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That awkward space between reality and reality television.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Hotel Chevalier
Director: Wes Anderson
Grade: Incomplete

Anytime a new Wes Anderson movie is released, I consider it a gift. He is one of the few directors for whom I periodically check IMDB to see what they are working on, and eagerly anticipate whatever it is, regardless of what I know about the film's subject. Yet, somehow, The Darjeeling Limited (now playing in limited release), never hit my radar until a couple of months ago (I had stopped paying attention to what he was working on last year, when I saw that he had a stop-motion animated project in the works figuring that could take a while).

What has always struck me the most about Anderson's films (Rushmore, The Royal Tenenbaums, The Life Aquatic) is the artistic direction. Every single shot is visually stunning. Costumes colors match perfectly with the colors surrounding the characters, and rooms are filled with curio and imagery that can steal the scene from the actors. At times, the background is the entire point of the frame.

Hotel Chevalier is the 12 minute prologue to The Darjeeling Limited and is available for free download on iTunes. My understanding is that it is not included in the theatrical version of the film, but it is Anderson's intent that it be watched prior to viewing Darjeeling.

This film EP is a single scene set in a hotel room in Paris. Jack (Jason Schwartzman), who apparently has been camped out in this room for some time, receives a surprising phone call from his ex-girlfriend (Natalie Portman). She has tracked him down and is on her way up to his room. Their interaction progresses with the even melancholy that paces all of Anderson's movies. However, this time, it seems forced. This isn't to say that some things do not ring true, but their lines to not come naturally.

I still await the expansion of The Darjeeling Limited to theatres around the country, or at least to theatres in my area. Anderson's most recent effort, The Life Aquatic, was his most critically disappointing movie, though I loved it. The main critique is that it is all the quirkiness without the depth of his previous work. It is already apparent that Anderson is trying to go deeper with his exploration of relationships with Darjeeling. I just hope that his schtick has not grown stale.
Comments:
Awesome. How was the fair?
 
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