New York Post

Wes should try doing more with a lot less

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Owen Wilson bikes around an old European town at the start of the new movie “The French Dispatch.” Meanwhile, his director, Wes Anderson, is backpedali­ng big time.

After a stretch of dry, high style, low-soul movies in the aughts such as “The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou” and “The Darjeeling Limited,” Anderson again found his footing in the ’10s with the wondrous “Moonrise Kingdom” and the Best Picture Oscar nominee “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”

Unfortunat­ely, in the ’20s, he has reverted back to chipping at ponderous on-screen ice sculptures.

The film’s title references a New Yorker-like magazine in the fake city of Ennui-sur-Blasé, France (hon! hon! hon!). Its wise editor Arthur Howitzer Jr. (Bill Murray) oversees a group of difficult, strong-minded, talented writers with pretentiou­s names such as Herbsaint Sazerac (Wilson), J.K.L. Berensen (Tilda Swinton), Lucinda Krementz (Frances McDormand) and Roebuck Wright (Jeffrey Wright).

Nobody gives a memorable performanc­e.

For the five readers who cherish movies about journalist­s, there are a couple decent jokes about these divas going over their word count and that sort of thing. Otherwise it’s not so much a paean to writers as it is a pain to witness.

Anderson’s film is told via a prologue and three episodes that bring to life the quirky publicatio­n’s stories. They just barely engage the audience as we watch the director’s entire mobile phone contact list show up for about 15 seconds each.

So many actors make cameos here that I’d forgotten Saoirse Ronan, Willem Dafoe, Jason Schwartzma­n and Liev Schreiber were even in it until right now. The A-list orgy is emblematic of the movie’s complete lack of investment and cohesion in service of a Euro vibe.

We Wes fans (“The Royal Tenenbaums” is a film I believe everyone should see once in their life) have been aggressive­ly pulled in many directions, great and terrible, by his indulgence­s over the years. And we’re still willing to go along for the ride.

But it’s high time he starts culling his ensemble. There’s no actual acting in his movies anymore.

Running time: 108 minutes. Rated R (graphic nudity, some sexual references and language). In theaters.

— Johnny Oleksinski

 ?? ?? Tilda Swinton is one of so many esteemed actors in “The French Dispatch.”
Tilda Swinton is one of so many esteemed actors in “The French Dispatch.”

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