We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode The Phoenician Scheme

The Phoenician Scheme

2025/6/9
logo of podcast Pop Culture Happy Hour

Pop Culture Happy Hour

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
C
Chris Klimek
G
Glenn Weldon
P
Parker
参与 Ramsey Network 的财务和生活问题讨论
Topics
Glenn Weldon: 作为韦斯·安德森的粉丝,我认为《腓尼基计划》具备了他作品的所有标志性元素,如精彩的演员阵容、风格化的摄影和精彩的对话。虽然不是每个人都喜欢他的风格,但我个人非常欣赏他创造的独特美学。然而,这部电影在情感深度上有所欠缺,缺乏像《小行星城》那样能够引发深刻思考的场景。此外,影片对主角 Zsa Zsa Korda 的道德救赎处理方式也引发了我的思考,他作为一个军火商和奴隶贩子,是否应该如此轻易地被原谅? Chris Klimek: 我基本上喜欢《腓尼基计划》,韦斯·安德森非常稳定和一致,他完美地定义了他自己的审美。即使有些人不喜欢他的电影,他创造的美学风格也是独一无二的。虽然这部电影可能不是我最喜欢的韦斯·安德森作品,但我相信它会像他其他的电影一样,在多次观看后变得更好。不过,我也同意这部电影缺乏情感深度,没有像他之前的作品那样触及到失去和遗憾的核心。 Parker: 我认为《腓尼基计划》对于韦斯·安德森的电影来说表现平平,它在美学上非常精致,但情感上却有些空洞。虽然影片触及了一些存在主义的问题,但这些问题并没有得到深入的探讨。我喜欢韦斯·安德森创造的演员阵容,尤其是迈克尔·塞拉的表现非常出色。总的来说,我希望这部电影能够更进一步,在美学之外探索更深层次的主题。

Deep Dive

Chapters
The hosts discuss Wes Anderson's latest film, _The Phoenician Scheme_, and its place within his filmography. They acknowledge that not everyone appreciates Anderson's style, but for those who do, they consider where it ranks amongst his other works. The discussion touches upon the film's unique aesthetic and consistent quality.
  • The Phoenician Scheme is considered a classic Wes Anderson film by some.
  • The film features Anderson's signature style, including stylized cinematography and heightened dialogue.
  • The hosts debate whether Anderson's work is more iterative or innovative.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

This message comes from Discover, accepted at 99% of places that take credit cards nationwide. If you don't think so, maybe it's time to face facts. You're stuck in the past. Based on the February 2024 Nielsen Report. More at discover.com slash credit card. ♪

Wes Anderson's new film, The Phoenician Scheme, is a classic Wes Anderson, really. For those of us who love his stuff, it gives us everything we're looking for in his idiosyncratic approach to filmmaking. It's got a great cast delivering heightened dialogue. It's got stylized cinematography. It's got a great cast

Look, it's Wes Anderson. You know the drill. Not everyone loves what he does. We should acknowledge that, of course. But if you do, where does the Phoenician scheme rank among all the films he's made? I'm Glenn Weldon, and joining me on NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour to talk about all that is B.A. Parker. She's one of the hosts of NPR's Code Switch podcast. Hey, Parker. Hello. Welcome back. Also with us is writer Chris Klimek. Hey, Chris. Hey, Glenn. Myself, I feel very safe.

There we go. The Phoenician Scheme is set in the 1950s and stars Benicio del Toro as Zsa Zsa Korda, one of Europe's richest men and amoral industrialist. Normal people want the basic human rights that accompany citizenship in any sovereign nation. I don't. I don't live anywhere. I'm not a citizen at all.

I don't need my human rights. His latest venture is a massive infrastructure project in someplace called Modern Greater Independent Phoenicia. He's got lots of business partners in this scheme, played by a series of Anderson favorites like Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Riz Ahmed, and Jeffrey Wright.

What's more, he's been experiencing weird spiritual near-death visions, which may explain why he summoned his daughter Liesel to his side. She's played by Mia Threpleton. They have a fraught relationship. He sent her to a convent when she was five. She's now a nun in training. And Zsa Zsa appoints her his successor. They travel with Zsa Zsa's young entomology tutor, trying to convince his business partners to cough up more dough, even as they dodge repeated attempts on Zsa Zsa's life.

