Wes Anderson


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© Twentieth Century Fox France

American Director, Actor, Producer, Executive producer, Screenwriter

Born May 1, 1969 in Huston, Texas (USA)

Currently appearing in : Fantastic Mr. Fox

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Filmography

My Best Friend Project (Coming soon)

Director


Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)


This movie is showing in 439 cinema(s)

Director


The Darjeeling Limited (2007)

Director


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Biography

Texas filmmaker Wes Anderson cut his directing teeth making Super 8mm movies with his brothers and went on to cable access television before meeting frequent collaborator Owen Wilson at the University of Texas in the late 1980s. The two made their film debut with the 1992 short "Bottle Rocket", a sparse, black and white film about two young burglars starring Wilson and his younger brother Luke. Championed by screenwriter-actor-director L. M. 'Kit' Carson and screened to acclaim on the festival circuit, the project gained the attention of producers Polly Platt and James L. Brooks and Columbia Pictures eventually offered Anderson a $6 million budget to fashion a full-length version of the story. Following two Texans who try their hand at a life of crime in search of some focus or sense of belonging, the 1996 film (co-scripted with Owen Wilson and co-starring both Owen and Luke Wilson) bombed at test screenings and opened to mostly positive critical notices but disappointing box office numbers. Weird, warm and at times riotously funny, the quirky, atmospheric piece didn't connect with most moviegoers but it found a devout cult audience, even earning a place on esteemed filmmaker Martin Scorsese's list of the best films of the 1990s. Anderson had already found his voice with "Bottle Rocket", his evocative use of color and music making the film something of a transcendence for those who caught on, while the feature also effectively launched the careers of stars Luke and Owen Wilson.
Anderson's second feature effort "Rushmore" (1998) was afforded about twice the budget of "Bottle Rocket" despite its predecessor's relative failure. With this film, Anderson and Owen Wilson revisited the misguided but tenacious enthusiasm espoused by "Bottle Rocket"'s Dignan. In "Rushmore" the well-meaning maniac in question was fifteen-year old Max Fischer (Jason Schwartzman), a prep-school student with an overwhelming slate of extracurricular activities but lackluster grades who loves first grade teacher Miss Cross (Olivia Williams) almost as much as he loves the titular school itself. Max's journey of friendship (relationships with Bill Murray's bemused businessman and Mason Gamble's earnest and wise fourth grader blur the line between mentor and mentored), loss and self-awareness is handled with both an unwavering eye and palpable affection, the audience learning to love him as they note his missteps. Full of the kind of singularly evocative and empathetic moments (most tied inextricably to the seminal soundtrack) that have set Anderson apart from his contemporaries from the beginning, "Rushmore" reached a much wider audience than "Bottle Rocket", bringing in over $17 million in box-office grosses and becoming a favorite of many critics and movie fans alike.
Anderson's next project "The Royal Tenenbaums" was set in NYC, the filmmaker's adopted home since 1999. A story about a family of child prodigies who never reach their potential, the film boasted Anderson's most impressive cast, with Gene Hackman as the eponymous patriarch, Anjelica Huston as the graceful mother, Danny Glover as her gentlemanly suitor, Ben Stiller, Gwyneth Paltrow and regular Luke Wilson as the three siblings in a state of arrested genius and Owen Wilson, Bill Murray and Anderson's unlikely staple Kumar Pallana (an Austin yoga instructor who befriended Anderson and the Wilsons and has appeared in every feature) with fully-realized supporting turns. Continuing to use music and setting as characters in and of themselves, Anderson outdid himself. Breathtaking moments between strangely attracted siblings Margot (Paltrow) and Richie (Luke Wilson) were created through precise employment of music (including Nico's "These Days" and The Rolling Stones' "She Smiled Sweetly") and a perfectly restrained touch while Anderson's Manhattan is hyperbolic, almost cartoonish, a New York City where New Yorkers are from pages of The New Yorker, all cabs are dispatched by the Gypsy Cab Co. and people swim and stay at the 375th St Y. Mixing the colorful characters with hyperrealistic surroundings, Anderson succeeded in setting the scene and bringing his script to life though mixed critical reception seemed to indicate that the film didn't resonate with people quite the way "Rushmore" had.
Anderson continued to explore large ensembles of extremely quirky characters, if less successfully, in his next outing, the offbeat comedy "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou" (2004). A half-serious, half-cartoonish exporation of a famed oceanographer/filmmaker (Bill Murray) whose fading fortunes and increasing ennui are reversed when he adds his possible son (Owen Wilson) to his crew and embarks on a quest to kill the "jaguar shark" who ate his best friend. The film reunited Anderson regulars Murray, Wilson and Anjelica Huston (as Zissou's estranged wife) with a well-selected new crew of players including Cate Blanchett as a pregnant journalist caught in a love triangle between the Zissou men, Jeff Goldblum as Zissou's rival, Willem Defoe as Zissou's emotionally threatened right-hand man. Anderson's whimsical touched including a very 1970s vision of oceangraphic technology, a menagerie of imagined exotic undersea life and a crewman who regularly warbles David Bowie hits in French as he strums his guitar, but while the film had many moments of comic brilliance and emotionally resonant moments it did not quite reach the creative heights of his earlier efforts.

Wes Anderson on the news reel

47 Ronin Finds Director


Universal in talks with Ridley Scott protégé Carl Erik Rinsch

18 November 2009 - Screenrush.co.uk

London Film Festival: Day One


Foxes, badgers, Clooney and Murray kick off the annual cinematic shindig in style...

15 October 2009 - Screenrush.co.uk

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Trailers

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Films Out Now


2012

2012

 (15)

Dir. Roland Emmerich
Starring John Cusack, Chiwetel Ejiofor

Currently showing in 466 cinemas
Trailer | Pics
Fantastic Mr. Fox

Fantastic Mr. Fox

 (PG)

Dir. Wes Anderson
Starring George Clooney, Meryl Streep

Currently showing in 439 cinemas
Trailer | Pics
Pixar's Up

Pixar's Up

 (U)

Dir. Pete Docter, Bob Peterson
Starring Edward Asner, Jordan Nagai

Currently showing in 436 cinemas
Trailer | Pics

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Hannah Montana: The Movie


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Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs


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Bandslam


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The White Ribbon


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Upcoming Films


Paranormal Activity

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Out: November 25, 2009

Dir. Oren Peli
Starring Katie Featherston, Micah Sloat

Where The Wild Things Are

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Out: December 11, 2009

Dir. Spike Jonze
Starring Max Records, Catherine Keener

Clash of the Titans

Clash of the Titans


Out: March 26, 2010

Dir. Louis Leterrier
Starring Sam Worthington, Gemma Arterton

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - part 1


Out: November 19, 2010

Dir. David Yates
Starring Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson

Invictus

Invictus


Out: February 05, 2010

Dir. Clint Eastwood
Starring Morgan Freeman, Matt Damon

Planet 51

Planet 51


Out: December 04, 2009

Dir. Jorge Blanco
Starring Dwayne Johnson, Jessica Biel

Nine

Nine


Out: December 18, 2009

Dir. Rob Marshall
Starring Daniel Day-Lewis, Nicole Kidman

Upcoming Films
More films coming soon



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