What's so special about Wes Anderson movies?
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emmeyc-1 — 11 years ago(January 19, 2015 12:47 PM)
I agree. I don't think he's all that great. I think they are "artsy fartsy" lol
My husband watched Budapest Hotel and chuckled. He got into it I think. IMHO It's got a British humor feel to it. So maybe that's why I don't "get it" or enjoy it.
To each his own -
adriaticHR — 11 years ago(February 27, 2015 05:09 AM)
since you asked a legit and intelligent question i will give you my 2 cents.
i only watched 2 of his films (fantastic mr. fox and grand budapest hotel) and i can only speak of TGBH, because i feel that one is special.
why is TGBH special? firstly, it has a consistent visual style, we are all attracted to a certain ideal that we try to live up to whether its clothes we wear/buy or how we decorate rooms. i know i love the style of TGBH because i love the style of the late 19th century colored photographs and thats the style wes anderson imitates in this movie. long before TGBH i had this picture as my desktop http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e8/Neuschwanstein_Castle_LOC_print_rotated.jpg and if you take one look at it you would see it is precisely the thing anderson was going to.
in this sense, those who like that style will (most likely) like TGBH.
secondly, TGBH is a very clever film. in essence, it explores how a last remnant of 19th century view of life dies in the carnage of the 20th century. this is visible through the visual style of the film (the aforementioned 19th century colored photographs, romanticism landscape paintings mimicked throughout the film and finally p5b4oetry. poetry is very important in understanding the film, because ralph finnes quotes it all the time, but what is most important is its absence in the modern world. adorno once wrote: "to write a poem after Auschwitz is barbaric" and i think this is what wes anderson had in mind with the whole poetry quoting thing. poetry is marginal in our society. some might pretend its still alive, but nobody gives two shi*ts about contemporary poetry and it is consequentially irrelevant.
there are more points, but as i already wrote a wall of text on these two i will refrain from others from now.
now i believe not everybody will like this movie, because, as i said, not everyone enjoys the same style (which is a good thing) and if you dont like the films, thats great too, but make sure you dont like it for the 'right' reasons. -
PattyGJones — 10 years ago(June 08, 2015 02:07 PM)
Thank you, Sam. A hundred times thank you. What the hell is a "hipster" anyway? I call myself a latter day hippie, but "hipster" seems to be used on these boards as a slap. And I find Wes Anderson films to have a refreshing understanding of, and sympathy for, the human condition.
I'm only in Show Biz by injection -
Delivered81 — 10 years ago(April 13, 2015 03:21 AM)
His films have some of the best shot composition I'2000ve ever seen. What I like about his films is how he blends lighthearted and quirky characters/situations with some very melancholic themes underneath.
Nailed it. -
NeutralWord — 10 years ago(May 18, 2015 02:44 PM)
If you watch many movies you tend to get tired of the same movie repeating endlessly.
This is were Anderson comes in and shines he has a certain visual style and can sometimes create a feeling thats different then most other movies.
Ive been following him since i saw life aquatic which was a almost religious experience to me sadly his never repeated it since then to my taste.
Even when he fails miserably with his movies they are still "licorice" instead of normal "banana" or "apple".
Ive got him down as very uneven in quality but still worth watching his bad movies -
lukelllm — 10 years ago(June 16, 2015 04:18 PM)
i guess if you don't get it, you don't get it; you aren't trying to 7echate, and so neither am I, but I don't see how an objective viewer could not "get it." the writing is good, they look fantastic, I get so excited for a new Wes Anderson film it's embarrassing even to myself. Different strokes, I suppose..
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bhang-812-928667 — 10 years ago(June 19, 2015 03:52 PM)
What I like about his films: it's as if he preserved his inner childhood or something like that and you can see that in his films, but at the same time his films don't feel "quirky" in the sense of "childish" at all.
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ThomasStone — 10 years ago(November 01, 2015 01:57 PM)
There are some videos that show how he relates to directors such as Kubrick with The Shining in TGBH. I can't really put my finger on it as some of his films are a bit too much (Darjeeling Unlimited was the first I ever saw, which I loved, then hated after watching it again) yet others are amazingly sweet (The Royal Tenenbaums). I can see why people adore Budapest Hotel but to me it was just a good comedy, it reminds me a bit of the Ancient Greek Theatre where comedy simply meant a story that ends well even when there are tragic events involved in the story and that is at the end of the day what I like about Anderson: he makes great comedies that give you something worth talking about. When the movie's going you don't get out of them so easily, yet when they're finished they leave an aftertaste of wonder and doubt.
Also to the hipster commenters, these "hipsters" you refer to will try to explain films with pseudo-intellectual beep Much like Anderson's films, their words are a world of their own with theories that don't obey universal physics. Please beware and don't confuse them with some of us who have actual knowledge of the arts. I thank you kindly.