The Fictional Truth of Asteroid City

2024 ж. 13 Мам.
373 285 Рет қаралды

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  • Something I'm beginning to love about Anderson is how his movies just casually put A-list actors within abstract masterpieces. It's somehow a completely different feeling to seeing them elsewhere.

    @oscargill423@oscargill4239 ай бұрын
    • And most of these actors have such a great time that they almost always come back regardless of the size of the part. They just want to be involved.

      @Archius9@Archius97 ай бұрын
    • The #GREATEST #Actor on Planet Earth for the last 40 years is #BradHartliep - #GREATER than #TomHanks, #LeonardoDiCaprio, #RobertDeNiro, #JackNicholson, #ScarlettJohanson and EVERY single actor you can think of .. "A-List Actors" is a bullshit comment - they don't f'ng exist .. the ONLY reason they are "a-list" actors is because they are ass-kissers to the #Hollywood #Elite - they #Brown-nose their way to the top of the ass-kissing ladder -- it has NOTHING to do with Talent or Capability as an Actor .. it's 1000% pure POLITICS and Nepotism and ZERO PERCENT qualification .. There are literally HUNDREDS of "a-list" actors with ZERO acting talent and hundreds of "a-list" directors with ZERO directing talent .. I am Three Hundred MILLION times MORE #Talented and FAR GREATER as an #Actor than every single so called "a-list" actor -- and I absolutely GUARANTEE YOU that Saving Private Ryan and Greyhound and One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest and EVERY single movie that Tom Hanks or Jack Nicholson or DeCaprio or DeNiro appeared in would be 300 Hundred Million Times BETTER with #BradHartliep in the #LeadRole ..

      @BradHartliep-kn9ud@BradHartliep-kn9ud4 ай бұрын
  • It occurs to me that Brian Cranston appearing in the colour section actually broke 2 separate 4th walls. Not only did it break the 4th wall between Asteroid City the play and Asteroid City's production, but it also broke the 4th wall between Asteroid City's production and Asteroid City the TV show about the creative process. From the perspective of the actors playing the characters in the play it's already confusing because he doesn't exist in their world, but the world of *their* actors, but from the characters point of view themselves Brian Cranston as an entity is beyond incomprehensible. They stare at him dumbfounded until he leaves the frame at which point they promptly reject his existence, unsteadily returning to the conversation they were scripted to have. It's almost Lovecraftian to think about. That you could peel back the layers of reality and discover that you were just a character played by an actor, only to then realise THAT actors 4th wall had also been violated.

    @SorchaSublime@SorchaSublime9 ай бұрын
    • That was the funniest part of the movie for me

      @LuisSierra42@LuisSierra429 ай бұрын
    • That's like ... 16 walls...

      @TestOfInsanity@TestOfInsanity9 ай бұрын
    • I was struck by the little smirking crack Hope Davis gives to ScarJo at the end of the scene about "I thought it might have been your ex-husband in Utah..." A reference to a previous scene her character wasn't in, definitely feels like an improvised moment between two theatrical actors after getting thrown off their rhythm. Kind of an "Okay, this scene turned into a shitshow... lets have some fun with it." moment. Also, Cranston looks just as surprised as any other cast member when Augie/Jones/Jason storms offstage at the climax... looking at him with that same kind of "What are you doing here?" gaze.

      @theohaegele9011@theohaegele90119 ай бұрын
    • thought this part was a lil corny

      @ethancrites6994@ethancrites69948 ай бұрын
    • ​@@TestOfInsanityI was gonna say that lol

      @TheZanzibarMan@TheZanzibarMan8 ай бұрын
  • I think that moment with the griddle is significant because Jones Hall actually burns his hand. We see Mercedes Ford break character and react honestly, because of course the actor is not supposed to actually burn his hand during the play. But the actor is experiencing very real grief over Conrad and does it. I love this film so much. I think it's my new favorite Wes Anderson movie. I'm glad people are talking about it.

    @EphemeraAeterna@EphemeraAeterna9 ай бұрын
    • Yes absolutely I think that's what I was trying to get at you just said it more clearly haha

      @ThomasFlight@ThomasFlight9 ай бұрын
    • Yes that is what I get too, now. At the moment it felt really strange

      @panstolen@panstolen9 ай бұрын
    • they have a scene of Jones and Conrad discussing the scene before it happens in the ‘play’, they mention that sentiment of not knowing why it happens but knowing it has to happen. very subtle but effective!! love this film!

