There are a few moments of true meaning and poignancy to be found in each story, brief interludes when Anderson drops all the artisanal mugging and speaks more plainly. The third is a crime caper involving a police officer’s son and the professional chef who cooks for the gendarmerie. Another concerns a brash young radical and his vaguely defined cause. One is about a mentally ill murderer ( Benicio del Toro) who happens to be a brilliant artist. The film is divided into sections, with three separate stories taking up most of the space. It’s an odd tribute, one premised mostly on Anderson’s youthful imagination of these imperious literary lives instead of anything so complicated and grownup as humanity. Anderson turns his apparent heroes into bundles of quirk, making their work seem silly and mannered rather than probing. A James Baldwin stand-in ( Jeffrey Wright) is merely a loquacious dandy with no political context, and no sense of the shape of his own writing. A brittle reporter ( Frances McDormand) sleeps with her young subject ( Timothée Chalamet) for inexplicable reasons. His fascination with New Yorker writers of old-to whom he dedicates the film in a closing title card-leads him to similarly empty places. But The French Dispatch abuses that investment, insisting that we watch it preen and digress and advertise its creator’s smarts while giving us little to care about. Of course, we generally hope for a certainty of style from auteurs-the whole point of a Wes Anderson movie is that it’s a Wes Anderson movie. Where Anderson’s past elaborate worlds have invited us in with all their cozy detail, The French Dispatch’s seems to haughtily sniff in our direction it doesn’t much care if we get it. The film-structured as an issue of a New Yorker-esque magazine-is fussy, ornate, difficult to grasp onto. And then there’s Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch, which isn’t about the filmmaker himself, but is intensely devoted to his personal fixations in a way that precludes outside engagement. Magnets make it easy to detach and reattach.This year’s Cannes has been filled with directorial self reflection: the memoir rumination of The Souvenir Part II, Mia Hansen-Løve’s meta mulling of her own craft in Bergman Island, Nadav Lapid’s similar filmmaker roman a clef in Ahed’s Knee. The other side is glossy and provides a clearer view of the monitor. With reversible viewing options, one side has a matte finish to reduce glare and fingerprints.Low reflective coating reduces glare from outside light sources for improved viewing clarity.Blue light reduction filters out harmful rays by up to 22%, easing eye strain and reducing the chances of blue light interrupting natural sleep patterns.
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