Identify
masthead
Retail Basket  |  Cookies & Privacy  |   Sign In  |  Register  |  © Cine7 2002-2024      
Cine7
navigation
 
Film Data
White Noise  2022
Director:  Noah Baumbach
Producer:
  Noah Baumbach and David Heyman
Art Director:
  Chris Farmer (supervisor)
Editor:
  Matthew Hannam
Music:
  Danny Elfman
Screenplay:
  Noah Baumbach, based on the novel by Don DeLillo
Director of Photography:
  Lol Crawley
image 1
Cast:
spacer1 Adam Driver
spacer1 Greta Gerwig
people1 Don Cheadle
spacer1 Raffey Cassidy
people1 Alessandro Nivola
spacer1 May Nivola
spacer1 Sam Nivola
spacer1 Jodie Turner-Smith
spacer1 Andre L. Benjamin
spacer1 Lars Erdinger
spacer1 Mike Gassaway
spacer1 Logan Fry
spacer1 Adam Driver spacer1 Greta Gerwig people1 Don Cheadle
spacer1 Raffey Cassidy people1 Alessandro Nivola spacer1 May Nivola
spacer1 Sam Nivola spacer1 Jodie Turner-Smith spacer1 Andre L. Benjamin
spacer1 Lars Erdinger spacer1 Mike Gassaway spacer1 Logan Fry
spacer1 Adam Driver spacer1 Greta Gerwig
people1 Don Cheadle spacer1 Raffey Cassidy
people1 Alessandro Nivola spacer1 May Nivola
spacer1 Sam Nivola spacer1 Jodie Turner-Smith
spacer1 Andre L. Benjamin spacer1 Lars Erdinger
spacer1 Mike Gassaway spacer1 Logan Fry

Synopsis:
How best to describe the indescribable White Noise? It’s a film about nothing and everything – about life, death and the nuclear family; it grapples with nuclear reactions, mysterious medicines and the sacred space of the supermarket. Driver’s Jack Gladney, a four-times married college professor, leads an ordinary life – or as ordinary as one’s life can be when you’re a pioneer in the field of Hitler studies but have only just started learning German.

Joined by an all-star cast playing family, friends and co-workers, including Gerwig, Don Cheadle, Jodie Turner-Smith and Lars Eidinger, Driver’s anti-hero finds himself on a journey to conquer his crippling fear of death, with some very unexpected results. Fans of Baumbach will delight in yet another sharp and comic look at human relationships. But White Noise sees the writer-director playing with genre and form in new ways, creating a film that’s both a love letter to DeLillo’s book and Baumbach’s most ambitious and surreal project to date.

disc test