Teaching a course in part on the films on Wes Anderson in the lead-up to his latest release means a constant onslaught of online material, all of which I feel obligated to review with an eye toward passing it along to my students.
Above is the sort of thing I'd share. Although I wonder whether the maker was commissioned by Criterion or is providing free labor. [You know, for exposure!]
Below is an excerpt from the sort of thing that makes me gag. Never change, NYT!
And here is some safely middle-ground material, Vulture's conversation with music supervisor Randall Poster:
The Darjeeling Limited: Peter Sarstedt, "Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)?"
Jack Whitman (Jason Schwartzman) puts the 1969 song on when his ex (Natalie Portman) visits him in his hotel room in "Hotel Chevalier," the short film that acts as a prologue to Darjeeling. Jack then plays it again inDarjeeling when he's having a cigarette with train attendant Rita.
That's an example where it felt like it captured very closely what was going on inside the character's head.
Sometimes you have these emotions in life and even though they’re painful, you want to feel them as deeply as possible. The pain validates the obsession or your commitment to your idea of a person. That's what the song ultimately does. It helps drive the obsession and is sort of a beautiful pain that we sometimes find ourselves yearning for. To feel pain is to feel alive. The song drives at the obsessive nature of romance.
Or these Film4 Anderson intros The Playlist posted.
Good thing we're moving on to Sofia Coppola, who doesn't inspire slavish pop and academic writing as much as she does pieces on fashion or nepotism!