That tutor, by the way, is played by Wes Anderson first-timer Michael Cera.

bringing with him a sort of cosmic sense of filmmaker-actor inevitability, really. The Phoenician Scheme is in theaters now. Chris, kick us off. What'd you make of it? Well, would it kill Wes Anderson to make a bad movie once in a while just to give us something to talk about? He's very steady. He's very consistent. And I come in regretting that there isn't something more incendiary or exciting that I can say other than I basically liked it. Okay. I like Wes Anderson. This is a guy who has defined his own aesthetic perfectly.

I'd call it inimitable if other people had not imitated it to great effect sometimes. Thinking of that Saturday Night Live horror movie Wes Anderson trailer from a few years back. There will be a temptation to say like, oh, he's just iterating, right? He's not innovating. But when you create your own aesthetic that is instantly recognizable, I would argue even to people who...

dislike his films or maybe haven't even seen his films, that is a triumph. I don't think this is my favorite Wes Anderson film. But on the other hand, another unique feature of his entire filmography is I've never had one of his films go down in my estimation when I've seen it a second time. They've only ever gone up, even movies that didn't really grab me initially. My question after this one, where's the grief?

Do you remember, Glenn, a certain fast food chain that used a slogan that rhymes with, where's the grief? I see what you did there. Because in every Wes Anderson movie, we're usually circling around to a core of loss, of regret, some somber undercurrent beneath all of these wonderful jokes, visual jokes, verbal jokes, set pieces.

Keith Phipps pointed this out in his review on his sub stack, The Reveal, that he shares with Scott Tobias about how this Wes Anderson movie does not have a point like the balcony scene from Asteroid City, where we get a very brief but profound kind of summing up of everything that the rest of the movie is swimming in.

This film, even though it is, you know, yes, there are many of his familiar themes. There's a father-daughter reconciliation. There's a sort of amoral guy, arguably maybe becoming a slightly more human person. But it doesn't all come together in that profound, recognizable way. So I enjoyed it very much. But yeah, I'm left with that question that Wendy's asked us in 1984. Where's the grief? I mean, you say recognizable. Some would say human. Where's the human connection here?

But what do you think, Parker? I mean, I thought for a Wes Anderson film, it was right down the middle. Like, it is very taut. Like, he has a very specific aesthetic that is, at this point, he's like a well-oiled machine when it comes to how his world and how these films are constructed. He's like a sentient corduroy shoe. Like, I know what I'm getting. But it's also just like I wanted more.

It's so, like, tightly orchestrated, but also rang a bit hollow for me because there is, like, this very surface-level approach to what we were experiencing, even though, you know, there are, like, these existential questions that are hovering over this, like, very taut story. Yeah, look, I think...

I think going forward, I may need to recuse myself from reviewing Wes Anderson films because I certainly don't think they're critique proof. I don't think that. I kind of feel like they might be critic proof if the critic in question is me. I mean, I don't know. I have been reading these reviews, which are very mixed. And, you know, that's happened over the years. A lot of his reviews are mixed. And I nod my head vigorously whenever I, you know, hear from any detractor. Right. I get what they're saying. He's mannered. He's twee.

He's fussy. His films are puzzle boxes or dioramas. They're contrived. They're emotionally cold. I would say this film goes further than being cold. I think it's kind of emotionally Kelvin Zero for me. There's also something a little self-satisfied in his films, right? A little patrician, elitist, snooty maybe. But I am a sucker not for necessarily these individual films but for the pursuit of

That's involved. Does that make sense? Like the construct of it all. Yeah. I mean, we both talked about it. The intellectual and aesthetic pursuit of creating this very singular world. This facade. People ding the facade. I like this little pocket universe that he and only he exists in. And when I read, you know, that critics and regular Joe is complaining about how there's a sameness here. I mean, Miyazaki has a sameness. Like this is the sandbox this guy's playing in. Yeah. As you both alluded to, he's his own genre. Yeah.

