कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
MATCH ME IF YOU CAN
The New Yorker
|June 16, 2025
“Materialists.”
The work of the Korean Canadian filmmaker Celine Song is modest in scope and intimate in feel, but listen closely to her words—to say nothing of her silences—and you will hear whispers of a grand, even cosmic, ambition. “Past Lives,” her début feature, from 2023, was a small-scaled yet breathtakingly expansive tale of cultural and romantic confusion. The story skipped across countries and decades, leaping fluidly through time—twenty-four years backward, twelve years forward, and so on—with a quiet confidence in the bigger picture. The three main characters, modelled on Song, her husband, and her childhood sweetheart, spoke of the Buddhist-derived concept of inyeon, which posits that love is not only fated but also perfected across centuries, through endless cycles of rebirth.
Now Song has written and directed a new film, “Materialists,” and it is, like “Past Lives,” a triangle without a villain. Nobody plots against anyone, but nobody invokes ancient proverbs, either. It unfolds in present-day New York, although there are two bookending scenes, set in prehistoric times, in which we see two cave dwellers embarking on an early human romance. Love, the film suggests, has always been a strategic, material affair, a matter of skillful hunting and gathering. Your ears perk up when, about forty minutes (and tens of thousands of years) later, one character admonishes another: “You say you think I’m smart, but you're talking to me like I’m a caveman.” Coincidence? In Song’s movies, there’s no such thing.
यह कहानी The New Yorker के June 16, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
The New Yorker से और कहानियाँ
The New Yorker
Amanda Petrusich on Katy Grannan's Photograph of Taylor Swift
There’s something uncanny about this still and stunning portrait of a twenty-one-year-old Taylor Swift, shot by Katy Grannan for Lizzie Widdicombe’s Profile of the singer, in 2011.
1 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
DEAL-BREAKER
Pam is seeing someone, but she’s not talking about it.
19 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
THE OTHER BOOMERS
Kathryn Bigelow, the director, and Alexandra Bell, the arms-control expert, are both nuclear-attack-submarine literate. Bigelow—whose new Netflix film, “A House of Dynamite,” imagines the U.S. government’s response to an incoming intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) eighteen minutes from impact—shot part of her 2002 submarine film, entitled “K-19:
3 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
THE MUSICAL LIFE BROADWAY BABY
At Joe’s Pizza on Carmine Street, Marc Shaiman, the celebrated composer and lyricist, dropped his slice on the floor. “Ugh, it’s the Shaiman vortex,” he said. “Everything I come near breaks.”
3 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
NOTORIOUS M.T.G.
Marjorie Taylor Greene and Donald Trump break up over Epstein.
26 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
YES, AND?
How consent can—and cannot—help us have better sex.
14 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
LET IT BLEED
When Helen Frankenthaler remade painting.
5 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
THE AMERICAN POPE
How the Chicago-born Robert Prevost became Leo XIV.
32 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
DEPT. OF RECYCLING SWIPE OUT
In 1994, when the MetroCard made Its 22, many straphangers were reluctant to say farewell to the subway token. Across the city, commuters struggled to master \"the swipe.
2 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Easily missed on the back side of the November ballots that brought Zohran Mamdani to Gracie Mansion was a proposal for a new map of New York City.
4 mins
January 12, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
