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Wes Anderson Rises

Posted: 05/25/2012 5:27 pm

Wes Anderson is back. Moonrise Kingdom is his best film since Rushmore. The new film just premiered at Cannes and is being released in the States today, but I got to see it at a cast and crew screening in Newport, R.I. two nights ago.

I'm currently in R.I. finishing my degree at RISD. I got a week off from filming Seth Rogen's The End of the World in New Orleans so I would have time to go to the final critiques for my department, Digital + Media. My final piece is a plywood house that contains 16 video adaptations from a book of erotic fiction called Fucking James Franco. I think the critique went well; with that done, all I had to do was attend other people's' critiques. So when I heard that Wes's film was going to be screened in the area, it seemed like the perfect reward for two years of art school. One of Wes's former assistants, Gabrielle, is a friend of mine from NYU, so I asked her if she could get us into the screening, and she did. I took my assistant Anna, my bandmate and classmate Tim and my teacher Raphael.

Newport is 45 minutes from Providence and it's beautiful. Anna told me about some famous mansions in the area where they might have filmed an earlier version of The Great Gatsby. Wes had shot his movie in the area and used some RISD students as interns, but most of the film takes place in the woods, so I didn't recognize any of the buildings from Providence's College Hill in the movie. I actually ran into Wes on the train from R.I. to New York last winter; it was then that he told me that he was making a film here. Rhode Island is a beautiful place and I think Wes effectively portrayed it through his eccentric lens so that all the quaint Americana beauty of the area will be seen by the world.

I was sad to be away from Nana, because she would have loved the film, but she was in London helping the actors from Prometheus look good for their press conference. She read the latest posts I wrote for The Huffington Post and texted me to say that she liked them. One thing about Nana is that she is incapable of saying anyone's name correctly; we've called it her "condition" ever since watching Memento together and noting a kinship between her hilarious gaffes and Guy Pierce's character's short-term memory loss. She said that she liked being my "Sancho Panda." I told her that Don Quixote's sidekick was actually named "Sancho Panza" -- but Panda is even better, because she does look like a cross between a panda and a turtle. Anyway, the film.

We got to see it in an old theater called the Jane Pickens. Wes was still in France, but he sent a video message to all the local crewmembers and cast members, most notably the kids from Troop 55 and the two young actors who play the young lover leads. I was immediately pulled into the film. It almost goes without saying that Wes is a master of production design and that his shot composition, editing, pacing and use of music have influenced countless other filmmakers. He uses all those skills to full effect in Moonrise Kingdom.

But this is also his first film since Rushmore to feature child protagonists, and I think that makes all the difference. Wes has had some great adult performances in his precious films: Bottle Rocket gave Owen Wilson the best performance of his career, Gene Hackman was both extreme and grounded in The Royal Tenenbaums, Willem Defoe was at his quirky best in The Life Aquatic and Bill Murray is perfect in all of them. But Wes undeniably makes movies that use childhood motifs to address adult problems. He has said that this new film is based on Truffaut's Small Change, which does the same thing. My teacher Rafael says Wes's films remind him of school projects, in the best way. Wes has been both praised and criticized for his idiosyncratic approach -- but I think it's ridiculous to criticize his style. He is an original, someone who has created a new world for us through his films. And because his films are so detailed, they reward multiple viewings. Almost like your favorite children's book -- think Maurice Sendak. But even if his style is beyond reproach, we can still investigate his movies' content.

In Moonrise Kingdom, the plot turns on two young lovers who run away together. Wes hits every childhood fantasy that anyone ever had. I remember telling my mother that I wanted to marry my 13-year-old girlfriend; I planned an extensive runaway with friends; I adored books like L. Frank Baum's Oz series, Where the Red Fern Grows, My Side of the Mountain, Steinbeck's Cannery Row and The Red Pony; and I wanted to fight all the cocky bullies that stood in my way.

