Cannes 2023: Wes Anderson Says Pandemic Lockdown Helped Inspire Asteroid City

Wes Anderson‘s new film puts Westerns, theatre, 1950s Americana, and an alien into a blender for another of his atypical — and star-packed — concoctions that he says is about “reckoning with forces beyond your control”.

As always, Asteroid City, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on Tuesday, features a roster of actors that reads like a Hollywood phonebook. Tom Hanks, Steve Carell, and Margot Robbie — newcomers to the Anderson family — join past collaborators Scarlett Johansson and Edward Norton and regulars like Adrien Brody, Jason Schwartzman, and Tilda Swinton in the film.

The one-of-a-kind director never seems too influenced by events in the real world, but he told AFP the COVID-19 pandemic did have an impact. “This movie is certainly informed by the most bizarre viral moment in recent history,” he said. “Writing it during this pandemic, in the middle of the most locked-down lockdown, we were not sure we would ever go out again — so I think that’s sorta in it.”

Hanks is ‘intimidating’

Asteroid City is a bizarre and knotty tale set in a remote desert town where a group of child geniuses are gathered for a science competition that is interrupted by an alien visitor, leaving them locked up in quarantine. But in typically convoluted Anderson form, the desert story is presented as a play being performed in New York.

Anderson says he wanted to pay homage to actors, who remain something of a mystery to him, even after working with the biggest names in the business. “Many of the actors are my friends now, but nevertheless they are different on set,” Anderson said. “Actors recognise something in each other that normal people don’t go through — this thing of being the one who everyone is going to watch. It has this interesting strange effect. It became part of what the movie is about.”

Working with Hanks was a joy, he told AFP, though he was initially nervous. “He’s a wonderful actor but also a huge movie star… it’s intimidating.”

“But his manner on set is: you suggest something and he says ‘Sorry, I should have thought of that.’ That encourages you to be better because you’re empowered by this person with such an aura.”

Scarlett’s smokey voice

One person who is glaringly absent is Bill Murray, who has appeared in all of Anderson’s films since Rushmore in 1998. “Bill was cast in a part but then he got Covid three days before we were supposed to shoot,” said Anderson. “We replaced him very quickly with the wonderful Steve Carell who was great.”

Luckily, Murray’s health improved to come hang out on set for the last of the shoot, he added, and Carell turns in a hilarious cameo as a hotel owner.

What Anderson often loves most about his actors is their voice, something he discovered when he cast George Clooney as the lead in the animated film Fantastic Mr Fox. “Only when I recorded George did I realise how much it’s about his voice. And that kinda applies to the majority of actors — so much depends on the voice.”

Johansson, who did voiceover for Anderson’s Isle of Dogs (2018) “has this wonderful, slightly smokey voice,” he said. Arguably, no director has ever had a style that is so immediately recognisable as Anderson’s: the symmetrical playhouse-like sets, bright colours, deadpan irony. He can’t help it.

“There’s a way I do scenes that is just me,” he said. “It’s more like a condition than a choice.”


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Natalie Portman Talks Mentorship and Memes at the Cannes Film Festival

Work can be stressful for everyone—even Natalie Portman.

Never mind that the actress and producer is a certified badass who has fought sexism and space invaders, earned a STEM degree from Harvard, and—perhaps toughest of all—danced for hours in pointe shoes while wearing some very bold eyeliner.

All that said, she’s still just a girl…standing in front of a wall of shouting paparazzi at the Cannes Film Festival…posing in a Dior Couture dress and a strand of Chopard diamonds and sapphires that are, as the kids say, doing the absolute most.

“It can be very anxiety-provoking,” says Portman of her considerable red carpet duties, which include the premiere of her new film May December and the Trophée Chopard ceremony, where she’ll serve as the famous award’s Godmother. “It really has to do with centering yourself and breathing through it because it is [stressful]. You have to kind of remember who you are and where you are, and try and, you know, appreciate the moment.”

Natalie Portman at the Cannes Film Festival on May 21.

Lionel Hahn//Getty Images

The good news: it’s quite a moment. May December is in competition for the prestigious Cannes Palme D’Or; Portman is also serving as somewhat of a guiding light for the jeweler’s annual Cannes ceremony, which honors two emerging actors—this year, it’s Naomi Ackie and Daryl McCormack; past winners include Anya Taylor-Joy and Joe Alwyn. “I know how important it was in my career…to have the ability to reach out when I had an important question about something that was difficult, that not many people can necessarily relate to,” she says, “So hopefully, with Daryl and Naomi, I can be part of a community for them.”

