Monday, December 12, 2022

White Noise

When I read the novel White Noise by Don DeLillo in a Contemporary American Lit class in college I did not like it at all (I suspect I was too young to really appreciate the topic of existential dread).  When I heard that Noah Baumbach was directing an adaptation starring Adam Driver, I decided to read it again and it resonated a bit more with me this time around for many reasons.  I have been anticipating the movie ever since and I finally had a chance to see it at the Broadway last night.  Jack Gladney (Driver) is a professor of Hitler Studies at College-on-the-Hill in a small Midwestern town living a suburban life with his fourth wife Babette (Greta Gerwig) and a collection of his, hers, and ours children (Raffey Cassidy, Sam Nivola, and May Nivola) while trying to bury his fear of death in the mundane.  However, when a train derailment creates an airborne toxic event and Babette reveals that she has been taking an experimental drug called Dylar, Jack is forced to confront his fears.  Even though it explores serious themes, this is a comedy of the absurd and its surreal tone might not work for others but it really worked for me and I had a lot of fun watching it.  It is a very faithful adaptation of a somewhat unwieldy novel and I think Baumbach does a great job with the material even if it does go off the rails a bit in the third act.  The best part, for me, is Driver's performance because he really humanizes a character that I found remote in the novel.  He plays Jack as a pontificating intellectual who is also a bit of a buffoon to his family and his deadpan delivery is perfect.  My favorite scene is when he and a fellow colleague, played by Don Cheadle, give a lecture together about the pervasive themes of death in the lives of Hitler and Elvis because he is so over the top (the editing in this scene is brilliant).  I also enjoyed his scenes with Gerwig (who is also outstanding) and the children because he has such a great rapport with them and they seem like an actual family in their chaotic interactions.  There are some amazing action sequences (this is Baumbach's most ambitious project), particularly the train derailment and the evacuation sequences, and the production design, especially the A&P, is a lot of fun.  I predict this will be a movie that people will either love or hate but, since I love it, I will recommend it to fans of dark comedies (it will begin streaming on Netflix on December 30).

Note:  Definitely stay through the credits because there is a dance sequence with the whole cast in the A&P to a new song by LCD Soundsystem (their first music in five years) and it is hilarious!  Be sure to watch Jodie Turner-Smith (who plays a professor).

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