Don DeLillo's book “White Noise,” newly adapted for the screen by Noah Baumbach, precisely diagnosed the modern condition, Dana Spiotta writes.
All these feats of linguistic alchemy make it so that when you finish “White Noise,” you see the “colloquial density” in a new way. TV with its “narcotic undertow and eerie diseased brain-sucking power” has been supplanted by the internet and iPhones, but we are more than ever overloaded by “the incessant bombardment of information” described in the novel. More than ever “we are the sum total of our data.” I put my finger on my touchscreen and tap the New York Times app. And there is Dylar, a drug that has the side effect of making people unable to “distinguish between words and things.” The book’s attention to the “unlocatable roar” of our age also plays out in how the characters react to events in which language both identifies and obscures what is happening. “White Noise” is a campus novel, “White Noise” is a family romance, “White Noise” is proto-cli-fi, with man-made environmental contaminations. What is first described as a “feathery plume,” then “a black billowing cloud,” finally becomes the “airborne toxic event,” as tracking each iteration or recitation becomes more powerful than the experience of the thing itself. When the children start reporting their symptoms to their parents, they are informed that they are exhibiting “outdated symptoms,” as the news reportage is more attended than the actual experience. Noah Baumbach’s funny and very stylish film adaptation of “White Noise” is a great invitation to return to the source material, Don DeLillo’s novel from almost 40 years ago. But of course, these aren’t random when we read them in “White Noise.” They are chosen, arranged, invented for us to laugh at but also to listen closely to. Spaced out in the novel, often in its own paragraph apropos of nothing before it, we get lines of three brand names separated by commas: “Dacron, Orlon, Lycra Spandex,” “Mastercard, Visa, American Express,” “Tegrin, Denorex, Selsun Blue.” The pattern is constructed, artful. “White Noise” doesn’t have the historical reach of DeLillo’s books “Underworld” or “Libra,” or the international gravitas of “The Names,” all extraordinary novels.
A family in 1980s garb. Greta Gerwig, May Nivola, Adam Driver, Samuel Nivola, and Raffey Cassidy in White Noise. Wilson Webb / Netflix.
The cults of the famous and the dead.” “The tales of the supernatural and the extraterrestrial. “Once you’ve seen the signs about the barn, it becomes impossible to see the barn.” He paints it in almost religious terms: “Being here is kind of a spiritual surrender. But like the white noise machine I need to sleep, even though there’s nothing to drown out anymore, we’ve become so dependent on our cultural white noise that the idea of living without it is almost unbearable. He instead focuses on the larger existential point at the heart of the novel: that all of this white noise we’ve generated for ourselves — a drive to buy things, a fascination with catastrophes, technologies always humming in the background — is a way of distracting ourselves from the horrifying realization that we will die. It’s why people become obsessed with celebrities (like Elvis) or leaders who falsely promise us the world (like Hitler); in becoming part of a crowd, in losing ourselves to the emotional high of the performer, we can stop the feeling for a while. When they arrive, there are “forty cars and a tour bus” in the lot, and a lot of people standing nearby with photographic gear, taking pictures of the barn. Jack frequently muses on misinformation and disinformation (“the family is the cradle of the world’s misinformation,” he says at one point) — something that comes from the human brain’s inability to process everything flying at it, and our need to make sense of it with conspiracy theories. [lengthy](https://www.jstor.org/stable/1208561) [peer](https://www.jstor.org/stable/25112247)- [reviewed](https://www.jstor.org/stable/3831638) [papers](https://www.jstor.org/stable/40588075) and dissertations on White Noise, because it is not really just a story, though it’s plenty entertaining on the surface. It’s called “the most photographed barn in America,” and they start seeing signs for it long before they get there. What a strange and largely unremarked-upon choice — but the movie and the novel treat this as if it’s a totally normal sort of academic department to found. Jack can’t really believe that a disaster would happen to him because he is a well-off college professor, not the kind of person to whom disasters happen — which is to say, a person on TV.
A husband, wife and their friend chat at the end of a supermarket aisle. Adam Driver as Jack, from left, Greta Gerwig as Babette and Don Cheadle as Murray in “ ...
