We had a special treat going to see the film in its first week. Landmark
Theatres have taken over the Sunset Five cinema and not only done a very nice
job renovating it, but they created a full premiere experience for this film
including several of the actual sets and costumes in and around the lobby. They had also created special Asteroid City Instagram filters that we were invited to play with while waiting for the film to start. We
sorely miss the Arclight, lost to the pandemic, which was a movie-lover’s dream
theatre and used to do that sort of thing regularly. We’re delighted to see
that Landmark seems to be stepping in to fill that void. Bravo!
Saturday, June 24, 2023
FILM: Asteroid City
Last weekend we had the pleasure of seeing Asteroid City. Filmmaker
Wes Anderson has a distinctive style that you either love or you just scratch
your head wondering what was that. Each of his films have their own unique
sense of time, place, color, and mood, and yet each is unequivocally Anderson. Here
we’re in the 1950s, in a southwest roadside rest stop of a town somewhere along
some Route 66-like highway. The color palette is ripped from the tailfins of 1950s
cars. Even the sky seems airbrushed turquoise. Jason Schwartzman plays a newly
widowed man driving with his four young children to move in with their
grandfather when their car breaks down in Asteroid City, a wide spot in the desert
road where an asteroid landed years ago, and which hosts a sort of “space camp”
for nerdy young kids, with nuclear test explosions going off occasionally in
the distance. The whole place goes on military lockdown when an actual alien
shows up to repossess the asteroid. For a normal movie, that might have
required a spoiler alert, but in a Wes Anderson film, the plot is tentative at
best, so there’s little to spoil. As usual, there’s a whole cast of familiar
actors including Scarlett Johansson, Tom Hanks, Tilda Swinton, Steve Carrell, Edward
Norton, Matt Dillon, Margot Robbie, Adrian Brody, Willem Dafoe, and even Jeff
Goldblum makes a cameo as the alien. Everyone wants to have a part in Anderson’s
fertile imagination. None of them act normally, but deliver their lines as if
they’re all a little bit on the spectrum, unexpressive and unfiltered, like
cartoon characters speaking their captions and their thought bubbles at the
same volume. What they say is always deadpan, sometimes clever, and sometimes
made me laugh out loud, as they move through a series of beautifully crafted scenes.
Even emotional aspects are handled in a detached and unconventional way (like
Jason Scharzman waiting three weeks to inform his children that their mother
has died). It was quirky and odd, but I thoroughly enjoyed it, although I
couldn’t for the life of me tell you why.
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