![]() ![]() And saving the best ’til last, ‘The Private Dining Room Of The Police Commissioner’ sees Jeffrey Wright’s food writer Roebuck Wright profiling genius chef Nescaffier (Stephen Park), who becomes embroiled in a kidnap plot involving a police commissioner’s ( Mathieu Almaric) son, gangsters and an underworld accountant known as The Abacus ( Willem Dafoe). Wes Andersons new film is based on articles of a fictional magazine published in a fictional city in France. The middle (least satisfying) episode, ‘Revisions To A Manifesto’, mixes Godardian radicalism and Truffaut-style romance as essay writer Lucinda Krementz ( Frances McDormand) begins an affair with student Zeffirelli ( Timothée Chalamet) during the tumult of May 1968. ![]() Berensen, ‘The Concrete Masterpiece’ tells the engaging tale of convicted murderer Moses Rosenthaler ( Benicio Del Toro), who uses prison guard Simone ( Léa Seydoux) as a nude model and muse, catching the eye of dealer Julien Cadazio ( Adrien Brody). Relayed by Tilda Swinton’s art correspondent J.K.L. Reviews The French Dispatch is peak Wes Anderson. Then we are into the first feature proper. Wes Andersons THE FRENCH DISPATCH brings to life a collection of stories from the final issue of an American magazine published in the fictional 20th-century French city of Ennui-sur-Blase. 4.29 196 ratings29 reviews THE NEW FILM FROM WES ANDERSON The French Dispatch brings to life a collection of stories from the final issue of an American magazine published in a fictional 20th-century French city. A rare Wes Anderson film that flirts with the real world, engaging with politics, sex and violence. ![]()
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