Wes loves scenes that display sets, props and costumes, scenes that focus on small, detailed moments and scenes that build in a staccato rhythm to moments of tender feeling. These types of scenes all work well with younger characters. I am not saying that Wes can't deal with adult characters. But it is much more engaging to see children grapple with issues that are too large for them -- as the kids in Moonrise Kingdom do when they try to have an adult relationship -- than it is to watch adults deal with childhood issues -- as the adult children in Royal Tenenbaums do when they pout because their dad is a jerk. Wes is a master director who works with a very controlled hand. And his characters have tons of heart. But in some of his films, those characters end up being flattened into pretty set design to match the rest of the mise-en-scene. In Moonrise Kingdom, the characters own their world, not vice versa. The teenage actors bring life to their oddball characters -- which, in turn, give vitality to the fantastic display around them.

 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Veronica
2 hours ago ( 2:35 AM)
Damn, there are some brittle, bitter people on this thread. Jesus.
8 hours ago ( 7:49 PM)
This is a nice little write-up that offers an honest personal perspective on the film. I think it's great that James took the time to talk about the film in a public forum and I think it's ridiculous that people here are flat out insulting him for doing it.
7 hours ago ( 8:42 PM)
I wholeheartedly agree with you. It seems that many are just taking shots simply because he is a celebrity.
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arthur99
Anger dwells only in the bosom of fools
8 hours ago ( 7:45 PM)
lot of anger over a movie and it's review
why personally attack Franco? silly

I like Wes Anderson's stuff, all of it, lovee 'fox'

the reviews so far look strong on this http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/moonrise_kingdom/

I'll definitely see it, and buy the bluray
it's only a movie, some mindless entertainment that might make you think or feel good, remeber your youth...not 'war and peace'
9 hours ago ( 7:25 PM)
Taking your Art School Teacher to a special Wes Anderson cast and crew screening has got be one of the easiest ways to get a good grade. :)

A good article, I'm really not sure what these other commenters got so furious about.
11 hours ago ( 4:40 PM)
"I woke up this morning and went to sleep at night." -- Solus van Ipse
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
almchrl13
12 hours ago ( 4:34 PM)
When will you be on Brooklyn?
Free rent.
12 hours ago ( 3:45 PM)
Ok...so here's a little comparison to understand why the majority of editors, educators, writers, and basic, old-fashioned book-lovers are offended by Franco. Imagine if the publishing/blogging world was the Olympic gymnastic competition. Now imagine pretty, pretty Franco has entered the competition. All the competitors, who have spent sometimes up to twenty years working to this point land their moves and perform intricate, terrifying maneuvers. Now, Franco steps onto the mat. Instead of starting his opening pass, he describes to the judges and the audience what he did the morning before he got to the arena, he drops some names, talks about the trainers and coaches he has worked with, and then when the time finally comes to actually do some gymnastics, he sprints across the mat and performs a single somersault--nothing else. Though he has spent roughly three or four years in gymnastics and has learned little more than a somersault, he is a rich, Hollywood movie star, who doesn't have to conform to the same rules as everyone else.

Franco is very offensive to those of us who have paid our own way through multiple degrees without financial aid, who have worked minimum wage jobs, and who have risen to positions within publishing and education ON OUR OWN STEAM. We have worked hard enough to avoid failure, and we support ourselves by not resting on laurels or assuming any sense of entitlement. OUR editors don't let us get away with such shoddy writing.
13 hours ago ( 3:07 PM)
" I was immediately pulled into the film."

I wish I could have been there to see that.

Perhaps the struggle to get back out again or the g-forces involved scrambled his brain and caused him to write so badly.
14 hours ago ( 2:07 PM)
I just want to know if he also stars in the 16 erotic films and if so, where can I see them? I like Francos columns and his videos, esp the ones where we get to see inside his film making process. I don't understand a lot of what he's doing and would never pretend I "know" him in any way from what he produces but he is brave in exposing himself to critique. I have a podcast called The Creative Class on Spreaker and another writer and myself discuss the need to be "seen". I really think that it's not self-love per se that fuels Franco, but a deep need to be seen. We can become jealous because our need to be seen is no less than his, he just has many platforms to get that need met.
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13 hours ago ( 3:04 PM)
"I really think that it's not self-love per se that fuels Franco, but a deep need to be seen."

