540 The Darjeeling Limited

Discuss releases by Criterion and the films on them. Threads may contain spoilers!
Post Reply
Message
Author
User avatar
justeleblanc
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 10:05 pm
Location: Connecticut

#401 Post by justeleblanc »

I don't know, I found Rushmore to be pretty annoying and hackish as well. I felt Anderson used his understated deliveries and quirky dialog to hide the lack of real development or relationship between the characters. And the mix tape of a soundtrack (dedicated to his 7th grade crush no doubt) also helped gloss over the bad script.
User avatar
Michael
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 4:09 pm

#402 Post by Michael »

I have no idea if my feelings for Rushmore remain the same. I saw it when it first came out more than a decade ago and that was when I didn't know who Wes Anderson was. All I know that I was consumed by the film's bittersweet melancholy. I never forget Miss Cross' eyes as she longs for her dead husband in Max.
User avatar
domino harvey
Dot Com Dom
Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm

#403 Post by domino harvey »

justeleblanc wrote:Now that you feel this way, go back and watch Tenenbaums.... you'll hate him even more.
See, I still think the Royal Tenenbaums is the one Anderson movie where all his little annoying quirks and homages works, but the thing about something like that is it only works once-- hence his inability to make another movie that isn't just a rewrite of his earlier works and influences.
User avatar
Magic Hate Ball
Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 10:15 pm
Location: Seattle, WA

#404 Post by Magic Hate Ball »

Anderson isn't so bad. I enjoy even his medicore films (Zissou, Darjeeling), love his good films (Rushmore), and ejaculate wildly all over his best films (Tenenbaums).

Zissou and Darjeeling are mediocre due to their lack of structure and generally tired feel of the material. I enjoy many parts of both (standout parts from Z include the funeral, the film festival, and the moon jellies scene, and from Ltd. include the flashback, most of the train scenes, and the end), but they are dragged down by slow parts. Rushmore shows a better structure and great tone, and it looks terrific, but occasionally comes off as slightly contrived. Tenenbaums is all-out his best film. The structure is impeccable, the tone flawless, the actors fanastic, and the script perfect. It reminds me of a Salinger book, in the good way. If I had to pick anyone to direct any Salinger, it'd be Anderson, or at least Tenenbaums-era Anderson, which has a kind of airy lightness to it.
Macintosh
Joined: Sat Sep 09, 2006 3:38 pm
Location: New York City

#405 Post by Macintosh »

Magic Hate Ball wrote: Tenenbaums is all-out his best film. The structure is impeccable, the tone flawless, the actors fanastic, and the script perfect. It reminds me of a Salinger book, in the good way. If I had to pick anyone to direct any Salinger, it'd be Anderson, or at least Tenenbaums-era Anderson, which has a kind of airy lightness to it.
There are many parallels between Tenenbaums and Franny and Zoe, which i belive was one of the biggest influences on the writing of the story, in terms of child prodigies dealing with fame and their families. I'm not sure if you have read this or not (since you didn't mention it), but it's my favorite of Salinger's work and LEAGUES better then Catcher in the Rye.
User avatar
Magic Hate Ball
Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 10:15 pm
Location: Seattle, WA

#406 Post by Magic Hate Ball »

Macintosh wrote:
Magic Hate Ball wrote: Tenenbaums is all-out his best film. The structure is impeccable, the tone flawless, the actors fanastic, and the script perfect. It reminds me of a Salinger book, in the good way. If I had to pick anyone to direct any Salinger, it'd be Anderson, or at least Tenenbaums-era Anderson, which has a kind of airy lightness to it.
There are many parallels between Tenenbaums and Franny and Zoe, which i belive was one of the biggest influences on the writing of the story, in terms of child prodigies dealing with fame and their families. I'm not sure if you have read this or not (since you didn't mention it), but it's my favorite of Salinger's work and LEAGUES better then Catcher in the Rye.
I really loved Franny and Zooey, and will have to read it again. Catcher is terrific, though, with so many layers of metaphors and allusions and whatnot. I sort of speedread Franny and Zooey, and probably missed whatever metaphors and allusions and whatnot Salinger wrote in. I've yet to start on Nine Stories or any of the others, though, but I'm looking forward to it; the Glass Family is fascinating.
Macintosh
Joined: Sat Sep 09, 2006 3:38 pm
Location: New York City

#407 Post by Macintosh »

this is my favorite short story he's written. Check it out.
User avatar
Steven H
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 7:30 pm
Location: NC

#408 Post by Steven H »

I was thinking about some of the other things I really liked about this film, one of them being the reveals throughout, about a character's history or personality, which were then played with. All three brothers slowly reveal their selves to the others, by bits and pieces, throughout. It reminded me of the Margot character in Tenenbaums and how you really don't know her at all until the very end of the film (where a lot of the other members of the family wear their hearts on their sleeves.) There's even a kind of meta-reveal at the end where they take you through the train one last time to get a second glance at all the people in their lives. You find out, in a way, what has really touched them and what they truly care about.

