The most interesting sentences in this week’s issue are by
Richard Brody. In his capsule review of Leos Carax’s Boy Meets Girl (1984), he
writes:
Lucid, sardonic, cinema-centric asides (especially one great
set piece involving an aged, hearing-impaired movie technician from the
silent-era) adorn their all-night tangle of intimacy, building to a grungy,
furiously self-deprecating Liebestod.
Notice how he deliciously delays the verb. His sentences are
like long freight trains, multi-colored boxcars of description strung before and aft of the
locomotive verb. I’m a sucker for such front-loaded constructions. Brody is a
master writer of them. Here’s another example, this one from his mini-review of
Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958), also in this week’s New Yorker:
The irrepressible allure of Hitchcock’s visual extravagance
– his baroque swirl of caustic greens, voluptuous purples, acidic yellows, and
fiery reds, the indecent glare of daylight – conjures a vortex of unconscious
desires beyond the realm of dramatic machinations; his happy ending, of health
restored and crime punished, resembles an aridly monastic renunciation.

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