearing loss for a working musician, but that soon turns into a recovering addict dealing with a life changing problem, which quickly becomes an addict entering a cult like therapy with no real explanation of their extreme lock in conditions imposed on him. Phone and transport confiscated? Why? Why cut him off from his support community? Why imprison him, he's an ex addict, dealing with a life changing situation. Why punish him for for seeking the advantage of hearing in his life which requires it?

    Was it about the sorry sate of medical assistance in America? He had to sell off all his belongings to address his hearing loss.

    These questions are never answered and he moves on to the final stage of the movie, reuniting with his girlfriend who unsurprisingly has grown in a different direction during the imposed unreasonable and unexplained no contact rule. This leads to the final moment of silence and clarity, like it was some sort of revelation.

    The movie seems to think it's giving us some magic insight into something but it doesn't set up the fame work for it to land.

    Riz does a good job of creating his edgy alternative musician character, although he's essentially a narrow one note kind of person. Highly strung but dealing with it.

    Olivia's character is a rich girl with a broken family looking for direction through rock, but we don't really get to know her much to understand her motivations or feelings.

    The award winning sound design was good. They went for the muffled tone rather than the more common tinnitus constant ringing and that's probably a good thing as siting through 90 mins of ringing tone wouldn't have been much fun.

    It was a well made and acted movie that only half delivered for me.
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