So you get the bad dad, the disillusioned daughter, the fumbling suitor, the mannered speech, the stillness, the symmetry. Fine. But you know what? In opera, they sing a lot. So I can't – this is why I feel like I might need to just remove myself from –

The critical pursuit of reviewing these films just because, I mean, I wouldn't place this. That's it. I wouldn't place this in my top five, maybe not even my top ten. This is a comedy. I didn't laugh once. That's got to. I did laugh. I mean, I did have a big goofy grin on my face throughout. And if I had to point or try to figure out why, maybe it was that the plot device at the center of this particular film, which is visiting each investor one at a time, is

was so mechanical because it's a device, right? That it doesn't even faint toward what the notion that plot grows out of character and real human interaction. It just feels like infrastructure laid over top of structure, right?

I don't know. I just rolled over and wanted it to scratch my tummy, and it did. Yeah, I'm wearing my Wes Anderson character T-shirt here, and I noticed when I put it on that there is actually a loose thread hanging out to one side, which I feel was the kind of thing that should not exist in the Wes Anderson universe. I mean, I agree in that it's like pizza. You can never go wrong with any kind of pizza. Controversial opinion, I don't care for Grand Budapest Hotel. Sure. I love the French Dispatch. Okay. And also, I'm fully aware that

I am not the target audience for a Wes Anderson film as, you know, a young black woman. I go see them anyway. There is an earnestness in the pursuit. I love that he's created this kind of actor's gang that he can rely on time and time again, which I mean, side note,

I'm so shocked that this is Michael Cera's first time in a Wes Anderson film when he fits so perfectly in that universe. And like, you know, a younger me was like, oh, this reminds me of him in like Youth and Revolt. This is so cool. He was the most delightful part of the film for me and the part that shone the most because he gets to have...

The most fun, I think, besides maybe Bryan Cranston and Tom Hanks playing basketball. But I can also want more. You know what? As a person who, like, I know that he is currently in his mid-century short story bag. It's like he wants to be in, like, John Cheever and Roald Dahl.

And you know what? Live your life, but also, you know, you can have your aesthetic, but also move that aesthetic forward. Do you feel like he has been locked in and stuck in this aesthetic spot? He can't grow it? The mid-century thing is something I wanted to bring up, because I was trying to think about when the last time Wes Anderson made a film set in the present day was. And even, you know...

like the present of Rushmore or Tenenbaums. Yeah, like it still never feels like our present, right? It does feel like this hermetic world. But, you know, this film is set in the 50s. Asteroid City is in the same period. That might be telling in a way, right? It's just, it's another level of remove, another fantasy, right? Because it's, the past is,

It's a foreign country. You know, it's beyond all of us, right? We can't get there. We certainly can't. Okay. So after the break, we'll talk about some of the standout performances.

This message comes from Rinse, who asks, who does your laundry? Simplify your life by having Rinse do it for you. With one touch in-app scheduling, pickup and delivery are effortless. Your clothes come back fresh, folded, and ready to wear, handled by laundry experts who get every detail right. Rinse combines human care with seamless technology to make laundry and dry cleaning the easiest part of your week. Sign up at rinse.com and save $20 on your first order.

This message comes from Capital One. Your business requires commercial banking solutions that prioritize your long-term success. With Capital One, get a full suite of financial products and services tailored to meet your needs today and goals for tomorrow. Learn more at CapitalOne.com slash commercial. Member FDIC.

This message comes from Thuma. Create your oasis with Thuma, a modern design company that specializes in furniture and home goods. By stripping away everything but the essential, Thuma makes elevated beds with premium materials and intentional details. With clean lines, subtle curves, and minimalist style, the Thuma bed collection is available in four signature finishes to match any design aesthetic.

To get $100 towards your first bed purchase, go to thuma.co.npr. This message comes from BetterHelp. June is Men's Mental Health Month, and every year, 6 million men in the U.S. suffer from depression. If you're feeling overwhelmed, the strongest thing you can do is ask for help, and BetterHelp can make it easy.

