Current:Home > reviews'All the Light We Cannot See' is heartening and hopeful wartime tale -StockPrime
'All the Light We Cannot See' is heartening and hopeful wartime tale
View
Date:2025-04-23 07:03:16
At a time when so much of what we see on television is devoted to ongoing coverage of war, you may not want to seek out a scripted drama about war – even long-ago World War II, and even a story based on Anthony Doerr's very popular novel. But All the Light We Cannot See, the new four-hour Netflix miniseries, is worthwhile and heartening. In the midst of the darkness and horror of war, the "Light" in the title refers to hope.
All the Light We Cannot See is told in several different time periods, and from several different perspectives – all leading to a climax in which everything somehow comes together. The main characters are two young children — a French girl named Marie-Laure and a German boy named Werner. He's a tinkerer who becomes adept at building and repairing all types of radios. She's blind, and is equally fascinated by the radio because she listens nightly to a shortwave broadcast, aimed at kids, hosted by a mysterious ham operator who calls himself the Professor.
In Paris, Marie-Laure is inspired by the Professor's messages of hope — and back in Germany, so is Werner, who intercepts the same broadcasts from his orphanage before being forced into service by the Nazis.
Eventually, the roles of these central characters are taken up by older actors. Werner, as played by Louis Hofmann, is now a teenager trained and dispatched by the Nazis to seek out illegal radio operators. And Marie-Laure, now played by Aria Mia Loberti, flees the city of Paris on foot after the Nazi occupation, suitcases in hand. She's led by her father Daniel, a museum director played by Mark Ruffalo, who's smuggling out some important museum valuables.
Their journey as refugees eventually takes them to the coastal town of Saint-Malo, where Marie-Laure's uncle Etienne, played by Hugh Laurie, is a member of the French resistance. In time, Werner, the young Nazi, is sent there to hunt down illegal radio operators. And Marie-Laure, discovering the secret location from which the Professor once made his defiantly hopeful broadcasts, decides to do the same.
This puts both Marie-Laure and her father in harm's way, hunted by other Nazis in addition to Werner, whose conflicted conscience is one of the strongest elements of All the Light We Cannot See. Laurie's character, an agoraphobic veteran of an earlier war, is touching too — but no one is as resonant, or as captivating, as Loberti as Marie-Laure.
Loberti, like the young woman she plays, is legally blind, and this is her first professional acting role — I didn't become aware of that until after I saw all four hours of this Netflix drama. I'm still blown away by how assuredly, and effectively, this relative newcomer carries the weight of her leading role. Co-creators Shawn Levy and Steven Knight, who directed and wrote this miniseries, didn't just fill a difficult and demanding part when they cast this impressive unknown. They also discovered a talented new actor.
veryGood! (971)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Author Sarah Bernstein wins Canadian fiction prize for her novel ‘Study of Obedience’
- New 'NCIS: Sydney' takes classic show down under: Creator teases release date, cast, more
- Video purports to show Israeli-Russian researcher kidnapped in Iraq
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Harvest of horseshoe crabs, used for medicine and bait, to be limited to protect rare bird
- Video purports to show Israeli-Russian researcher kidnapped in Iraq
- What is trypophobia? Here's why some people are terrified of clusters of holes
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- The Excerpt podcast: Supreme Court adopts code of conduct for first time
Ranking
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- NBA power rankings: Houston Rockets on the rise with six-game winning streak
- Biden administration slow to act as millions are booted off Medicaid, advocates say
- Retired NASCAR driver Kevin Harvick buys 'Talladega Nights' mansion, better than Ricky Bobby
- 'Most Whopper
- Pope removes conservative critic Joseph Strickland as bishop of Tyler, Texas
- TikToker Quest Gulliford Gets His Eyeballs Tattooed Black in $10,000 Procedure
- Los Angeles man accused of killing wife and her parents, putting body parts in trash
Recommendation
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
South Carolina jumps to No. 1 in the USA TODAY Sports women's basketball poll ahead of Iowa
Life-saving emergency alerts often come too late or not at all
A British man is sentenced to 8 years in prison over terror offenses with the Islamic State group
Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
Kevin Turen, producer of 'Euphoria' and 'The Idol,' dies at 44: Reports
Stephen A. Smith says Aggies should hire Deion Sanders, bring Prime Time to Texas A&M
Chicago firefighter dies after falling through light shaft while battling blaze