White Noise
You can’t hear it if it's everywhere.
Jack Gladney, professor of Hitler studies at The-College-on-the-Hill, husband to Babette, and father to four children/stepchildren, is torn asunder by a chemical spill from a rail car that releases an "Airborne Toxic Event" forcing Jack to confront his biggest fear - his own mortality.
Trailers & Videos

Official Trailer

The White Noise Cast Breaks Down the Supermarket Dance

The Flow is Constant: Translating White Noise to the Screen

A Jingle for the Fear of Death: Creating White Noise's 'new body rhumba'

Official Clip

Notes on the Fear of Death: The Original Score of White Noise

Crafting a Hyperreal 80s: The Production Design of White Noise

Noah Baumbach & Cast on the Making of White Noise | NYFF60

White Noise star Greta Gerwig and director Noah Baumbach at the BFI London Film Festival 2022

White Noise Red Carpet Highlights | NYFF60
Cast

Adam Driver
Jack Gladney

Greta Gerwig
Babette Gladney

Don Cheadle
Murray Siskind

Raffey Cassidy
Denise Gladney

Sam Nivola
Heinrich Gladney

May Nivola
Steffie Gladney

Jodie Turner-Smith
Winnie Richards

André 3000
Elliot Lasher

Sam Gold
Alfonse

Carlos Jacott
Grappa

Lars Eidinger
Arlo Shell

Bill Camp
Man With TV

Barbara Sukowa
Sister Hermann Marie

Francis Jue
Dr. Lu

J. David Hinze
Herr Dokter

Gideon Glick
Simuvac Technician

Danny Wolohan
German Teacher

George Drakoulias
Cotsakis

James DeForest Parker
Truck Driver

Andrew Barth Feldman
Student
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
"Jack" (Adam Driver) is a college lecturer married to "Babbette" (Greta Gerwig). It's fourth time round for both of them so their family consists a mix of siblings, half-siblings and pets that could easily give the Tower of Babel a run for it's money. Add to that mix that he teaches about Adolf Hitler (but cannot speak German) and she has developed a secret dependency on a mysterious drug ("Dylar") and the scene is set for a dysfunctional family drama that I'm afraid to say left me yawning. The structure of the drama is pretty episodic in nature and the escapades themselves frequently border on the nonsensical (and implausible) as they have to comprehend and flee from the effects of an "airborne toxic event". Some of that is funny, some of that is not - and I'm not sure the entire concept can really sustain the 2¼ hours Noah Baumbach provides for us here. At times it comes across as ridiculously contrived, the humour and scenarios straining at the bit to be imaginative or inventive, but ending up, intellectually, face down in a ditch. Too many directors nowadays appear to me to challenge the audience to comprehend an increasing degree of nonsense or surreality almost daring us to ask "What's this all about?". Revealing ourselves idiots when we haven't really any clue? There are certainly constituent elements of this that raise a smile, and Driver continues to grow in confidence with each of the quirkier roles (remember "Annette" from 2021) he undertakes, but this is just a rambling mess of a story that offers us a surfeit of irritating dialogue underpinned by a story that plays to paranoia and stereotype in equal measure without really offering us much of a stab at redemption or comprehension. It may improve with a second viewing, but oddly enough I found it entirely well titled.
Nathan
White Noise was not what I expected going into it. It had great performances and interesting premise but slowly went off the rails for me. I was enjoying the first half the film; the unique dialogue structure was fresh and the suspense of the chemical event was intriguing. It had great social commentary and was funny to watch post pandemic. But after the second act the story spirals absurdity and it really hurts my overall enjoyment of the film. I have a lot more I have to say, but spoilers would be required. There was definitely something here, but unfortunately it never quite reaches the mark.
Score: 62%
Verdict: Decent
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