      @mykeadelic@mykeadelic9 ай бұрын
    • I think that - generally speaking - people do tend to talk about recent major movie releases. Just something I've noticed over the years.

      @grunions9648@grunions96489 ай бұрын
    • But does he *actually* burn his hand? I'm guessing not, but I think it's deliberately made unclear

      @nahometesfay1112@nahometesfay11129 ай бұрын
  • I've read an explanation of "I still don't understand the play" online: The actor playing Augie Steenbeck is certain Conrad Earp, his lover, committed suicide (You can't wake up if you don't fall asleep) and looks for a reasoning inside his last play. The grief he channels when reading the script is his real life grief for Conrad. It's like Augie's motivation and Jones Hall's motivation merged into one layer. It's the reason why the cut scene with Augie's wife consoling Augie behind the scenes is actually Conrad consoling Jones beyond the grave.

    @heshamhany8470@heshamhany84709 ай бұрын
    • When did this lightbulb above my head appear

      @brycelavender2255@brycelavender22559 ай бұрын
    • MY JAW HIT THE FLOOR-

      @maxwellgrimsley@maxwellgrimsley9 ай бұрын
    • I completely missed that

      @El-Burrito@El-Burrito9 ай бұрын
    • This is the best take.

      @DrPOP-jp7eb@DrPOP-jp7eb9 ай бұрын
    • Yes!! think a lot of people missed the fact that Bryan Cranston mentions (too nonchalantly) that the playwright Conrad Earp (Edward Norton) died a few months into production of the play. Jason Schwartzman's character (the actor - Jones) was in a relationship with the playwright and is therefore grieving the death of his lover (Norton), while simultaneously playing Augie who is grieving the death of his wife. Both Jones and Augie are trying desperately to find meaning, purpose and easy answers - just like everyone in Asteroid City after the alien incident. But the director, Schubert (Adrian Brody), encourages Jones to 'just keep doing [the character/the play], even if he doesn't understand everything'. Finding purpose and meaning in life's biggest obstacles and mysteries can feel like a futile mission. But Wes beautifully portrays how artists (and fans of art) can process grief and the mysteries of life through art and escapism, even if it doesn't provide you with any clear or easy answers - "You can’t wake up if you don’t fall asleep".

      @ezwar99@ezwar999 ай бұрын
  • The part about their feelings, Tilda Swinton's character had that exact line: “I never had children, but sometimes I wonder if I wish I should have.” She doesn't wish she should have, she wonders if she should wish. It's a very fascinating layer of conditionals.

    @PerfektFilms@PerfektFilms6 ай бұрын
  • I admit I wasn't sold on this movie when I first saw it--but it wormed its way into my consciousness. I can't stop thinking back to it. I think it was the line "It doesn't matter, just keep telling the story" that, to put it academically, rocked my shit.

    @nathanielfishburn9676@nathanielfishburn96769 ай бұрын
    • Just keep swimming as Dori said. Just keep on going.

      @vibesmom@vibesmom9 ай бұрын
    • @@vibesmom SSSSHHHHHHhhhhh dont point out cliches are cliches around here.

      @Odb718@Odb7189 ай бұрын
    • @@Odb718it’s all about context

      @Squifum@Squifum9 ай бұрын
    • Just finished the movie about an hour ago and this single, small line hit me with the most profound feeling. Very well done.

      @1SilverVixen1@1SilverVixen19 ай бұрын
    • ah, Sophisticated As Hell, i see! neat!

      @ClementMenard-hx8rz@ClementMenard-hx8rz8 ай бұрын
  • I think a great visual analogy for the layers of narrative and meaning in this movie is the billboard you can see at 9:10 - a billboard featuring a picture of a billboard, both of which feature the same scenery that's behind the billboard itself.

    @TheArborTree@TheArborTree9 ай бұрын
  • I couldn't help but laugh when the editing of this video began mimicking the layers of the movie. The use of black and white for the commentary clips and then suddenly the use of color during the breaking moment of "I don't know if this video makes any sense," but it feels correct. This is one of those films that I keep thinking about and can't stop running through the different layers. It is beautiful and complex.

