Signs (2002) [NEW]
Shyamalan famously "plays the audience like a piano" in this film. Instead of relying on global destruction or flashy CGI, Signs builds dread through domestic isolation. We see the world through the eyes of the Hess family on a remote Pennsylvania farm, where a baby monitor picking up static or a shadow on a roof feels more terrifying than a fleet of motherships. Key moments that still haunt viewers today include:
A grainy news broadcast from Brazil that provided one of the most effective jump-scares in modern cinema. Signs (2002)
Are There No Coincidences? Revisiting M. Night Shyamalan’s Signs (2002) Shyamalan famously "plays the audience like a piano"