Trailers & Videos

International Trailer

Official Trailer #2

Official Trailer

Paul Mescal talks his admiration for Josh O'Connor whilst working on The History of Sound

On Set Featurette with Paul Mescal and Josh O'Connor

Folk songs and yearning in THE HISTORY OF SOUND

Paul Mescal, Josh O'Connor, and Director Oliver Hermanus Waited Years To Make 'The History of Sound'

Don't miss THE HISTORY OF SOUND

Write. Send chocolate. Don't Die.

Official Clip #2
Cast

Paul Mescal
Lionel

Josh O'Connor
David

Molly Price
Lionel's Mother

Alison Bartlett
Samantha

Chris Cooper
Older Lionel

Raphael Sbarge
Lionel Sr.

Hadley Robinson
Belle

Peter Mark Kendall
Nathan

Emma Canning
Clarissa

Gary Raymond
William

Alessandro Bedetti
Vincent

Michael D. Xavier
Mr. Roux

Aidan Redmond
John Conway

Aedin Moloney
Mary Conway

Tom Nelis
Grandfather

Briana Middleton
Thankful Mary Swain

Dawn McGee
College Receptionist
More Like This
Reviews
badelf
The History of Sound: The Casablanca of the 21st Century
"The History of Sound" is an incredibly powerful love story, I'm calling it the "Casablanca" of the 21st century. That's not hyperbole. Like Bogart's immortal line: "If that plane leaves the ground and you're not with him, you'll regret it. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of your life." Oliver Hermanus's film understands the weight of choices made and paths not taken. Both these love films stay with you long after the credits roll, their emotional resonance deepening with time.
Kudos to Ben Shattuck for writing an incredible screenplay, particularly impressive for a beginner adapting his own short story. He's crafted something rare: a narrative that honors both romantic love and the love of music without sacrificing either. Hermanus brings this vision to life with luscious, warm, period filmmaking that feels both intimate and expansive. And he succeeds in making the queer love story so natural that the film doesn't feel like it's making that kind of statement at all.
The soundtrack is a treasure chest of Americana, those wax cylinder recordings capturing not just songs but souls, voices that might have been lost to history if not for the devotion of men like Lionel and David. The film understands that preservation is an act of love, whether it's folk songs disappearing into modernity or moments between two people that the world may never acknowledge.
"The History of Sound" is cinema that lingers, that reverberates, that refuses to fade.
Bessie
Brokeback for Academics
I liked it, but it needed much much much more music. My folk music loving heart is melting.
You've reached the end.
