    @Xenicus31@Xenicus319 ай бұрын
  • I was surprised to see a general consensus about the movie having more potential and let people down... It instantly became my favorite Wes Anderson flick. Maybe that's because I watched it in a theater that really only exists in my town to show old/indie/small budget moves and the theater just has so much charm it can make anything fun. Maybe it's because I really enjoyed the setting. But I was surprised to find that not as many people liked it. It felt small and self contained, yet had so much to unpack. My partner and I were talking about it the whole drive home and still bring it up in conversation today.

    @samrose9675@samrose96759 ай бұрын
    • I saw a matinee show in an empty theater (just me and one other person ten rows away) and the same thing struck me. There's so many little things that speak to the ephemeral existence of things. In a small town theater, or at a lonely showing, I think you get that feeling already.

      @rachelfinder@rachelfinder9 ай бұрын
    • I had the exact same thing, I love this movie and when I finished the movie (the day it came out) I thought everyone would be as exited by it as I was, but that want the case

      @ARTHURO244@ARTHURO2449 ай бұрын
    • The alien scene was worth the admission for me

      @hammy5746@hammy57469 ай бұрын
    • I agree. I loved it.

      @NeonNijahn@NeonNijahn9 ай бұрын
    • I got to see it in theater with a packed house, and was stunned to hear how audibly displeased people were with it at the end. Really strange reaction to meta text considering how anal we’ve gotten about finding the meaning in things as a species. My friends and I adored it, though, but maybe because we handle our existential dread through TTRPG’s lol

      @culbycove4963@culbycove49639 ай бұрын
  • Asteroid City is a beautiful analogue for how many neurodivergent people see the world. Speaking from my autistic experience, much of my life feels like I'm having to act in order to make connections with the people around me. And when everything is suddenly in complete chaos, all I desperately want to do is find out who *I* am - not the actor I've been conditioned to be, but who I naturally settle into being. And much of that personal narrative is explored through taking myself out of "the scene" (i.e. a conversation with a coworker) and hyper-analyzing my motivations behind or even beyond the moment. Seeing a bunch of actor-characters struggle to find the "right way" to receive information and act in kind, while simultaneously acknowledging this shared meta-reality with everyone else in the film, was such a unique, refreshing, and emotionally resonant experience that Asteroid City has quickly become one of my favorite movies in recent memory. A beautiful example of a movie that isn't made for everyone, but if you are in the target audience, it feels overwhelmingly like it was MADE FOR YOU.

    @throwaway1743@throwaway17439 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for sharing, I appreciate this incite. I how the line "It doesn't matter. Just keep playing, you're doing it right" (paraphrasing) fits into this for you.

      @crazysasha1374@crazysasha13747 ай бұрын
    • As a fellow autistic, I love how all of Wes Anderson's characters feel autistic. They stare directly at each other, say exactly what they mean, often in a fast paced, blunt style that I relate to deeply. They're direct when doing something and don't mince words. It makes me feel seen, even if that wasn't his intention.

      @itscjrodgers@itscjrodgers6 ай бұрын
    • That's an interesting angle I didn't consider. I'm autistic myself and also experience this phenomenon but can't really say that the movie or its characters reminded me of it while watching, probably because I was waiting for the actual meaning of everything to "click" for me, which I guess is one of the points it was making lol

      @DOCTOR.DEADHEAD@DOCTOR.DEADHEAD5 ай бұрын
    • I think that feeling could be anyone. We all feel like that at times.

      @Bodharas@Bodharas2 ай бұрын
  • Fun Fact: At one point, a radio off-screen plays Slim Whitman's "Indian Love Call", the song that killed all the alien invaders in Mars Attacks!.

    @_The_Archive_@_The_Archive_9 ай бұрын
  • This movie managed to make me feel like I was in a movie more successfully than any other experience I’ve had

    @franciscovigil2341@franciscovigil23419 ай бұрын
    • I don't think that's a good thing. It means you were being taken out of the emotional experience of watching a movie. I'm pretty sure that's the opposite of what a director wants to make you feel

      @51gan788@51gan7889 ай бұрын
    • @@51gan788 Feeling something, anything is a good outcome for most of the people who stumble through life.

      @jaywulf@jaywulf8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@51gan788not when that director is wes anderson

      @vilkristproductions6772@vilkristproductions67727 ай бұрын
    • @@51gan788exactly? It defeats the purpose of art.. I don't see how clever it is... This maybe equivalent to a bad movie where you are aware that you're in a movie, and you have feelings about that awareness...

