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Sunday, April 6, 2008

On Wes Anderson

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My wife Christine refused to see this movie that just came out here, about three estranged brothers on a contrived spiritual quest in India; normally I wouldn’t have seen it either. But it was The Darjeeling Limited (or Au Bord du Darjeeling Limited, as it’s known in France), and Wes Anderson directed. He’s one of the directors in my age range (he’s 38) that I keep an eye on. I have a thing for stylists of every artform, and Wes Anderson is no doubt a stylist, to the point where his films might even be considered style over substance. Christine saw The Royal Tenenbaums (a.k.a. La Famille Tenenbaum) in 2001, yes, she just wasn’t that impressed.

Not to sound like one of those whiteboys who like Anderson for the sake of cool points, but there’s usually always a moment in his movies that makes them worth my 10€. For example: The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou. Though Ivy League-type hipper-than-thou humor isn’t really my bag, I left the movies and couldn’t get that moment out of my head with Bill Murray and his crew underwater in the submarine and “Starálfur” by Sigur Rós in the background. At the time, my wife had just put me up on Cru by Brazilian musician Seu Jorge, and so his Greek chorusy asides in Zissou doing David Bowie covers was cool to me. But this also works as a really elementary example of Anderson’s elitist-hipster appeal, because it’s only if you’re up on Bowie classics like “Oh! You Pretty Things” and “Life on Mars?” ahead of time that Jorge’s versions will mean much to you.

I tried to download the Anderson short Hotel Chevalier for free on iTunes before going to see The Darjeeling Limited, but they’re not offering it anymore. Wes Anderson splits his time living between Paris and New York City (like his buddy Sofia Coppola and her French babydaddy Thomas Mars), and Hotel Chevalier was filmed here at the Hôtel Raphaël on Avenue Kléber in the 16th arrondissement. In the end, the short was tacked on at the beginning of Darjeeling, as like a prequel introduction, so I saw it anyhow. Darjeeling itself was cool enough, exactly what I expected from Wes Anderson; Sri Lankan actress Amara Karan was sexy. Christine wouldn’t have liked it, but I’m already curious about The Fantastic Mr. Fox, his animated joint due out next November.

Comments

Michael A. Gonzales at 5:05 AM on 04/11/08:

that’s why you’re my bro…wes rules
http://www.brightlightsfilm.com/59/59wesanderson.html

MML at 12:06 PM on 04/11/08:

wes rules, indeed. he’s the new wave: sofia coppola, spike jonze, pt anderson, wes anderson… wouldn’t miss ‘em for the world.

Cinnamongirl71 at 6:59 PM on 05/04/08:

Mh… same here, I love Wes Anderson. And I love that he is a stylist, even to the point of styling more than simply narrating a story sometimes… He is a director (along with Sofia C.) that I do also keep an eye on because there are so many directors out there whose job is to respond to the expectations of others, and those two only respond to their owns. That is luxury right there… They created an universe of their own.

I did not know about the Hotel Chevalier story but I loved the opening hotel scenes, not only because i love Parisian hotels and I have only stayed at the mid-range ones so far, never the chichi ones, but I just loved the story. Wes styles his images yes, but his narrative is always strong, he never creates empty scenes. I loved the lighting (very intimate, very warm), the wardrobe (geek chic rules), the acting (Natalie !), the silent moments (you could hear the kissing), and the obscure musical references to 70’s French pop star Sacha Distel (how much more elitist can you get ? who on earth is gonna catch that ? my grand-mother used to like Sacha Distel !). And to be partial I just love that Wes Anderson’s characters are such geeky “emo” types (I just learned that word from my 25 year old co-worker). There is nothing wrong with geek humor as long as it is funny eh…

There were so many other visual references in it I kept jumping on my couch. I kept telling my boy-friend; “wow he took that from the Beatles “Abbey Road” picture !”, or “wow he took that from the “Beatles in India” footages ! “wow he made Adrian look like a resurrected Jesus !” etc… I was so high and happy that now I hope I did not make some of those up…

The first time I saw “The Royal Tenenbaums” with my boy-friend I was left with a mind blank for a day or so. And then it dawn on me, the whole trip just revealed itself to me and now I get Wes Anderson, and I love him very much. His style is endearing, just endearing. “The Darjeeling” was to me like a “how geeks can go “Hideous Kinky” of some sort. Just endearing.

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