Shropshire Star

Film Talk: Latest Movie Releases – Wes Anderson looking to make impact with Asteroid City

How it happened I’m not sure, but for a long time the films of a certain Mr Anderson eluded me.

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Grace Edwards stars as Dinah and Scarlett Johansson takes up the role of Midge Campbell is Wes Anderson's new film, Asteroid City

My first taste of the works of the wonderful wizard called Wes didn’t occur until 2014, when his pièce de résistance, The Grand Budapest Hotel, hit the flicks.

An ensemble-cast masterpiece featuring Ralph Fiennes, Tony Revolori, Saoirse Ronan, Adrien Brody and Tilda Swinton, this one instantly propelled itself into the ranks of my top ten cinematic tipples, and has remained there ever since. Incredible performances from all involved aside, the storytelling and tone made for a sensational movie, and I was keen to explore more from the mind of its creator.

The back catalogue didn’t disappoint, and within the next few weeks I’d imbibed and relished The Royal Tenenbaums, The Darjeeling Limited, and Rushmore. With a signature visual and narrative style, Anderson was now a director whose work I felt invested in. It wasn’t until 2021, however, that another flick from the Texan troubadour captured me quite like his tale of hotel high jinks had years before.

An anthology comedy following four stories from a magazine’s final issue, The French Dispatch is Anderson’s self-described “love letter to journalists”, and, featuring the talents of Brody, Swinton, Bill Murray, Benicio del Toro, Frances McDormand and Timothée Chalamet, it is only a hair’s breadth from standing as his greatest work to date.

Yet now, the acclaimed filmmaker has released a new work he hopes may take this title. A sci-fi comedy drama featuring a cast populated by a number of Anderson’s old favourites, Asteroid City is looking to make an impact.

Let’s take a look...

ASTEROID CITY (12A, 105 mins)

Released: June 23 (UK & Ireland)

Since his eye-catching 1996 debut feature Bottle Rocket, Oscar-nominated writer-director Wes Anderson has honed an instantly recognisable aesthetic that trades in gorgeous production design and costumes, snappy dialogue, stop-motion animation and gleefully eccentric characterisation.

When Anderson is on fire, his weird is truly wonderful, exemplified by The Grand Budapest Hotel and Rushmore.

Asteroid City nestles comfortably in the middle of his wildly creative pack alongside Moonrise Kingdom and The Darjeeling Limited.

Set in a desert town somewhere in America’s southwest, population 87, this whimsical comedy of manners unfolds as charming and impeccably framed tableaux that contemplate grief, the creation of art, celebrity and the scientific community’s long-running debate about whether we are alone in the universe (Anderson’s riposte is typically droll).

An ensemble cast including blink-and-you’ll-miss-them moments for Margot Robbie, Jeff Goldblum and Willem Dafoe enlivens fanciful flourishes but a core emotional component suffers sunstroke and never fully recovers.

The writer-director embellishes one of his more simplistic narratives with a waggish framing device (presented in black and white and square aspect ratio), which allows characters to blithely break the fourth wall and underline the gorgeously stylised artifice of everything on screen.

A television host (Bryan Cranston) introduces a programme dedicated to playwright Conrad Earp (Edward Norton) and the genesis of his stage work Asteroid City about a convention of young astronomers in the summer of September 1955. Behind-the-scenes shenanigans involving Earp, his cast of actors, the play’s egotistical director Schubert Green (Adrien Brody) and his wife Polly (Hong Chau) contrast with the widescreen Technicolour of a dramatisation of the play.

In this lustrous fiction, widowed war photographer Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) and his brood, including academically brilliant eldest son Woodrow (Jake Ryan), arrive unceremoniously in Asteroid City for a Junior Stargazers and Space Cadets convention.

Woodrow and four other children are being feted at a ceremony hosted by General Grif Gibson (Jeffrey Wright).

Glamorous actress Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson) attends with her daughter Dinah (Grace Edwards), another honouree who piques Woodrow’s interest when she discloses, “Sometimes I feel more at home outside the Earth’s atmosphere.”

Shortly after a speech by quixotic scientist Dr Hickenlooper (Tilda Swinton), parents, children and dignitaries witness a close encounter of the comical kind connected to a meteorite, which impacted the site almost 5,000 years ago.

Asteroid City will appeal to Anderson’s ardent fanbase but like his most recent indulgence, The French Dispatch, this is brightly coloured and freshly spun candy floss: mouth-watering to the eye, sweet on the tongue but insubstantial for an average cinemagoing appetite.

The writer-director’s long-running collaboration with cinematographer Robert Yeoman conjures gorgeous vistas (Spanish locations double handsomely for Cold War America).

