BRIAN VINER in Cannes: Wes Anderson's The Phoenician Scheme: These superstars are having a riot... But it's no fun for us

The Cannes Film Festival is wrapping up this weekend, and what’s unusual is that two of the movies with the most glamorous premieres there have already made their way to cinema screens in the UK.

Unfortunately, one’s a bit of a dud while the other is rather a drag.

The Phoenician Scheme

(15, 101 mins)

Verdict: Far too whimsical 

Rating:

Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning (12A, 169 mins)

Verdict: Impossibly long

Rating:

One of these films is The Phoenician Scheme, the latest creation from the esteemed writer-director Wes Anderson, boasting a stellar cast as is typical of his projects. The main role is played by Benicio del Toro, supported by a lineup that includes Tom Hanks, Benedict Cumberbatch, Scarlett Johansson, Bill Murray, and Bryan Cranston, among other noteworthy names.

Anderson, it is said, is cinematic Marmite: folk either love his films or hate them. But maybe it’s also possible to fall out of love with Marmite.

While I greatly appreciated Rushmore (1998) and absolutely loved The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014), I found The French Dispatch (2021) and the upcoming 2023 release of Asteroid City to be excessively self-centered and at times confusing whimsical escapades that seemed to lack substance. They felt like ventures into Anderson’s incredibly imaginative mind, and although many are pleased to be taken on that journey, I personally was ready to step off.

The Phoenician Scheme, alas, offers more of the same. In mitigation it’s consistently lovely on the eye. And it has a terrific, genuinely funny opening, but it careers downhill thereafter.

Set, like Asteroid City, in the 1950s, it boasts all Anderson’s usual flourishes – above all that mannered artificiality of dialogue, set and costume that has become his trademark. 

The title refers to the latest dodge by a rich, conniving businessman called Zsa-Zsa Korda (del Toro), who keeps surviving assassination attempts. Korda has nine boys, but only one girl, Liesl. She’s a novitiate nun nicely played by (Kate Winslet’s daughter) Mia Threapleton, and even though they are estranged, she’s the one anointed as his successor, should his enemies ever succeed in killing him.

The cast plainly have a whale of a time as Korda whizzes round the world trying to bond with his daughter, finding backers for his dubious project, and confounding assassins. 

I can imagine how much fun it is to be in a Wes Anderson film. But I for one no longer derive enough fun from watching them.

Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning would be a lot more fun if it weren’t so long-winded, lasting almost three hours. A floppy-haired Tom Cruise plays Ethan Hunt of the Impossible Mission Force, criss-crossing the globe while attempting for the umpteenth time to save it, this time from a rogue slab of artificial intelligence known as The Entity.

There is one truly spectacular extended stunt, which sees Hunt clinging to the wings of a biplane in the clouds above South Africa, but far too much of Christopher McQuarrie’s picture gets bogged down in ponderous self-importance, when it should just be tongue-in-cheek escapism.

Maybe McQuarrie also felt that a colossal $400 million budget required a commensurately whopping running-time? Whatever, he could have cut half an hour by removing 90 per cent of the references to the world being on the edge of a precipice. As it is, by the end, you might find yourself wishing it would just fall off.

 

Fountain Of Youth (12A, 125 mins)

Verdict: Overflows with fun

Rating:

Guy Ritchie does a much better job with Fountain Of Youth, another action thriller with a potty plot, but which, crucially, never takes itself too seriously. 

It benefits greatly from John Krasinski’s gently, engagingly facetious lead performance as Luke, an art thief, squabbling endlessly with his sister Charlotte (Natalie Portman), a museum curator. 

Luke, it turns out, is pinching masterpieces by the likes of Rembrandt and Rubens because together they will lead him to the elusive elixir of life, required by his dying billionaire patron (Domhnall Gleeson).

The writer, by the way, is James Vanderbilt, of the famously wealthy family of industrialists, whose great-grandfather went down with the Lusitania in 1915. And he references that episode in the narrative, in a compellingly unlikely collision of fact and fiction.

Fountain Of Youth is on Apple TV+. 

A longer review of Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning ran last week.

You May Also Like

50 Cent insults Kanye West’s wife Bianca Censori during Diddy trial appearance

50 Cent quickly targeted Kanye West and his wife Bianca Censori after…

Kind Attacker Takes Injured Victim to Hospital After Slashing With Machete

A Florida man told deputies he “felt bad ” after slashing another…

Large numbers of patients will receive treatment from general practitioners instead of hospitals as part of major changes to reduce NHS waiting times

To address the NHS crisis, Keir Starmer is implementing radical reforms that…

Intense Moment as Fox News Reporter Takes Cover on Live Broadcast and Urges Everyone to Move While Missiles Hit Israel

FOX News reporter Trey Yingst has been forced to run for his…

Mossad operatives spent years preparing for Israel’s targeted assault in Iran, employing drones, eliminating military leaders and nuclear experts, and destroying radar and missile facilities in the most severe attack on Iranian land in almost fifty years.

Months, if not years in the planning, it was the most devastating…

Theory of expert on simple mistake that Air India co-pilot potentially made leading to crash and casualties

An expert in aviation has suggested that the co-pilot of Air India…

Video Shows Debris Flying From Air India Jet After British Survivor Escapes – Was It the Door He Used?

THE Brit survivor of the Air India disaster may have been saved…

Silver Alert Issued for Missing Texas Woman: Keep an Eye Out

The Texas Department of Public Safety has issued a Silver Alert for…

Final preparations for Trooping the Colour ceremony before Charles’ official birthday with special tributes for Air India crash victims ordered by the King

Today’s Trooping the Colour parade is in its final preparations this morning…

My Review of the World’s Largest All-You-Can-Eat Buffet: A £10 Meal with No Time Limit – What You Need to Know

A FOODIE who filled up her plate at the world’s biggest buffet…

Father Accused of Incest for Having 3 Children with Daughter

A West Virginia man was indicted on Monday for sexually abusing his…

Inside the £1.5m Scots mansion purchased through an act of royal ‘treachery’ leading to lifetime banishment from House of Windsor.

The message on the smartly embossed card was so matter-of-fact that its…