John Krasinski recounts the time he teared up on the set of 'A Quiet Place'

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John Krasinski recounts the time he teared up on the set of 'A Quiet Place'

a quiet place

Paramount Pictures

John Krasinski in "A Quiet Place."

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  • John Krasinski told Business Insider the moment on set of "A Quiet Place" when he realized the movie could work with audiences.
  • It wasn't one of the thrilling scenes, but an intimate one that made him get emotional while watching it unfold.

John Krasinski knew it from the start: Making a horror movie with very little dialogue and the actors using sign language to communicate was a huge gamble. But having the opportunity to do something different by Hollywood standards was too enticing to not go forward with.

Today, Krasinski's writing-directing-starring effort in "A Quiet Place" makes him look like a genius. The $17 million movie - about a family being tormented by monsters that kill anything that makes a sound - went on to make over $340 million worldwide, and Paramount is eagerly waiting for Krasinski to complete the script to the sequel.

But before all of that, Krasinski admits he and the rest of the cast and crew, which included his wife Emily Blunt starring opposite him in the movie, weren't worried about anything other than trying to get through making the movie.

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Read more: How the "First Man" composer created one of the best scores of the year, which was just nominated for a Golden Globe

And it was within the making that Krasinski got a hint that things would be okay.

In a recent conversation with Business Insider, Krasinski explained that while shooting the scene in the movie in which Blunt's character is homeschooling her son, Marcus (Noah Jupe), he saw the movie's true potential.

"In that scene, two things happened," Krasinski said. "Emily was obviously amazing, but one of the things is air started coming out of her mouth when she was mouthing the words as she was signing. There was something so beautiful in that. In that moment, I realized you can even communicate with breath, with no voice. That was really beautiful to me."

a quiet place 2 paramount

Paramount

John Krasinski and Emily Blunt on the set of "A Quiet Place."

And then the other was the performance Jupe gave.

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"To watch this kid dealing with these circumstances that are completely imaginary but heavy for a kid to deal with - apocalyptic, losing a family member, a father who has fallen out of love with the whole family - these are big themes, and this kid was able to articulate in that one scene such powerful emotion that it felt so real," he said. "I genuinely started tearing up behind the monitor watching this kid act because it was so moving."

Krasinski said he was so excited by the performances in the scene that he turned to his producer and said the movie might actually work.

"And he said, 'Hey, man, it's Day Three! It's a little too late to say this might work,'" Krasinski said.

The star said from that point on he knew to keep his excitement to himself.

But since the movie opened to audiences its others who have been excited. The movie recently was awarded one of the best movies of the year by the National Board of Review, and its a good chance it will be Oscar-nominated for its use of sound.

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