Wes Anderson's 'The French Dispatch' Review Thread


Rotten Tomatoes:Metacritic: 88/100 (7 critics)As with other movies, the scores are set to change as time passes. Meanwhile, I'll post some short reviews on the movie.While The French Dispatch might seem like an anthology of vignettes without a strong overarching theme, every moment is graced by Anderson’s love for the written word and the oddball characters who dedicate their professional lives to it. There’s a wistful sense of time passing and a lovely ode to the pleasures of travel embedded in the material, along with an appreciation for the history of American foreign correspondents who bring their perceptive outsider gaze to other cultures.-David Rooney, The Hollywood ReporterMostly, though, “The French Dispatch” is a fun watch because it keeps reinventing itself. Each chapter gives another journalist the chance to take charge.-Eric Kohn, IndieWire: B+The result is hugely impressive and awfully scattershot, a wry piece of art that is always entertaining but also so excruciatingly detailed that you wonder if it will connect the way the more emotional, more fully drawn stories of “Grand Budapest,” “Moonrise Kingdom” or “The Royal Tenenbaums” did.-Steve Pond, The WrapFrivolous as this all may sound, Anderson is right to celebrate a generation who broadened our idea of what storytelling could be, shaping more than just journalism: They found poetry in the streets and heroes on the margins; they challenged the establishment and represented a nouvelle vague every bit as influential as the one sweeping cinema around the same time.-Peter Debruge, VarietyHis new film, The French Dispatch, long delayed by Covid, has on the strength of the extensively picked-apart trailer, been condemned as more of the same. To which I can only say … sure, yes, more fun, more buoyancy, more elegance, more marvellously eccentric invention, more originality. It might not be at the very zenith of what he can achieve but for sheer moment-by-moment pleasure, and for laughs, this is a treat.-Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian: 4/5Artifice imitates life in The French Dispatch, Wes Anderson’s exceedingly clever love letter to literary magazines such as The New Yorker. Told in chapters which represent individual reported stories that appeared in the now-defunct titular publication, the director’s 10th feature is among his most visually remarkable, each frame filled with meticulously crafted small details that add up to a dense, inviting cinematic jewel box.-Tim Grierson, Screen DailyWes Anderson sends up The New Yorker in superbly kooky style.-Robbie Collin, The Telegraph: 5/5It’s hard not to believe that, if he could, Anderson would not willingly jump into the world he’s so scrupulously created in The French Dispatch and live there forever. And a certain number of us might be sorely tempted to join him. The filmmaker has fashioned a fantastic and fantastical adjacent realm here like no other in filmdom, much less the real world, and for some people it’s a place they might care to visit time and again, even if Anderson himself is the only full-time resident.-Todd McCarthy, DeadlineBut there is something delightfully perverse about Anderson's hyper-industrious treatment of such flimsy material. His craftsmanship is so overwhelming that unless you're already allergic to his tics and trademarks, you should get a buzz from the film's many, many incidental pleasures. One thing's for sure: there is nothing quite like The French Dispatch – except Anderson's other films, of course.-Nicholas Barber, BBC: 4/5The French Dispatch is a rocket ship ride to your cinematic soul, meshing word, action and vision in one glorious bon-bon that’s both sweet and savory. It’s a film I cannot wait to visit over and over, and it’s a film that reminds that, yes, stories truly can take one to places that they never knew they wanted to be, yet are forever changed by the journey that we’re led on.-Jason Gorber, /FILM: 10/10PLOTThe film is a love letter to journalists set in an outpost of an American newspaper in a fictional 20th Century French city and brings to life a collection of stories published in ‘The French Dispatch’ magazine.” The film will reportedly be set in both 1950s Paris and the fictional commune of Ennui-sur-Blasé.DIRECTORWes AndersonSCREENPLAYWes AndersonSTORYWes Anderson, Roman Coppola, Hugo Guinness & Jason SchwartzmanMUSICAlexandre DesplatCINEMATOGRAPHYRobert YeomanRelease date:July 12, 2021 (Cannes Film Festival)October 22, 2021 (theaters)STARRINGBenicio del Toro as Moses RosenthalerTony Revolori as young Moses RosenthalerAdrien Brody as Julien CadazioTilda Swinton as J. K. L. BerensenLéa Seydoux as SimoneFrances McDormand as Lucinda KrementzTimothée Chalamet as ZeffirelliLyna Khoudri as JulietteJeffrey Wright as Roebuck WrightAlex Lawther as MorisotMathieu Amalric as The CommissaireStephen Park as Lt. NescafierBill Murray as Arthur Howitzer Jr.Owen Wilson as Herbsaint SazeracLiev Schreiber as Talk Show HostElisabeth Moss as AlumnaEdward Norton as The ChauffeurWillem Dafoe as Albert the AbacusLois Smith as Upshur “Maw” ClampetteSaoirse Ronan as First ShowgirlChristoph Waltz as Paul DuvalCécile de France as Mrs. BGuillaume Gallienne aÈ™ Mr. BJason Schwartzman as Hermes JonesRupert Friend as Drill-SergeantHenry Winkler as Uncle JoeBob Balaban as Uncle NickHippolyte Girardot as Chou-fleurAnjelica Huston as The Narrator via /r/movies https://ift.tt/3xA98A3

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