Cannes Film Festival 2013

Cannes Check: Wes Anderson's 'Moonrise Kingdom'

We kick off our series of Competition previews with the festival opener

<p>Edward Norton (left) in "Moonrise Kingdom."</p>

Edward Norton (left) in "Moonrise Kingdom."

Credit: Focus Features

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I'm not sure I'm ready for it, but yesterday's full lineup announcement brought home the fact that this year's Cannes Film Festival is less than a month away. It scarcely feels like a year ago that the likes of "The Artist," "The Tree of Life" and "Drive" entered our lives, but here we are, ready to welcome next batch of potential crossover hits, treasured obscurities and inevitable disappointments.

With that, welcome to our Cannes Check series, in which I'll individually preview each of the 22 titles in Competition. (Much as I'd love to give similar treatment to Un Certain Regard and other festival strands, I am but one man.) Same as last year, I'll be covering one film a day, in alphabetical order of the director's surname. Tidily enough, that means we're kicking off with the film that itself will be raising the curtain on this year's festival -- Wes Anderson's "Moonrise Kingdom."

The auteur: Wes Anderson (American, 42 years old)

The talent: We've come to expect all-star ensembles -- with a slightly mix-and-match flavor -- from Anderson's films. His latest is no exception. Regular Anderson lucky charms Bill Murray and Jason Schwartzman are joined by a host of A-listers you wouldn't necessarily expect to find in the same film: Bruce Willis, Tilda Swinton, Edward Norton, Frances McDormand, Harvey Keitel and Bob Balaban, as well as a pair of first-time child actors, Jared Gilman and Kara Hayward, in the putative lead roles. Roman Coppola, who co-wrote and co-produced "The Darjeeling Limited" in 2007, again had a hand in the script here, while super-producer Scott Rudin continues the partnership he's maintained with Anderson since "The Royal Tenenbaums" in 2001.

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Below the line, cinematographer Robert Yeoman, who has shot all of Anderson's live-action features, is once more on board -- and looks to have more to do here than he did on recent Hollywood assignments like "Bridesmaids." Editor Andrew Weisblum, fresh off an Oscar-nomination for "Black Swan," has been with Anderson since "The Darjeeling Limited"; a newer collaborator is ubiquitous composer Alexandre Desplat, who scored an Oscar nod for his first pairing with the director, "Fantastic Mr. Fox." Crucial newcomers, considering how much of Anderson's reputation rests on his films' design properties, are production designer Adam Stockhausen (promoted from art direction duty on "Darjeeling") and costume designer Kasia Walicka-Maimone.

The pitch: Wes Anderson's films are styled in such a way that they always evoke roughly the same milieu, regardless of when and where they're set, but this is an actual period piece. Set in small-town New England in the 1960s, it's an ensemble comedy sprouting from the story of two amorous kids (Gilman and Hayward) who decide to flee the island community they live in, prompting a town-wide search party to go after them. Bruce Willis plays the sheriff leading the search, Murray and McDormand play Hayward's parents, Norton plays Gilman's scout leader and Swinton evidently pops up as a social services worker. The premise promises much of the unhurried, digression-laden quirkiness that is Anderson's trademark, with a shot of woozy summer romance. It doesn't look like those who find his work precious -- in both the positive and negative senses of term -- will be given much cause to change their minds.

The pedigree: Considering his established arthouse brand and relative popularity in Europe, it might seem a little surprising that this is Anderson's first film to unspool at Cannes -- but then his auteur reputation is arguably heftier than his filmography of just six previous features. "The Darjeeling Limited," which played Venice (but won no prizes) in 2007, gave the director his only previous appointment at one of the European majors.

The buzz: Cannes organizers gave an already anticipated film a major profile boost by handing it the opening night slot, but that can be something of a poisoned chalice -- Woody Allen made good on the opportunity last year, but Cannes openers generally have a reputation for underwhelming, particularly when they're also in Competition. ("Moonrise Kingdom" is the first film to tick both boxes since "Blindness" in 2008; "My Blueberry Nights" is another unhappy precedent.) That said, the film makes perfect sense as a curtain-raiser, promising both lightweight fun and red-carpet star wattage; with any luck, like "Midnight in Paris," it'll prove an easily digestible appetizer for the heavier courses to follow. The trailer, meanwhile, has drawn the approximate levels of fluttery excitement and scepticism you'd expect for an Anderson film -- "Fantastic Mr. Fox" having earned back much of the critical goodwill lost by the coolly received "Darjeeling."