Apart from Schwartzman and Johansson’s conflicted parents, characters skedaddle from our memory almost as quickly as an extra-terrestrial interloper.

NO HARD FEELINGS (15, 103 mins)

Released: June 21 (UK & Ireland)

No Hard Feelings: Jennifer Lawrence as Maddie and Andrew Barth Feldman as Percy

Films are prone to infection at every stage of production: chronic logic failure, foot-in-mouth disease, hyperactive editing fever, sequelitis, special effects bloating, swollen soundtrack, tone deafness… the list goes on.

Gene Stupnitsky’s potty-mouthed romp succumbs to overactive trailer syndrome: an increasingly common condition, particularly affecting comedies and action-packed blockbusters, which compels filmmakers to give away their killer one-liners and most jaw-dropping stunts in promotional material and hold almost nothing back as a surprise for paying audiences.

No Hard Feelings has already shared its best set-ups and punchlines except for an all-guns-blazing sequence of full-frontal nudity that is a testament to Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence’s unerring commitment to her role as a cash-strapped 30-something, who promises to take a teenager’s virginity to ease her financial woes.

Co-written by Stupnitsky and John Phillips, this surprisingly sweet throwback to raunchy 1980s comedies like Weird Science and Risky Business is inspired by a real-life advert on Craigslist posted by a mother, who was looking for someone to date her son before he flew the nest and attended college.

Lawrence and co-star Andrew Barth Feldman catalyse endearing on-screen chemistry as directionless souls across the age divide, who sow the seeds of a touching friendship in the most unusual circumstances.

For all the titillation and sexually suggestive set-pieces including an amusingly awkward lap dance, No Hard Feelings is a big softie at heart.

Luckless Uber driver Maddie Barker (Lawrence) watches helplessly as old flame Gary (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) carries out a court order and tows away her car for failure to pay taxes on her late mother’s house.

Priced out of the Long Island property market by obnoxious, wealthy outsiders, Maddie answers an advert posted by married couple Laird (Matthew Broderick) and Allison Becker (Laura Benanti).

They are offering a Buick Regal to anyone willing to “date” their introverted 19-year-old son Percy (Barth Feldman) before he attends Princeton.

The shy teenager doesn’t appear to have any friends, he spends hours staring at his phone, only leaves his bedroom to volunteer at the local Rescue Friends animal shelter and lacks confidence to talk to girls.

Maddie promises to bring Percy out of his shell but she is disarmed by his hopelessly romantic heart.

“I’m not going to have sex with somebody I don’t know,” he quietly explains to Maddie, who knows that getting the boy into bed is the quickest route to a new car and earning the money she needs to save her home.

No Hard Feelings poses as a filthy-minded comedy but ultimately delivers something sweeter and more sincere, buoyed by the rapport between the lead actors.

Supporting characters are undernourished but pacing is brisk and the script retains sympathy for Maddie, even when Long Island neighbours dismiss her as predatory, emotionally cold and manipulative.

THE LAST RIDER (12A, 97 mins)

Released: June 23 (UK & Ireland, selected cinemas)

Greg Lemond in The Last Rider

With Lance Armstrong’s sporting achievements erased from history after he admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs, Greg LeMond is the only male American cyclist to win one of the most gruelling road races in the world: the Tour de France.

Bafta-nominated documentary filmmaker Alex Holmes relives LeMond’s achievements in 1989, when he claimed the yellow jersey without the support of his team or mentor Bernard Hinault.

The Last Rider explores shocking events leading up to the championship, when the cyclist was shot by his brother-in-law in a hunting accident, resulting in shotgun pellets in almost every major organ.

JESUS REVOLUTION (12A, 120 mins)

Released: June 23 (UK & Ireland, selected cinemas)

Greg Laurie (Joel Courtney) is disillusioned with the wilting flower power of his peers and he seeks a new direction in his life.

Hippie street preacher Lonnie Frisbee (Jonathan Roumie) kindles that spark for Greg and they join forces with pastor Chuck Smith (Kelsey Grammer) to open the doors of a church to a new kind of preaching, which will attract a younger, more diverse and impassioned congregation.

THE SUPER 8 YEARS (12A, 63 mins)

Released: June 23 (UK & Ireland, selected cinemas)

Born and raised in Normandy, Annie Ernaux is a celebrated French writer who was honoured with the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature.

This feature-length documentary co-directed by the novelist and her son David pores through a treasure trove of previously unseen home movies from 1972 to 1981 to chronicle family dynamics as Ernaux was beginning her career with the autobiographical work Les Armoires Vides.

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