Since it is three people (again, Anderson concentrates a lot of energy into that specific dynamic in his films) two maybe know something about the third he doesn't, and vice versa. Anderson spends the whole film exploiting this unfamiliarity or familiarity with the others for all it is worth. Their back story seems fully realized and is made plain without being overbearing. Maybe these are the three most fully realized characters in any Anderson film. For any kind of information that put across by the brothers, it almost always gets warped into a misunderstanding, adds to confusion, or shines a light into an area previously untouched, rarely does dialog serve no purpose that I can discern. One of the guiding principles in the film, and what really moves it forward, is how they communicate with each other, so much through body language especially.

I also can't get the "I lost mine" Brody line out of my head. At first it seemed completely inappropriate, but the more I think about it the more it seems in character at least, but still awkward. It is followed with one of the deepest examinations of loss in an Anderson film, certainly less flippant than the dog and airplane flashback in Tenenbaums. A set of wake and funeral scenes that are beautifully put together. The film has so much respect for this family and the three boys during this section, they nearly eclipse the brothers in importance (and you feel that this refocusing is *right*) The ceremony is in direct contrast to their previous behavior "going to holy places" with no direction. Speaking of which, I was watching Malle's Calcutta and early in the film an Indian man is being interviewed who left his life and his family to just wander attending religious ceremonies, maybe this was inspiration?
User avatar
Lino
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 10:18 am
Location: Sitting End
Contact:

#409 Post by Lino »

Steven H wrote:... Speaking of which, I was watching Malle's Calcutta and early in the film an Indian man is being interviewed who left his life and his family to just wander attending religious ceremonies, maybe this was inspiration?
Well, Malle's documentaries (as well as Renoir's The River and Satyajit Ray's movies) are credited by Anderson in his liner notes for the soundtrack CD as big influences on him for this movie. So, I guess that the answer to your question is, yes, quite possibly.
User avatar
Le Feu Follet
Joined: Fri Jul 07, 2006 10:14 pm
Location: Reading, UK

#410 Post by Le Feu Follet »

Renoir and Satyajit Ray, eh? Well, he's got a long way to go.
User avatar
manicsounds
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 2:58 am
Location: Tokyo, Japan

#411 Post by manicsounds »

according to dvdbeaver, there is no audio commentary
Cinesimilitude
Joined: Tue Jul 09, 2013 4:43 am

#412 Post by Cinesimilitude »

I've got the disc and can confirm that. the film looks great as expected, and its got a trailer for a film called "The ONION movie", which I hadn't heard of, but looks like a lot of fun.
User avatar
domino harvey
Dot Com Dom
Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm

#413 Post by domino harvey »

SncDthMnky wrote:I've got the disc and can confirm that. the film looks great as expected, and its got a trailer for a film called "The ONION movie", which I hadn't heard of, but looks like a lot of fun.
I remember reading about this several years ago-- apparently it was filmed and was so bad that the studio wouldn't release it. Then they tried to get a former Mr Show writer to punch it up with new material but last I'd heard nothing ever happened. Early word on the film was that it was Death though as far as laughs went-- only one or two writers from the Onion were involved and I'm pretty sure that once editors changed they tried to get "the Onion" label removed from the film. Shocked it's being released.
User avatar
Antoine Doinel
Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 5:22 pm
Location: Montreal, Quebec
Contact:

#414 Post by Antoine Doinel »

The lack of commentary still gives me hope this will appear in a special or Criterion edition down the line. While Criterion may be downplaying the possibility of a disc from them right now, I can also see Fox Searchlight asking them to keep it on the downlow for now while their disc comes to market. Anderson's commentaries (and Eric Anderson's artwork) are among my favorite and I really hope we get an Anderson/Coppola/Schwartzmann one down the line. I'm going to hold off on getting this for now.

And yeah, The Onion movie is by most accounts a trainwreck. It's been sitting on the shelf for a couple of years now. I too am surprised it's seeing a release at all. Though, it would be interesting to hear The Onion editors on a commentary track.
User avatar
skuhn8
Joined: Tue Dec 14, 2004 8:46 pm
Location: Chico, CA

#415 Post by skuhn8 »

Is there any reason to believe that the Onion movie is coming out? I suspect they just made a trailer of the 2.5 minutes of good stuff and are releasing like any other trailer for a non-existant film.
User avatar
King Prendergast
Joined: Sat Mar 01, 2008 5:53 pm

#416 Post by King Prendergast »

