Wes Anderson might finally win an Oscar this year, but not for one of his feature-length films.
Wes Anderson is one of the most celebrated filmmakers of his generation, but he’s never been able to take home an Academy Award.
Anderson has been nominated seven times in the past without any wins, but his eighth nomination might give the auteur his first Oscar.
His 2023 film Asteroid City did not receive a nomination this year, but another one of his 2023 projects earned him a nomination from the Academy this winter.
In a four-set of short films for Netflix, Anderson’s Roald Dahl adaptation The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar earned a nomination in the Best Live-Action Short category at this year’s Oscars.
It’s the frontrunner to win the award at present, which would give Anderson the first Oscar in his career. It’s an unlikely category for Anderson’s first victory, but it’d be incredibly deserving all the same.
Is Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce heading to Buffalo to take on the Bills in the AFC divisional round, or is he prepping for a new Wes Anderson film?
That’s exactly what was on Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce’s mind as he got in a hilarious roast at his younger brother for his flight outfit as the Chiefs left Kansas City to head to Buffalo for the next round of the NFL playoffs.
“Looks like he’s auditioning for a new Wes Anderson film,” Jason Kelce joked about Travis Kelce’s wardrobe choice for the flight.
Is he trying to homage the New England seafaring attire from Moonrise Kingdom? Is it more the sporty captain’s look from The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou? Either way, Jason Kelce knew exactly the right joke to make.
While the director’s ornate style and quippy dialogue might not be for everyone, he is one of the true originals left working in the world of movies. If you’re a fan, you are as big a fan as you can possibly be. ra
Going all the way back to 1996’s Bottle Rocket, we’ve ranked all of Anderson’s films through Asteroid City. While the director has never made a project that’s anything less than excellent, we’ve still compiled a list of how they stack up in the grander picture of his filmography.
Let’s walk through Anderson’s films and stack them up. It can be like trying to pick your favorite flavor of ice cream, but at least they’re all delicious.
Wes Anderson’s latest film Asteroid City is a marvelous study of grief and aliens.
Like all great directors, Wes Anderson understands that there’s no better place to be sad than the American West. Anderson’s latest film Asteroid City coats on the sadness like light pink paint on The Grand Budapest Hotel.
While his style has been parodied of late on social media as being emotionally despondent and blandly schematic, the brilliant Asteroid City might be the best example yet of why the auteur’s films beat from bleeding hearts, ones carefully hidden in ornate mazes designed with precision and reverence. It’s a film that’s as achingly melancholic as it is deeply funny, showing why Anderson is one of the true experts for tonal balance.
More so than he ever has in his career, the director seems fascinated with using Asteroid City to meditate on the nature of death and our long-standing struggle to cope with the gobsmacking craters that get left in our lives when someone we love passes on. While The Life Aquatic‘s Steve Zissou used his grief to fuel a revenge hunt on the jaguar shark that ate his best friend, Asteroid City finds its central characters running from grief like it’s a runaway locomotive barreling down a lonesome desert railway.
Well, it’s the characters from the mind of Western playwright Conrad Earp (Edward Norton), whose play Asteroid City is being brought to life in a televised production hosted by Bryan Cranston’s nameless emcee. Yes, Anderson seems to be having a bit of fun with critiques that his films are fussily rendered by taking his latest plot and stacking itself in on each other like different layers of dreams in Inception. The film bounces from the technicolor story of Asteroid City to the Cranston-narrated interludes of how the production came to be.
One moment, we’ll be in a dusty faux-rest stop in the middle of Arizona nowhere with a newly widowed Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman, sensational) and his four kids as the eldest attends a Junior Stargazers convention. The next, Anderson will cut to a black-and-white aside of Cranston telling us about how Earp the Asteroid City playwright met renowned actor Jones Hall (also Schwartzman), the man who seemingly inspired and later played Earp’s Augie Steenbeck.
Asteroid City takes its science-fiction roots seriously, with Anderson openly paying homage to Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind as the Junior Stargazers convention quickly dissolves into a government quarantine after a very timid alien drops in unexpectedly during an evening gaze at the cosmos in the very asteroid crater where the town gets its name from. However, Anderson finds so much more pathos in what happens after we see the alien than Spielberg did in the grand meeting.
Anderson’s film will spin your head around like a top as it navigates the precious relationship stories have to real-life traumas. We learn from stories because they’ve been written by people who have felt the emotions on the page.
While a story is merely a microcosm of themes and experiences scattered about with characters that may or may not relate to us, an artist’s work to bring those themes and experiences to us is all at once alienating and magnetizing. We feel their pain even though we may never know where it comes from, an act of isolation can breed such communal power.
Asteroid City bites off a whopping piece of rhubarb pie with its narrative overlays, but it rewards those who are finely in tune with Anderson’s rhythms. Not everything is going to make sense in Asteroid City, but it’s not supposed to. While his films have been accused of being too mechanic to elicit empathy, what’s more realistic than a dry, reserved season of grieving?
Life isn’t like the movies, but Anderson’s films have always found bracing humanity in those little moments of devastation where characters look at each other with heavy eyes that tell more than five-ton books ever could. Then, when the intimate conversation starts, it’s a tidal wave that sweeps you off your feet into Anderson’s oceans of rich emotions.
The beauty of Asteroid City comes with how it studies the indivisible relationship between processing the unexplainable and being there for people through the confusion. We’re not always going to understand what’s going on around us, whether it’s questioning why a character does something in a play or in why someone we held dear had to die so soon.
However, most people can’t help but want to be there for someone in a time of need. The questions of life may not ever get solutions that satisfy logic or reason, but the answers always come in the form of helping hands. We’re not alone in Asteroid City, as Anderson’s devastatingly hopeful film sneaks up behind you like a hug out of sight. The long, dusty road from grief might be a scary one, but at least we go on it together.
There’s a popular cliché that all Wes Anderson movies look the same, which is a misunderstanding of the reality that no other movies look like Wes Anderson movies. The girls who get it, get it, and for those that appreciate the visual majesty, weird humor and heartfelt sentimentality of Wes Anderson, the arrival of his latest film is always a cause for celebration.
The trailer for Anderson’s Asteroid City has now arrived and the first thing that will hit you, outside of the absolutely STACKED cast list (we’ll get to that in a moment) is the stark yet beautiful color palette inspired by the 1950’s southwest.
Scarlet Johansson
Tom Hanks
Tilda Swinton
Bryan Cranston
Edward Norton
Steve Carell
Adrien Brody
Willem Dafoe
Hong Chau
Matt Dillon
Margot Robbie
Jeff Goldblum
Is that the entire cast? No, it’s not. That is just a list of the members of the Asteroid City cast who have been nominated for Oscars.
Take a look at the trailer and see if you can spot any other familiar faces.