Take a short online quiz and connect from home with a qualified therapist. Visit BetterHelp.com slash NPR today to get 10% off your first month. That's BetterHelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash NPR.

Welcome back. Look, there's going to be a lot of people talking about how – just was your point, Parker – Michael Cera seems like he's always been in a Wes Anderson film, like he brings a bit of Wes Anderson to every project he's in. Yeah. He's always been the caretaker at The Overlook, right? Yeah.

But I want to talk a little bit about Riz Ahmed in this film. This is also his first Anderson film, and that is not a pairing I saw coming because Ahmed to me is a much more, I don't know, bodied, emotionally available creature of physicality. He's got such emotional power.

vulnerability and soulfulness. I think that was a part that called for an actor that has his kind of presence. You know that he's a prince, he's a regal figure. More or less. I mean, I think he has the right kind of presence for that, truly. It's not a showcase for him the way something like Sound of Metal is, of course, but I think he is well deployed here. I actually love the brief Cranston and Hank segment as these two potential investors are just a couple of jocks.

who want to settle this question of who's going to pay for the gap, the floating financial loss that is sort of the MacGuffin in this movie with a little two-on-two scenario

B-ball. I don't know who I think it was secretly a jock maybe in their former life, maybe Cranston, but I thought all that was very funny and I was here for it. British actor Richard Ayoade, he plays the terrorist leader Sergio. He was in Wes Anderson's universe before in the short film The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, but that is another guy who it makes me happy to

that I didn't realize there was a Richard Ayoade-shaped hole in the Wes Anderson filmography, and that has been filled. This is a guy who feels like he belongs here. Let's talk about Mia Threpleton, because, I mean, this is the first thing I've really seen her in. She is playing a familiar Anderson type of the kind of disillusioned, laconic woman, young woman. Yeah, she's kind of the Margot Tenenbaum in this, right? I think she, as the nun, like...

I thought she was funny. I thought her face had such presence.

that when you're a nun and your habit is covering everything, but, like, you have to have a face card to be able to do what Wes Anderson wants. That's right. I felt like she was really going toe-to-toe with Benicio Del Toro character, which can, like, in the pantheon of disaffected patriarchs who needed to grow a heart. Like, this is, like, royal and Margot Tenenbaum. You need someone to be able to be that mirror for that.

Yeah, Anderson seems to pick up a new player, you know, with each film, even if it's someone who's, like in the case of Benicio Del Toro, who really comes on his own in the Anderson company with this film, he was in the French Dispatch, but in a much smaller, much less verbal role. Mm-hmm.

You know, so here's the guy this time in the same way like we picked up Tom Hanks in Asteroid City and carry him along. And I, you know, I love that. I hope we'll get another, you know, small but memorable part for him in the next Wes Anderson movie. But for me, yeah, I did not have any prior sense of Miss Thruppleton. I hadn't seen her in anything before. I thought she was great, but I wasn't bringing in any baggage the way I am with Benicio del Toro, who, I mean, he was in The Usual Suspects 30 years ago. I mean...

Dude's been around, you know, and I feel like he was still showing me something of him that I hadn't seen from him before in this. No, I was thinking about that when I was watching it. There was a scene where it's like Tim and Jeffrey Wright and I immediately think of Basquiat. And I was like, oh, these two like incredible character actors in a totally different world are having this moment. And I was really excited about that.

There is a thread to this film that we haven't talked about yet, which is about Zsa Zsa's visions of heaven. This group of actors that we see up there as the biblical troop. There's a prophet. There's an angel. There's Zsa Zsa's dead first wife. I was surprised by that. And at first I thought it was a bit. And it kind of – it's not not a bit, right? I mean, like, I think of him as a ruthlessly secular filmmaker. Yeah.

