Internewscast Journal
  • Home
  • US News
  • Local News
  • Health
  • People
  • Guest Post
  • Support Our Cause
Internewscast Journal
  • Home
  • US News
  • Local News
  • Health
  • People
  • Guest Post
  • Support Our Cause
Home Local news Wes Anderson Discusses ‘The Phoenician Scheme,’ Gene Hackman, and His Cannes Bus
  • Local news

Wes Anderson Discusses ‘The Phoenician Scheme,’ Gene Hackman, and His Cannes Bus

    Wes Anderson talks 'The Phoenician Scheme,' Gene Hackman and his Cannes bus
    Up next
    Aerial view of the Nenoksa naval testing range.
    Vladimir Putin Enlarges Nuclear Missile Base Following Fatal Radiation Leak at Test Site
    Published on 17 May 2025
    Author
    Internewscast
    Tags
    • 039The,
    • and,
    • anderson,
    • Benicio del Toro,
    • Bryan Cranston,
    • Bus,
    • cannes,
    • Entertainment,
    • gene,
    • Gene Hackman,
    • Hackman,
    • his,
    • Jake Coyle,
    • Mia Threapleton,
    • Michael Cera,
    • Phoenician,
    • Scarlett Johansson,
    • Scheme039,
    • talks,
    • U.S. news,
    • WES,
    • Wes Anderson,
    • world news
    Share this @internewscast.com
    FacebookXRedditPinterest

    CANNES – Wes Anderson isn’t the one behind the wheel. The person steering the bus is named Laurent. He’s the driver responsible for taking Anderson and his bus to the Cannes Film Festival.

    As they journey from Anderson’s residence in Paris to the festival in the South of France, Anderson explains over the phone: “I’m not the one driving the bus. You need about four years of training plus a special EU bus driver’s license. The key thing is, if you’re going to drive such a bus, you’ve got to handle the challenge of reversing it, too.”

    For many years, instead of using the standard festival cars that transport guests, Anderson has opted to bring his own bus to Cannes so that his entire cast can arrive together at the premiere. On Sunday, Anderson, along with his crew comprising Benicio del Toro, Mia Threapleton, Michael Cera, Scarlett Johansson, and Bryan Cranston, will all hop on for the debut of Anderson’s new film, “The Phoenician Scheme.”

    It’s another example of how Anderson has made something quite unusual into a regular tradition.

    With remarkable regularity, Anderson has been crafting movies uniquely his own since his 1996 debut, “Bottle Rocket.” There are variations. Some are expansive family dramas (“The Royal Tenenbaums”). Some are more intimate (“Rushmore”). Some are more densely layered (“Asteroid City”).

    “The Phoenician Scheme,” a leaner tale which Focus Features will release May 30, is Anderson working in high comic gear. A playful and poignant kind of thriller, it stars Del Toro as the tycoon Zsa-Zsa Korda, who decides to name his daughter, a novitiate (Threapleton) heir to his dubiously accrued fortune.

    The wheels keep turning for the 56-year-old Anderson. But there are signs of time passing, too. The Cinémathèque in Paris is hosting an Anderson retrospective, as well as an exhibition of props, costumes and artifacts from his expansive personal archive.

    Anderson, who has a 9-year-old daughter with his wife, the costume designer Juman Malouf, spoke about those things and others on his way to Cannes to unveil “The Phoenician Scheme,” a movie that adds yet another fitting mantra to the world of Wes: “What matters is the sincerity of your devotion.”

    AP: How was it to dig through all the things you’ve saved from your movies?

    ANDERSON: We’ve been keeping this stuff for so long. The experience of doing it was kind of great. I’d sort of get pulled over there to approve things. And my reaction was, “Well, we have more stuff.” So we kept adding things. My daughter has lived with a lot of this stuff. The “Fantastic Mr. Fox” puppets have been in our apartment in New York ever since we made the movie in boxes. Over the years, she takes them out and plays with them.

    AP: Jason Schwartzman once told me your movies aren’t for kids but it’s “like they’re for kids when they grow up.” Do you agree?