Portman welcomed the Cannes newbies to the fold alongside Chopard’s co-president and artistic director Caroline Scheufele, who cordially invited her, and the actress did so wearing an archival Dior couture dress from the 2017 collection, specifically, along with a Chopard diamond and sapphire collar necklace, matching cocktail ring, and diamond stud earrings. (In other words, a look.) “It’s really wonderful to get to celebrate things that exist and not having to constantly make new things,” Portman says of her epic runway re-wear. “So it was great to get to wear something that that was from a previous collection and celebrate that idea of sustainability.”

As the Trophée Chopard godmother, Portman will also be celebrating the idea of setting an example for the next generation of Hollywood starlets—something she’s done as both a vegan activist, a political campaigner, and a passionate champion of women’s rights in the entertainment industry and beyond. But when I ask the Israeli-born Gemini (“Curious. Communicative. Impulsive.”) about the importance of female mentorship, she’s quick to point out that everyone can hold the door open for the next generation.

Portman walks the red carpet for the premiere of The Zone of Interest at Cannes.

Francois G. Durand//Getty Images

“I’ve had incredible mentorship from both men and women,” she notes, citing the late director and producer Mike Nichols as an instrumental sounding board. “And it’s been super helpful in my career to have people who I could both go to for advice, but also who would, unsolicited, come and tell me, ‘You know, this is not being your best self,’ or, ‘This is something you could do better.’ It was really helpful to have that guidance and that support. Now, no one is really looking at me like I need to be mentored!” she laughs. “But even still, at this point, I can reach out to those people when I do feel like I need those moments of guidance. I think that goes on for the rest of your life.”

Embryolisse Lait Creme Fluid Face & Body Moisturizer

Embryolisse Lait Creme Fluid Face & Body Moisturizer

I tell Portman that one of my early mentors told me to buy all my beauty products at French pharmacies, and ask what’s on her shopping list when she loads up abroad. “Oh, French pharmacies are amazing,” she agrees. “I like to get the Embryolisse moisturizers—the body moisturizer smells amazing—and I love the Bioderma micellar water and a thermal water spray.” Portman also gives the pro tip to visit a French supermarket when traveling abroad, but even though “Monoprix is amazing,” she prefers “those organic grocery stores—I couldn’t tell you the name, but they have this really wonderful, actually delicious plant-based Camembert.”

So Portman’s likely going incognito at a Bio Supermarché in Paris IRL…but she’s not peeping anyone’s Anakin and Padma memes online. When I ask if she has a favorite, Portman seems genuinely confused. “I have no idea what that is—I haven’t seen that stuff,” she says, rather convincingly. “It sounds funny, though!”

Editor at Large, ELLE.com

“Her beauty and her brain go not together.” —William Shakespeare

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Apple to Invest $1 Billion A Year on Theatrical Film Releases: Report

Apple reportedly intends to spend $1 billion (roughly Rs. 8,200 crore) per year on film production for theatrical release, and the company has already approached film studios about collaborating upon such titles for release this year and in the coming years. According to a recent report, the company intends to screen films in thousands of theatres for at least one month, reversing its earlier policy of streaming original content and limited box office releases. However, the details are still being worked out.

According to a Bloomberg report, Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, Matthew Vaughn’s Argylle, and Ridley Scott’s Napoleon could be among the potential films that the company may release theatrically.

This move is part of the Cupertino-based tech giant’s attempts to boost its profile in Hollywood and attract customers to its streaming platform, Apple TV+, as per the report. Usually, Apple has either released films straight to its streaming site or granted limited runs in a select theatres in order to qualify the release for Academy Awards nominations. CODA, a film produced by Apple, won the best picture award at Oscars 2022.

According to the report, Apple is trying to look to collaborate with established film production companies to handle global theatrical distribution, instead of managing it all internally due to a lack of expertise in this field. It is still trying to finalise agreements such as commercialising budget sizes and distribution commissions for the partner studio, the report said.

It also suggests that this is distinct from Apple’s currently underway plans for the Apple Original Films unit, as the Paramount contract originated from agreements a few years ago when Apple purchased the development rights to Killers of the Flower Moon from the studio.

Apple has paid around $200 million (roughly Rs. 1,600 crore) for the eagerly awaited Scorsese production, with the film expected to premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in May, accompanied by a wide theatrical release for a few months prior to actually streaming on the Apple TV+ platform.

The company’s dedication to long durations theatrical releases is a way for it to pacify Hollywood stars who want to see their works on the big screen while also making people aware for its subscription service, which is projected to have somewhere around 20 million and 40 million users, far less than rivals Netflix and Disney+, according to a CNBC report.


The newly launched Oppo Find N2 Flip is the first foldable from the company to debut in India. But does it have what it takes to compete with the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4? We discuss this on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
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