Did you watch the "White Noise" movie?
Are you ready for black humor and a lot of absurd moments and sincere emotions?
The new film of one of the favorite American directors of the newer generation, Noah Baumbach, after a series of productions based on his own scripts (or collaborations with his wife Greta Gerwig), is based on the novel "White Noise" by Don DeLillo.
We can, but we don't have to, interpret this moment as Baumbach's final exit from the strict authorial niche to the field where he wants to prove himself as someone ready to deal with the challenge of "someone else's text" and thereby establish himself as a director of a much higher caliber.
There are two ways you can approach "White Noise". The first is to see it as Baumbach's re-interpretation of the Spielbergian patterns demonstrated in family action sci-fi like "ET," "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," "Jurassic Park," or "The Goonies," in which a certain family situation is dealt with by an unexpected, fantastic event and through surviving it, it leads to its positive resolution (reestablishes family harmony). Another is to accept the entire film as Baumbach's discussion of death, apparently triggered by a mid-life crisis, threaded through the matrix of a pseudo-genre film.
Adam Driver plays Jack, the father of a large family that includes children from his numerous previous marriages with his wife Babette (the aforementioned Greta Gerwig). He is a professor at the local university obsessed with Hitler and Nazi Germany, the subject of his academic work. Death is very popular in their family, from the aforementioned Hitler, as an uber-sower of death, to a fascination with all possible recordings of tragic accidents.
The plot of the film begins when a tanker carrying dangerous gas and a train collide near their home, forcing the family to evacuate. And all this correlates together with the discovery that the mother takes some unusual pills.
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Post By: Vanessa F.