[hasn’t been in front](https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2020-02-08/gerwig-best-director-oscars-women) of the camera for some time, or because the role falls too far outside of her typical woman-child repertoire. While the film elides a slew of minor characters and subplots, Murray’s omnivorous fascination is a counterpoint to Jack’s increasingly grim self-involvement. [Barbara Sukowa](https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/movies/story/2021-02-04/review-two-of-us-french-romantic-drama-barbara-sukowa-martine-chevallier) presides at the German hospital where Jack lands near the story’s end (now with Babette in tow). In the process he draws a line from mass hysteria to human carelessness, the results of which can be similarly catastrophic. [Ann Roth](https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2003-mar-16-ca-herman16-story.html), who costumed De Palma’s “Dressed to Kill”). [Brian De Palma](https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-brian-depalma-profile-documentary-20160606-snap-story.html), not a purveyor of innocent fun, who suggested Baumbach consider an adaptation to try things Baumbach’s own scripts wouldn’t allow. “Waves and Radiation” introduces us to the Gladney family and Jack’s academic work in his first-of-its-kind Hitler studies department. Case in point: In a closing supermarket scene, DeLillo described shoppers as “aimless and haunted.” In the film, the same moment ends in an eight-minute dance number incorporating the expansive cast. “Dylarama,” taking up the second half of both book and film, documents Babette’s clandestine participation in an unsanctioned medical trial. Yet framing this as a dichotomy glosses over the complexity of the source material. [White Noise](https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/arts/la-caw-paperback-writers3-2010jan03-story.html),” a scholarly friend discussing cinematic car crashes tells the story’s protagonist, “Look past the violence, Jack. Whereas the book built up a kind of fatalistic resignation,
Noah Baumach's adaptation of the beloved novel is streaming on Netflix now. By Josh Zajdman Published: Dec 30, 2022. white ...
What it is and how it’s dealt with is just one facet of the story. Let’s hope that the adaptations of Libra, Underworld, and The Silence come to fruition. You have to read it and you have to read it before the forthcoming Netflix adaptation. Thrillingly, it’s also the work that is ushering in a new era of appreciation and attention for DeLillo from some unexpected corners—namely, Netflix. But, then there is White Noise, a modern classic if ever there was one and the book that DeLillo is arguably best known for. Deftly taking the reader from the Cold War to the turn of the century (and back again), Underworld is about everything and the way it’s all connected and how we too are all connected.
Noah Baumbach's adaptation of the 1985 Don DeLillo novel, starring Driver, Greta Gerwig, and Don Cheadle, is a bizarre, messy, occasionally enthralling ...
Later, Baumbach shows he can mix action with comedy in a farcical station-wagon car chase that could easily hail from a Chevy Chase movie from the period in which White Noise is set. Although the showy, CGI train crash that precipitates the Airborne Toxic Event doesn’t really work — it bluntly literalizes a disaster that, in the book, is all the more ominous for being distant and vague — what follows is an extraordinary, sustained sequence that echoes Spielberg’s masterpiece of collective madness, Close Encounters of the Third Kind. (It’s also the first period piece he has attempted, and the heightened, day-glo interpretation of the 1980s in the costuming and production design is one of White Noise’s principal pleasures.) He rises to the challenge in unexpected ways. An accident unleashes a poisonous cloud known as the Airborne Toxic Event, and the Gladneys are caught up in a wave of panic. Adapted from the beloved 1985 Don DeLillo novel, White Noise is a baffling, uneven, sporadically enthralling movie about the collective psychosis of 1980s America and a dry run for the end of the world. The besotted pair compete over which of them is more anxious about dying, but something seems genuinely wrong with Babette, and an ominous cloud is gathering on the horizon — literally.
Adam Driver's latest film White Noise has received a Rotten Tomatoes score of 63%, following its release on Netflix.
"A strange brew. [Is Adam Driver's new Netflix movie White Noise worth watchin](https://www.digitalspy.com/movies/a42238666/white-noise-review/) [In its four-star review of the film,](https://www.digitalspy.com/movies/a42238666/white-noise-review/) Digital Spy wrote: "How much you like White Noise will depend on your willingness to succumb to the strictures of its storytelling world. [Movie Mom](https://moviemom.com/white-noise-2/) [Empire Magazine](https://www.empireonline.com/movies/reviews/white-noise/) [White Noise ending explained - what the hell was that about?](https://www.digitalspy.com/movies/a42266707/white-noise-ending-explained-netflix/) [ABC News](https://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Culture/review-white-noise-sign-respect-virtuoso-completely-breaks/story?id=95940625) [White Noise](https://www.digitalspy.com/movies/a41050237/adam-driver-netflix-movie-white-noise-first-reviews/) has received its Rotten Tomatoes score, following its release on [Netflix](https://www.digitalspy.com/netflix/).
A movie based on one of the great novels from the previous century has been released. It is based on Don DeLillo's book "White Noise."
The 1951 [DeLillo](/topic/delillo)has published 17 novels (perhaps 18 without verifying one written under an identity), five plays, a screenplay, and a collection of short stories throughout the course of a career spanning more than fifty years. For instance, the underworld.