The odds: UK bookmakers Paddy Power have the film in midfield, giving it 16-1 odds of taking the Palme. Even that seems a tad generous, influenced more by name appeal than festival logic. Here, the opening-night slot is a drawback: with everything to follow, will the film stick in people's minds? Comedies rarely triumph at Cannes, and the film may strike the jury as too mainstream for top honors -- even if this year's president, Nanni Moretti, may be more inclined towards whimsy than most. Positive critical buzz, leading into the film's prompt release date of May 25, is really what Team Anderson is after.

For more views on movies, awards season and other pursuits, follow @GuyLodge on Twitter.

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Guy Lodge
Critic
Guy Lodge is a South African-born critic and sometime screenwriter. In addition to his work at In Contention, he is a freelance contributor to Variety, Time Out, Empire and The Guardian. He lives well beyond his means in London.

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  • Default-avatar

    Will

    I had forgotten that this was coming, and now I'm delighted. You guys do the festival coverage pretty much better than anyone else. Looking forward to the series of previews.

    April 20, 2012 at 1:24PM EST Reply to Comment
  • Default-avatar

    JuanL

    I have been waiting for these since yesterday! This series is always one of the most interesting and informative of the year. Thanks for your hard work Guy.

    April 20, 2012 at 2:22PM EST Reply to Comment
  • Default-avatar

    red_wine

    Looking forward to the entire series.

    Anderson is such a beloved writer (the Fox script was magnificent) that he might take screenplay but the Palm is out of question.

    April 20, 2012 at 2:47PM EST Reply to Comment
    • N25501058_36871357_8293821_talkback_profile

      Mykill I think that is a good prediction as well (for possible screenplay award) - but I agree that this isn't the type of film that is likely to win the Palme (nor the type of film that "needs" to win the Palme - since it pretty much already has a built in audience primed to see it upon release anyway.)

      April 21, 2012 at 12:50PM EST
  • Default-avatar

    jaydee

    next Jacques Audiard yeayy

    April 21, 2012 at 4:57AM EST Reply to Comment
  • N25501058_36871357_8293821_talkback_profile

    Mykill

    yes! Cannes Check is back! :^) As others have stated, this site does festival coverage like no other. This preview series, which you've mentioned in the past as basically being your preliminary "homework" about the films you are about to see, also serves as an excellent indicator of the films that we can look forward to being reviewed and getting excited about.

    I am glad that it worked out where the first film in alphabetical order was also the opening film of the festival (and one that I am most excited about as well.) I don't think it is going to win any of the majors at all, but that is still a high profile jumping off point for the film that will be a nice diversion from all the summer blockbusters. I personally loved The Darjeeling Limited, but Fantastic Mr. Fox was one of my favorite films of 2009 - so if Wes Anderson is continuing in that upward trajectory, then I am really pumped to see his newest film.

    April 21, 2012 at 12:45PM EST Reply to Comment
  • Default-avatar

    juan_josé_serrano

    Hopefully they'll name the company Weyland haha

    April 21, 2012 at 2:03PM EST Reply to Comment
  • Default-avatar

    Eren Odabasi

    Wonderful series, looking forward to the rest.
    But there is a slight mistake in the pedigree section. Tenenbaums and The Life Aquatic have both played in Berlin in their respective years. They were not exactly unspooled there but they were selected for competition.

    April 23, 2012 at 12:50PM EST Reply to Comment
    • Guypic_talkback_profile

      Guy Lodge Thanks so much. I don't know how the incorrect info stuck with me, particularly since IMDb gets it right too. Will correct.

      April 23, 2012 at 2:44PM EST

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2012-2013 OSCAR PREDICTIONS

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Best Picture

Best Director

Best Actor

Best Actress

Best Supporting Actor

Best Supporting Actress

Best Adapted Screenplay

Best Original Screenplay

Best Cinematography

Best Costume Design

Best Film Editing

Best Makeup And Hairstyling

Best Original Score

Best Original Song

Best Production Design

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Best Sound Mixing

Best Visual Effects

Best Animated Feature Film

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Best Foreign Language Film

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