written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Saturday 5 March 2016

The World According To Wes

A movie-maker is a creator of worlds and my favourite contemporary movie-maker, by a celluloid mile, is the American director Wesley Wales Anderson.

Still from The Darjeeling Limited
I'm going to quote unashamedly from an essay about Anderson by Pulitzer Prize winning author Michael Chabon (whose novel Telegraph Avenue is a must-read, by the way), because I think Chabon captures the essence of Anderson's movie-making mission most eloquently:

"The world is so big, so complicated, so replete with marvels and surprises that it takes years for most people to begin to notice that it is, also, irretrievably broken...mortality, entropy, heartbreak, violence, failure, cowardice, duplicity, cruelty and grief. Everyone, sooner or later, gets a thorough schooling in brokenness. The question becomes: What to do with the pieces? Some people hunker down atop the local pile of ruins and make do; others set about breaking what remains of the world into bits even smaller and more jagged; and some people start to pick up a piece here, a piece there, with a vague yet irresistible notion that perhaps something might be done about putting the thing back together again.

"The most we can hope to accomplish with our handful of salvaged bits - the bittersweet harvest of observation and experience - is to build a little world of our own...a scale model of that mysterious original, unbroken, half-remembered. We call these scale models 'works of art'.

"In their set design and camera-work, their use of stop-motion, maps and models, Wes Anderson's films readily, even eagerly, concede the 'miniature' quality of the worlds he builds - and yet these worlds span continents and decades.

"Anderson's films understand and demonstrate that the magic of art, which renders beauty out of brokenness, disappointment, failure, decay, even ugliness and violence is authentic and honest to the degree that it builds its precise and inescapable box around its maker's scale version  of the world. "For my next trick," says Wes Anderson, "I have put the world into a box."


Wes Anderson explaining a shot...
Anderson's methods are both intricate and painstaking, which is why he has only crafted eight movies in twenty years - but those movies are all of them brilliant stories and works of art in his distinctively quirky, engaging and very humane style. Take The Darjeeling Limited as an example. A significant part of the film (about three brothers seeking redemption and an absconded mother) is set on an Indian train (that gave the film its title) which, with the exception of the locomotive, was practically built from scratch for the production and everything was hand-made, right down to the hand-painted plates and hand-printed table-cloths in the restaurant car. Carriage walls had to hinge, to permit for distance shots to be set up, and girders were bolted into the ceilings to allow the cameras to track up and down corridors. As a final, self-referential touch, the outsides of the carriages were painted with stylised miniature scenes from the movie by local Indian artists - crazy and wonderful.

Wes often plays bit parts in his movies (in the grand tradition leading back to Alfred Hitchcock); a student, a passenger on a bus, a commentator at a tennis match; I like that in Fantastic Mr Fox he chose as his cameo role the Weasel. He was further inspired (for the cineasts among you) by Orson Welles, Francois Truffaut, Louis Malle, Stanley Kubrick and Satjayit Ray - not a bad roll-call of influences. However, he has forged a directorial style all of his own.

Here's a resume of the world according to Wes - funny, clever, life-affirming depictions of the human condition. I you are urged to see them all (available on DVD, Netflicks etc):

Bottle Rockets (1996), Rushmore (1998), The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004), The Darjeeling Limited (2007), Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009), Moonrise Kingdom (2012) and The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014). His latest venture is another stop-action animation about dogs, currently in pre-production. I can't wait.

And so to this week's poem, Camera Obscura, with a bit of a preamble: The poem was imagined in response to Anderson's suggestion that the break-up of his parents' marriage was a defining experience of his life; it is also allusive to a recent event in mine. The camera obscura (Latin for dark room) is a simple optical device that led to the development of the photographic camera and the whole evolution of still and moving pictures. It was originally a light-tight container with a pinhole in it that streamed the light and focussed a sharp (inverted) image, as shown in the diagram below - the world in a box.



Camera Obscura
Take one! Betrayal scene.
Pinpointed in the half-light
you lie stoned, naked
(martyr to your passion)
in this room,
this little world
in which you lost your head
in your fevered friend's bed.
The camera pans,
picks out your hand,
a tan-line minus wedding band.
Little details.
What does it betoken,
the missing ring folded in tissue,
carefully tucked at the bottom
of your carpet-bag,
with your conscience?
There are no more words to be spoken -
for this is now an awfully silent movie,
scripted, captured, canned -
and that's a wrap!

Thanks for reading. Have a popcorn-free, widescreen week, S ;-)

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

A poetic commentary genius, talking about another. Art supreme.

Anonymous said...

A fascinating blog. I found it quite at random but I love Wes Anderson's movies. Thank you.

Steve Rowland said...

Thanks. Random connections are better than none at all.I appreciate the feedback.

Anonymous said...

I loved Isle of Dogs and will be watching more of Wes Anderson's films in the future.

Powerful and heartbreaking poem.

Anonymous said...

A very informative blog and a moving poem. I enjoyed Grand Budapest Hotel ans we're going to see Isle of Dogs at the week-end.

Anonymous said...

Terrific blog and poem Steve. My favourite Wes Anderson film has to be Moonrise Kingdom. Looking forward to Isle of Dogs.

Steve Rowland said...

I originally posted this blog two years ago! It's taken Wes Anderson that long to complete his latest masterwork - doesn't surprise me in the least. I, too, loved Isle of Dogs and I will be watching it more than once.

Anonymous said...

I salute you sir. A fine blog.

Anonymous said...

My favorite movie-maker too. Great blog and a moving poem.

Anonymous said...

Brilliant.

Anonymous said...

A fascinating summary and I will be checking out these movies. Loved the poem as well.

Anonymous said...

So well written. This was a joy to read - I've got some catching up to do!

Anonymous said...

You call it right. My favorite movie maker too - ever since The Royal Tenenbaums.

Anonymous said...

Top blog. Wes rules.

Anonymous said...

A most interesting blog. Isle of Dogs is fantastic. I didn't know the bio stuff about Wes Anderson but it figures. Great poem too.

Rochelle said...

What a beautifully constructed blog. I've only seen a couple of Wes Anderson films and thought them a bit 'nerdy' but this gives a whole new perspective.

BottleRocket said...

As a longtime Wes fan I was pleased to read such a well-constructed piece. Good news is he has a new movie in the works - The French Dispatch. Liked your poem btw.

Anonymous said...

A most enjoyable blog.

Greg Mattocks said...

This was great. I love Wes Anderson films. When is the new one coming out, do you know?

Dee Dee Scrivener said...

That's one fascinating blog an a fine poem. I need to watch some of Anderson's early movies again after that. I loved GBH and Isle of Dogs.

Anonymous said...

I ❤️ Wes!!!

Talia Moore said...

I 💝 Wes! Loved your poem too! 💝