Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
SONGS OF WAR
The New Yorker
|November 04, 2024
Early on in “Blitz,” Rita Hanway (Saoirse Ronan), a London factory worker, puts her nine-year-old son, George (Elliott Heffernan), aboard a train. Rather, George puts himself aboard; he twists angrily free of his mother’s grasp—“I hate you!” he cries—and tears off down the platform.

Saoirse Ronan and Elliott Heffernan star in Steve McQueen's film.
Rita, distraught, tries in vain to say a proper good-bye, knowing that they might never see each other again. It’s 1940, German bombs are falling across the city, and George is being evacuated to the countryside, as millions of English children will be in the course of the war. His bitter resentment at this upheaval is startling, even in the annals of Second World War cinema, where fraught farewells in crowded train stations abound.
You may recall another boy telling his mother “I hate you” on a railway platform, though with a mitigating tenderness in his voice. So began “Au Revoir les Enfants” (1987), Louis Malle’s sobering account of his coming of age in Nazi-occupied France. For “Hope and Glory” (1987), the director John Boorman drew on intimate memories of a Blitz-ravaged childhood, with improbably buoyant results; the mother in that film pulled her children back from the train, unable to let them go. But Steve McQueen, the writer and director of “Blitz,” is not making a memoir. He was born more than two decades after V-E Day and raised in London’s burgeoning West Indian community—the rich inspiration for his five-part film anthology, “Small Axe” (2020). While researching that project, McQueen discovered a wartime photograph of a young Black boy with an oversized suitcase. Who was this child, and what became of him? “Blitz” imagines an answer.
Bu hikaye The New Yorker dergisinin November 04, 2024 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The New Yorker'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

The New Yorker
FORTRESS OF SYNERGY
\"Superman.\"
6 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
THE NEXT WAR
Is the U.S. ready for the future of combat?
39 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
ESCAPE ROUTE
Geoff Dyer tracks the comic confusions of a working-class British upbringing.
12 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
Paige Williams on Marquis James's Preview of the Scopes Monkey Trial
One of the first New Yorker writers hired by Harold Ross, the founding editor, was Marquis James. The men were good friends whose wives were also good friends; the couples vacationed together. James's début feature ran in the second issue, in February, 1925. I could have written this piece about that piece, a Profile of Alice Roosevelt Longworth, a child of Theodore Roosevelt, based on the following passage alone: “She knows men, measures and motives; has an understanding grasp of their changes. That's all there is to what is grandiosely known as ‘public affairs.”
2 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
BAGGAGE CHECK
“Too Much,” on Netflix.
5 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
LOSING LONELINESS
In the age of A.I., you never have to feel lonely again. That's not necessarily a good thing.
15 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
JUNK-DRAWER HEART
Ryan Davis's wordy disquisitions on desire.
5 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
FAMILY PRACTICE
A pediatrician’s search for redemption.
24 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
NATURAL HISTORY
He walked out of the precinct and wondered immediately what time it was.
22 mins
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
SERVE AND FOLLY
The annual British yearning for a homegrown Wimbledon champion.
22 mins
July 21, 2025