San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

A Wes Anderson town

Director and his team scouted, then tinkered with, a cozy and quirky city for ‘The French Dispatch’

- BY MEKADO MURPHY Murphy writes for The New York Times.

What happens when you combine the cinema of Wes Anderson with a charming, historic French city? You get a stylized version of France that highlights the director’s whimsical passions — like centuries-old buildings reframed in symmetric pictureboo­k ways and neighborho­ods accented with quaint and colorful accessorie­s.

“The French Dispatch” is Anderson’s ode to journalism, French cinema and the magic found while winding through the country’s cobbleston­e streets. It is heavily peppered with distinct, fussedover design elements that both celebrate and heighten its French aesthetic.

The movie, which is scheduled to be released in theaters on Oct. 22, focuses on an American magazine that is published in the fictional French city of Ennui-surblase (the name of which is a perfect Andersonia­n touch). With the death of its longtime editor, Arthur Howitzer Jr. (Bill Murray), the magazine is planning its final issue, and the four stories all get their own dramatizat­ion in the film. While the film’s cast is a long list of recognizab­le names (Tilda Swinton, Benicio Del Toro, Frances Mcdormand, Jeffrey Wright), one of its biggest stars is the city, showcased in a tour that makes up one of the segments. Rather than creating multiple town exteriors on a backlot, the filmmakers found a real French town, Angoulême, and used it as the movie’s beating heart, dressing it up or down as needed.

In considerin­g the setting for his movie, Anderson wanted something like Paris, but a version that doesn’t exist anymore outside of cinema, like the one of wonder captured by “The Red Balloon,” and one of whimsy captured by Jacques Tati.

One of the film’s producers, Jeremy Dawson, said that Anderson was looking for a place “with nooks and crannies, corridors, passages, staircases, layers and ramparts.” The filmmakers began their scouting search on Google, digitally navigating the streets of towns that might fit the bill. Then they hit the road to visit a few of them. While in Angoulême, they came across a plaza with a small cafe. Dawson recalled that Anderson suggested grabbing lunch at the cafe. “When he said that, I knew he’d picked this town,” Dawson said.

For an establishi­ng shot of the headquarte­rs of The French Dispatch, the filmmakers chose one building on a block of similarly styled structures and found the best angle with which to capture the shot. “We then designed these foreground buildings and placed them on articulate­d scaffoldin­g so we could twist them and turn them,” said Adam Stockhause­n, the production designer. Those foreground sets, angled just so, were able to give the impression of depth to the environmen­t while creating the kind of symmetry in the frame often found in Anderson’s work.

The top floors of the building, which include a sign so wordy (The French Dispatch of the Liberty, Kansas Evening Sun) that it continues across the upper-floor windows, were actually designed as a miniature. That miniature was digitally merged with the real building to give the top of it a more stylized look. The townscape of buildings in the background to the left is also a digitally added miniature. But on the ground level, the fronts were constructe­d for the film.

While most of the film’s exterior scenes involved existing locations, one shot required something special. In an early moment of the movie, a waiter climbs a quirky staircase in the middle of The French Dispatch building that is visible at certain parts and hidden by walls at others. The design team built a full-scale version of the building’s rear so the cameras could capture the actor navigating the staircase from that vantage point.

Dawson said the production aimed to make sure residents remained content as shooting took place around their spaces, whether that meant compensati­ng them for any inconvenie­nce or putting them up in a hotel. “It was case-by-case for each person,” he said. “But the town was very welcoming.”

 ?? ROGER DO MINH VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The crew paints signs on building walls for the Wes Anderson film “The French Dispatch,” out in theaters Oct. 22.
ROGER DO MINH VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES The crew paints signs on building walls for the Wes Anderson film “The French Dispatch,” out in theaters Oct. 22.

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