Do those moments come off like a bit or do they come off as sincere ultimately for you? I mean, I think that along with Asteroid City where there's like the acting troupe who's trying to have this like existential earnest conversation that's happening in black and white. And I feel like that's

kind of happening here where maybe like Anderson is trying to figure out something for himself and we're just all along for the ride. So I went along with it as like an earnest pursuit. Even if that is where we get like an earnest Anderson, that's where we get like,

grief and all that, but it has to be a step removed and in black and white for him to be able to capture it and understand it. I feel like questions of sincerity kind of don't apply to Wes Anderson. You know, I would don't think he's ever put a frame of anything that he doesn't fully believe in on screen. The technical mastery, the aesthetic stuff like that, he means that with his whole heart. So asking, you know, whether like these little interstitial sequences that are, you know, for example, black and white in a film that's otherwise color, whether it's

he's really bearing his soul to us or whether he's being, you know, ironic or distant or mocking. Like I just, no, I feel like he means all of it. The reason I'm asking about these visions of heaven is that they feed into what is at the end of the day, a redemption arc for this main character who is a billionaire and

He's a munitions guy. He is active in a slave trade. Is this a protagonist for today? Is this somebody we can kind of get behind? Is this supposed to be what we're supposed to get behind? I mean, we're kind of stuck in the world of like, I'm thinking of like the White Lotus and Succession, where it's rich people behaving the way that they behave. And we kind of like get on the bus or off it. But like,

maybe that's evolving, maybe things are changing and we, and like, maybe this is like the tipping point and we're, we're,

less likely to embrace these kind of characters. But I also think that's going to, that might limit Anderson's storytelling. Yeah, because it does seem like this is a bit further than we've gotten before, right? We've had irascible grumps like Royal Tenenbaum. We've had bad guys. We've had bad dads aplenty. Have we had murderers? Have we had murderers?

I mean, I'm thinking about where did the whole Marvel project start off? And it started with Iron Man, right? Which was a story of an arms dealer and a guy who, you know, has a, you know, forced into a moral awakening and tries to make amends by being a superhero, I guess. And, you know, in sort of predictable fashion, Zsa Zsa Korda, he does get his comeuppance. So, you know, we can ask whether that is a reflection of his own inner moral evolution or just of, you know, circumstances being...

imposed upon him. But again, I don't think the movie has to tell us that. I think it's okay for us to make our own decision about that. Yeah. And to your point, maybe what I'm reacting to is events outside the film, right? Where billionaires are acting with impunity. And that doesn't seem to me like the kind of character, the kind of person who should get off

spoiler, as free as this guy gets off. Maybe that's it. And that's not fair to the film. I think what I disagree with you about is I don't think the film lets him off the hook in quite the way that you're suggesting. No! Oh, Parker, settle the difference here. Who's right? I think he gets what he gets. It's more about like

Like softening his heart than his wallet. And inevitably, he gets both. Yeah. I mean, I get what you're saying. Look, this is a very dense film. We have a lot to unpack here. There's only so much we can get to. There's this whole thread about Liesel's mother's death we haven't really touched on.

Listeners, I feel like we've only just loosened the lid of the jar. Now it's your turn to tell us what you think about the Phoenician scheme. Find us on Facebook at facebook.com slash p-c-h-h and on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com slash nprpopculture. We'll have a link in our episode description. And that brings us to the end of our show. BA partner Chris Klimek, thank you so much for being here.

Thank you, Glenn. Thanks for having me. This episode was produced by Hafsa Fathima and Mike Katzeff and edited by our showrunner, Jessica Reedy. Audio engineering was performed by Sina Lafredo and Hello Come In provides our theme music. Thanks for listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. I'm Glenn Weldon and we'll see you all next time. This message comes from Thrive Market. The food industry is a multi-billion dollar industry, but not everything on the shelf is made with your health in mind.

At Thrive Market, they go beyond the standards, curating the highest quality products for you and your family while focusing on organic first and restricting more than 1,000 harmful ingredients. All shipped to your door. Shop at a grocery store that actually cares for your health at thrivemarket.com slash podcast for 30% off your first order plus a $60 free gift.

This message comes from Thrive Market. The food industry is a multi-billion dollar industry, but not everything on the shelf is made with your health in mind.

At Thrive Market, they go beyond the standards, curating the highest quality products for you and your family while focusing on organic first and restricting more than 1,000 harmful ingredients. All shipped to your door. Shop at a grocery store that actually cares for your health at thrivemarket.com slash podcast for 30% off your first order plus a $60 free gift.