What fills the silence in its place is Minakami Village itself: Every groan of a floorboard, every shudder of a wall, every structural complaint from the ancient, rotting buildings rendered with a clarity and presence that makes the whole place feel genuinely, oppressively alive. Inevitably, you will accidentally kick over a bucket or knock something off a shelf, and the resulting crash will be so catastrophically loud relative to everything around it that you will scare yourself half to death. Which is both a tremendous bit of audio design and a deeply humiliating personal experience. The contrast is entirely deliberate, and it works almost unfairly well at keeping you in a constant state of low-grade dread even in the moments when nothing is actively trying to kill you.
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The Daily Show's Desi Lydic also watched the U.S. president's one hour and 47-minute speech so you don't have to, unpacking the address on Wednesday night.
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