    ANDERSON: (Laughs) Jason, and Bill, have a way of catching you off guard with a turn of phrase. But I like that description. It’s kind of an amazing experience to have had Jason involved in our movies for so long given that he was 17 when I met him. It’s fun and a strange feeling. The decades have to elapse for you to have had that much time together. And it’s quite shocking that they do. But there it is.

    AP: The sweetest parts to “The Phoenician Scheme” are its father-daughter moments. Were you at all inspired by your own experience as a father?

    ANDERSON: I didn’t have something I thought I wanted to communicate about what it’s like to be a father. The story really come out of an idea for Benicio and for this character. But I don’t think he would have had a daughter if I didn’t. That’s my hunch. He’s a special kind of a father, in all the worst ways. But nevertheless, there’s something we related to. That’s probably somewhere in the DNA of the movie.

    AP: What drew you to Del Toro?

    ANDERSON: If I were to say what is the first idea of the movie, it is that face. It’s not an image of the setting, it’s an image of Benicio in a close-up as this character. His face is just so expressive and interesting. It’s a special advantage he has. He’s quite mesmerizing just looking at him on camera, his chemistry with the exposure of film. In “The French Dispatch,” there were electric moments on the set. But the electricity was amplified when we went back into the cutting room. The wheels started turning. When we showed “The French Dispatch” however many years ago in Cannes, I did mention to Benicio there, “Just be aware, there’s something else coming.”

    AP: Is that a common way for you to start imagining a movie? I can see “Rushmore” starting with Murray’s face with a cigarette dropping from his mouth, “The Royal Tenenbaums” with Gene Hackman’s smile and “The Grand Budapest Hotel” with Ralph Fiennes as a concierge.

    ANDERSON: Essentially, you’ve put your finger on the movies that were written for a specific actor, along with Jason in “Asteroid City.” Owen and I were talking about Gene Hackman by the time we had 10 pages of a script. Ralph was the idea for the character in “Grand Budapest” before there was even one page. But I never had one where I thought of someone in such a tight close-up. With this movie, somehow it’s the face and the eyes and the closest close-up.

    AP: After Gene Hackman’s death, Bill Murray and others talked about the tough time he gave you while making “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”

    ANDERSON: First of all, Gene Hackman, one of the greatest movie actors ever. He did enjoy the movie, I think, between action and cut. He said, “That’s when I have a good time.” But he really didn’t enjoy the parts in between, which is most of the time. He wasn’t wildly taken with the script in the first place. I don’t think he loved the idea of being that guy. I think he thought: “There’s a lot of things I don’t like about this man and I’m not sure I want to live as him.”

    Also, I was very young. He was shy and reserved, though he could also get quite explosive. We didn’t know each other well. Sometimes, when we had conflict, we often had open conversations about what just happened. And I felt like I learned so much about him in those times. And he would often become much more gentle.

    I don’t want to assume a great friendship because I don’t think he would have ever have referred to our relationship (laughs) in those terms. But I really liked him. He just carried so much tension and he used in the work, but it was sometimes bordering on a little abusive, especially to me. (Laughs)

    AP: Given how good he is in the film, it makes me wonder if the best parts for actors are the ones they resist.

    ANDERSON: I think that’s the case sometimes. When he saw the movie, he told me, “I didn’t understand what we were making.” But he totally understood it when he saw the movie. It worked for him. He liked it, and I think he liked what he had done it. I later thought: I wish I had paused for three days of shooting, edited some of the scenes carefully and then shown him: Here’s what you’re doing and here’s what we’re doing. I think maybe if I had done that, we might have had a gentler time.

    AP: You’ve managed to continue making movies for adults at some scale when hardly anyone can do that. Are you happy to avoid the changes in the industry or do they concern you?

    ANDERSON: The path that I’ve had as a movie director, I don’t know if that’s totally available right now. I don’t know if the kind of movies I started out making would have been made on the same scale or with the same support or with any audience available. To get to the point where I can make the movies I make I now, I just don’t know what route that would take. I think some things have changed fundamentally. But I’m not 25 years younger than myself, so I just do what I do.

    ___

    Jake Coyle has covered the Cannes Film Festival since 2012. He’s previously interviewed Wes Anderson in Cannes about “Asteroid City” and “The French Dispatch.”