No one should trigger a healthy nation's gag reflex as often or as intensely as quirky-moment-machine Wes Anderson. For years I've fantasized about the ultimate slo-mo outro to a documentary called Wes Anderson & The Life Arctic: Anderson is placed on a small dinghy with the Wilson brothers (all three of ‘em) and Angelica Huston, then slowly descended from a pastel-colored Finnish ice-breaker. Just as the tears appear in Anderson's horrified, frost-encrusted eyes, Abba's "So Long" kicks in, drowning the group's slow-motion screams for mercy. Anderson went from ass-clown status to the he-must-die list with 2007's Darjeeling Limited, a vapid film even by his standards that doubled as an effortless insult to India. It's the film equivalent of a frat boy carving his initials in the Taj Mahal. Anderson had the gall to dedicate the film to Satyajit Ray, who would have spat in Anderson's face had he lived to enjoy the honor.
User avatar
denti alligator
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 1:36 am
Location: "born in heaven, raised in hell"

#417 Post by denti alligator »

Auch.
User avatar
pianocrash
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:02 pm
Location: Over & Out

#418 Post by pianocrash »

King Prendergast wrote:Anderson went from ass-clown status to the he-must-die list with 2007's Darjeeling Limited, a vapid film even by his standards that doubled as an effortless insult to India.
I think this belongs in the "Rediculous Customer Reviews" thread.
User avatar
domino harvey
Dot Com Dom
Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm

#419 Post by domino harvey »

I disagree
User avatar
Bananafish
Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2008 9:55 pm
Location: Montreal

#420 Post by Bananafish »

King Prendergast wrote:No one should trigger a healthy nation's gag reflex as often or as intensely as quirky-moment-machine Wes Anderson. For years I've fantasized about the ultimate slo-mo outro to a documentary called Wes Anderson & The Life Arctic: Anderson is placed on a small dinghy with the Wilson brothers (all three of ‘em) and Angelica Huston, then slowly descended from a pastel-colored Finnish ice-breaker. Just as the tears appear in Anderson's horrified, frost-encrusted eyes, Abba's "So Long" kicks in, drowning the group's slow-motion screams for mercy. Anderson went from ass-clown status to the he-must-die list with 2007's Darjeeling Limited, a vapid film even by his standards that doubled as an effortless insult to India. It's the film equivalent of a frat boy carving his initials in the Taj Mahal. Anderson had the gall to dedicate the film to Satyajit Ray, who would have spat in Anderson's face had he lived to enjoy the honor.
It seems pretty easy to call a film "vapid" under the guise of an equally vapid critique.
User avatar
domino harvey
Dot Com Dom
Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm

#421 Post by domino harvey »

What were the odds of someone with a Salinger username posting in a Wes Anderson thread
User avatar
pianocrash
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:02 pm
Location: Over & Out

#422 Post by pianocrash »

domino harvey wrote:I disagree
I really just wanted a chance to click the "Helpful/Not Helpful?" yes or no button, sorry. For the record, I would have clicked "Helpful".
User avatar
carax09
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 6:22 am
Location: This almost empty gin palace

#423 Post by carax09 »

domino harvey wrote:What were the odds of someone with a Salinger username posting in a Wes Anderson thread
About the same odds as someone who's a real smarty-pants posting in a Wes Anderson thread.
portnoy
Joined: Sat Apr 01, 2006 3:03 pm

#424 Post by portnoy »

No, but seriously guys, this movie is so offensive(ly bad).

India is exotic! The poor people there are so noble!
User avatar
Steven H
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 7:30 pm
Location: NC

#425 Post by Steven H »

portnoy wrote:No, but seriously guys, this movie is so offensive(ly bad).

India is exotic! The poor people there are so noble!
Ah yes, please tell us that culture shock doesn't exist, and it makes for poor material for a story! And very untruthful. I for one know that even with in a few minutes of a completely different place I assimilate completely and understand their customs as my own. How right you are to assuage Anderson for making a film about people going somewhere they've never been and not "getting it."
King Pendergrast wrote:It's the film equivalent of a frat boy carving his initials in the Taj Mahal. Anderson had the gall to dedicate the film to Satyajit Ray, who would have spat in Anderson's face had he lived to enjoy the honor.
It's more like the film equivalent of someone writing the sentence "It's the film equivalent of a frat boy carving his initials in the Taj Mahal" which is a really interesting way of looking at the movie. I'm sure Ray would have spat in another filmmaker's face who had a similar disposition, which is probably why he helped Renoir make his (very arguably racist) The River, and spoke volumes about how much he learned on the shoot. He clearly had zero tolerance for any outsider's view of his country.

The amount of flippant and ridiculously over the top statements in this thread would be enough to make an improv comic blush.

What are the odds of someone making facetious comments in a Wes Anderson thread?

1-1?
Post Reply