Uh huh. Rigggghhhhhhtttt.
15 hours ago ( 1:14 PM)
Some times for me it looks like when we grow older our problems just go bigger, this means we always have problems bigger than the ones we can solve. Some are true, others is just our lack of responsability. Which brings me to the next thought: Having adults dealing with kids problem is the best way of saying our soul is not the same age as our body and Wes is the master in the way he shows us this matter.

Thus, for me, is not really a problem being a little irresponsible some times.
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All this may look totally random but these was my thoughts after I read the article.
15 hours ago ( 1:06 PM)
It's nice that Franco gives a shout-out for his filmaking friend. Unfortunately, IMHO, Mr. Anderson consistently makes dull and shallow films. Fans of Mr. Anderson surely believe that they are in on some sophisticated examination of the human condition, rendered with a wit that only those who are smart enough to "get it" get. But what passes for quirky wit is really only mildly amusing set ups and dialogue, something akin to a Bill Cosby Vegas routine in front of an audience of middle-aged middle Americans. This is, in a word, boring. There is nothing deeper than that going on. While somebody like Bill Murray is perfectly suited for Mr. Anderson's movies, since he (Murray) effortlessly conveys a sense that something deeper is going on, as he did with the insipid and derivative Coppola movie, Lost in Translation, he cannot save Mr. Anderson's repeated forrays into the mundane. Sorry, James.
14 hours ago ( 2:17 PM)
A sophisticated examination of the human condition is this.. the inability to "get it." What it is that we are all reaching for is far beyond playful primary colors/ mock playhouses/ elusive harmony/ cynical perfume/ majestic chromaticism/ ..and so on. It is.. sir activation.. your identity. The meaning: incompetence is an impediment to imposing further identification of the "it." Omnipotent oligarchy in my opinion ..where your ideas arise. For something that makes more sense by making non sense senseless.. and sensational.. is utmost the most sensual in a scene. I suppose we don't really feel balanced while watching each individual compositionally ornately crafted still... they become more so embedded whilst becoming overbearing and intrusive in our "mundanaity." Static stablization ... wait we never discussed the.... sorry society for the creatures that lavidly become implements in Mr. Anderson's placid tales.
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HamletsMill
All Myth is Astronomy
13 hours ago ( 2:57 PM)
I'll have what she's having...

"Majestic chromaticism" is always a good choice in prose! Just say'in.
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Mike Cofta
10 hours ago ( 5:46 PM)
I dig your light and airy writing style...I would love to hear you "call" a hockey game.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Durham
Just a guy who tries to stay informed and stand fo
15 hours ago (12:45 PM)
I love Wes Anderson's approach to filmmaking. He is a visionary. And his vision includes the strength that arises from human frailty. In this day and age where the gun makes the man (or woman) in most films, it's nice to see courage presented as something that comes from within, something that is born of fear and requires more than weaponry to overcome. You must face your fear, your failure, your weakness and walk the road of redemption with faltering steps. Just as humans do. Atonement comes from affirmation that those you love grant you as you lurch toward the light. There is no gun big enough to get that affirmation on demand. You have to earn it. That is the recurrent theme that touches me in Mr. Anderson's work.
15 hours ago (12:42 PM)
Haven't had the pleasure of seeing the finished product, Moonrise Kingdom yet, however I was privileged to host the extraordinary cast, crew, producers and spend some interesting time with all while filming in and around Newport last spring/summer. A more disciplined group who were completely devoted to their director, not to mention gracious and unassuming while our guests, one couldn't hope to meet. Indian Paintbursh Production, Wes, my Tony winner Frances, Bill M. (who kept my guests charmed throughout), Harvey K and his lovely family...BRAVO on all the success...Your Host M.
16 hours ago (12:36 PM)
Indulgent writing, Franco. Write with an audience in mind other than yourself.
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13 hours ago ( 3:06 PM)
He would need a personality transplant.
16 hours ago (12:32 PM)
Willem Dafoe not Defoe
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almchrl13
12 hours ago ( 4:36 PM)
Da man.