    ___

    For more coverage of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Share this @internewscast.com
    FacebookXRedditPinterest
    You May Also Like
    Astronomer CEO resigns after Coldplay 'kiss cam' scandal
    • Local news

    CEO of Astronomy Organization Steps Down Following Controversial Coldplay ‘Kiss Cam’ Incident

    Data analytics company Astronomer announced on Saturday that its CEO has stepped…
    • Internewscast
    • July 19, 2025
    Man arrested on several counts of sexual exploitation
    • Local news

    Individual Detained for Multiple Charges of Sexual Exploitation

    The Jasper County Sheriff’s Office (JCSO) Special Victims Unit apprehended a suspect…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025
    ICE arrests top 100K under Trump
    • Local news

    ICE to Gain Access to National Medicaid Data: Key Information

    () The personal health information of 79 million people will soon be…
    • Internewscast
    • July 19, 2025
    Culver's to open 22 new restaurants in 11 states
    • Local news

    Culver’s Plans Expansion with 22 New Locations Across 11 States

    (NEXSTAR) Wisconsinites and their neighbors are no strangers to the beloved Butter…
    • Internewscast
    • July 19, 2025
    Is cane sugar healthier than high-fructose corn syrup?
    • Local news

    Is cane sugar a healthier choice compared to high-fructose corn syrup?

    () President Donald Trump’s announcement Wednesday that Coca-Cola will switch from high-fructose…
    • Internewscast
    • July 19, 2025
    Noem touts 'worst of the worst' arrests in recent ICE raids
    • Local news

    Noem Highlights Arrests in Recent ICE Raids Targeting ‘Worst of the Worst’

    () Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem held a news conference Friday to…
    • Internewscast
    • July 19, 2025
    Vietnam tour boat survivor describes his escape
    • Local news

    Vietnam Boat Tragedy: Survivor Shares Harrowing Escape Story

    HA LONG BAY – A Vietnamese man who survived the capsizing of…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025
    Monticello man pleads guilty, sentenced in fatal hit and run
    • Local news

    Danville Resident Acquitted of 2023 First-Degree Murder Charges

    DANVILLE, Ill. (WCIA) — A Danville man, aged 33, has been acquitted…
    • Internewscast
    • July 19, 2025

    Woman Detained as Authorities Investigate Baby’s Drowning in Chicago Lake

    CHICAGO (WGN) A Chicago woman was taken into custody Saturday morning, and…
    • Internewscast
    • July 19, 2025
    Trump administration imposes limits on Mexican flights and threatens Delta alliance in trade dispute
    • Local news

    Trump’s team restricts Mexican flights, jeopardizing Delta partnership amid trade conflict

    The Trump administration introduced new flight restrictions from Mexico on Saturday and…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025
    Motocross to take over Champaign County Fair
    • Local news

    Motocross Event Set to Dominate Champaign County Fair

    URBANA, Ill. (WCIA) — Shortly, the roar of motorcycle engines will echo…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025
    Storm Team 3: Another Very Hot Day Sunday
    • Local news

    Weather Update: Expect Another Scorching Day on Sunday

    On Saturday in Savannah, GA, temperatures soared, reaching the mid to upper…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025

    Tsunami Alerts Announced Following 7.4 Magnitude Earthquake Near Russian Coast

    TSUNAMI alerts have been issued following two powerful earthquakes in the Pacific.…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025
    Anker Nebula X1 review: a terrific home theater that goes anywhere
    • Tech

    Anker Nebula X1 Review: A Fantastic Portable Home Theater Experience

    I rarely sleep in the same spot for more than a few…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025
    Memory cafes at the National Comedy Center ignite laughter and connection for dementia patients
    • US

    Dementia-Friendly Memory Cafés Spark Joy and Laughter at the National Comedy Center

    JAMESTOWN, N.Y. (AP) — Seated together on a couch at the National…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025
    JCPD: 1 injured, man arrested following downtown shooting
    • Local news

    JCPD: One Person Injured, Suspect Arrested After Shooting in Downtown

    JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (WJHL) — An investigation is underway following a shooting…
    • Internewscast
    • July 20, 2025
    Internewscast Journal
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA Notice
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Guest Post
    • Support Our Cause
    Copyright 2023. All Right Reserverd.