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Prime News delivers timely, accurate news and insights on global events, politics, business, and technology
By Drew Dietsch | Updated
After watching the most recent movies of Wes Anderson, The Phoenician scheme (My review), it energized me to see him try to inject a specific gender energy into his usual film formula. Although many Babeo wheres will denounce Anderson due to their different aesthetic elections, it has always watched me to see him exercise his trade with a variety of different stories. The Phoenician scheme It is not a typical movie of attraction, but channels that genre in a unique way thanks to Anderson’s artistic voice.
So, it is time to overcome a drum that I have been hitting for what it seems now: Wes Anderson needs to make a horror movie.
It is likely that many will say that Anderson is not an adequate option for the horror genre because their particular approach to the realization of movements is antithetical to the expectations of the genre. “How are you going to make a movie scary with all this nonsense?”
He would point them out in the direction of the Anderson Short Film collection that he made as adaptations of Roald Dahl’s stories. Specifically, the cinematographic versions of “The Rat Catcher” and “Poison” show that Anderson can redirect their inclinations from dollhouse to legitimate suspense and even terror. His worlds can be brilliant and welcoming, but Anderson is not full of a naive fluff or a bite neck. It’s just that he prefers the kingdom of comedy when it comes to his stories.
So why wes Anderson shouldn’t make a horror comedy?
Sam Raimi is one of my favorite filmmakers and a reason why it is due to his approach to the intensity of the genre. Namely, if Sam Raimi makes a west, it will be the westernmost western one who has western The quick and the dead. If you make a tense thriller, you will make you chew your nails to the clouds with A simple plan. And if you want to make a horror comedy, you will unleash and Evil Dead Flick is more kooker than the previous one.
All this is to say that Wes Anderson should hug his internal Sam Raimi and let go of a boners horror comedy unlike anything done before. I do not say that Raimi’s style should emulate. Instead, Anderson should improve the parts of his cinema that would benefit from being deployed in a horror story. Who does not want to see a diorama of a huge ancient castle in a vampire movie by Wes Anderson?
If emerging horror bits in The rat receiver and Poison They are some indication, Wes Anderson could easily elaborate a horror movie with its specific comic vein that pumps blood in your heart. As Anderson becomes an even more niche filmmaker, it would be exciting to see him go find a horror movie. It could even be a way of attracting another generation of devotees, since the genre of terror is full of curious and devout followers.
I am always interested in what Wes Anderson is doing as a filmmaker, and a horror movie of his mind would be something that I cannot imagine, as much as I would try idiot, lazy and unimaginative. We hope Anderson gets the itching and gives us a horror movie unlike any other.