      @sgopalan58@sgopalan587 ай бұрын
    • @@sgopalan58 or maybe, just maybe, different directors have different intentions and nothing "defeats the point of art" in a blanket way

      @vilkristproductions6772@vilkristproductions67727 ай бұрын
  • I always took the meaning of the movie to be about loss and grief and "how do i move on" and getting tangled up and not remembering how you used to live, then something reminding you (margot robbie scene) about why you do what you do it all, and you just gotta keep doing it

    @charliewolf4411@charliewolf44119 ай бұрын
  • I felt a lot of different things during the movie. Some parts are sad, some funny, some touching... but there's a strong resonnance beetween the confusion of the spectator, the confusion of the actors (of the play) and the confusion of the characters (in the play). (And there's maybe another layer, the actors of Wes's movie that are also a possible target of all this, are playing a movie and showing feelings while not understanding what is this all about) Having all these layers muddle even more the distinction between the spectator and the movie and makes you part of the global experience in a stronger way. The fact that you feel what the characters feel and that you are (as spectator) as confused as the characters made everything even more relatable. Things happen, we feel stuff. We don't always know why or how to respond, most of the time we just keep going. That's part of life.

    @arileb267@arileb2679 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, the operative word is "confusion".

      @123benny4@123benny43 ай бұрын
  • My take on the “message” here is that there doesn’t always need to be a message. The visual artifice can sometimes be just that- spectacle. Art and the message of art is driven just as much by the audience as it is the artist themselves. I walked away feeling almost hollowed by the message, centered around not just “finding meaning” in art, life, etc., but also coming to terms with the fact that not everything has meaning in art, life, etc. I’ve seen it 3 times now and each time I felt more and more sad. This is pinnacle Wes Anderson, imo.

    @Garradouken@Garradouken9 ай бұрын
    • The most "there is no message" part has to be the running shootout. The same two cars and a motorcycle go past three times, guns blazing, and no one ever reacts. We never learn what's going on and are left trying to make sense of something that simply doesn't have a meaning. It's absurd and I love it.

      @DavidGuild@DavidGuild9 ай бұрын
    • I think you're right, and I think that this point is made especially clear by the fact that all events we see are fiction, even within the world of the movie. The documentary is stated to be about a fictional production. The struggles of Jones [Augie's actor] aren't real, they've been created for the purpose of the documentary. We're watching actors playing actors playing actors. And yet, even though it's made explicit that this story and its events are not real [even within the world of the documentary], we can still relate to it and find meaning in the story being told.

      @nietzsche8297@nietzsche82975 ай бұрын
    • I think the reason that the movie frustrates a lot of people is because there's an inherent clash between that side of the film, the side that feels like such an obvious answer it's almost hitting us over the head, and the entire rest of the movie that really feels like it's trying to say something. The question they ask is "Am I really supposed to believe there's nothing more to this movie when every single line that's said seems to have at least 3 different meanings, and nearly everything that happens only makes any sense at all if you consider it's just a metaphor you don't understand yet?" I think that juxtaposition is on purpose, and is more to the point of the film than either part individually, but I just can't figure out how they go together. The meaninglessness and the meaning are both important parts of it, and discounting the meaning and saying the point is that there isn't any message or meaning is missing half the film, but discounting the meaninglessness is also missing half the film, but how can you try to make a point out of meaninglessness when the point is that there is no meaning and how can you reconcile that with the half of the film that has meaning when meaning is inherently opposed to meaninglessness and AAAAAAAAAAGAHAHBKJSHFGINRGSG This movie is hard to think about it hurts my head

      @apersonwhomayormaynotexist9868@apersonwhomayormaynotexist98683 ай бұрын
    • I was thinking though, even if it's not Auggie's "real" struggle, he seems to be conveying something real from his experience of life. Yet another layer!

      @squirlmy@squirlmy3 ай бұрын
    • Although I think the line about "just keep telling the story" is authentic on all levels. In a weird way it's an anti-suicide film. It encourages the audience to keep going.

      @squirlmy@squirlmy3 ай бұрын
  • I am an emotional man, and I am okay with that. I often cry during movies with really good scenes, but I usually feel it coming on. When Augie said he didn’t know the meaning of the play and the director told him it didn’t matter, just keep telling the story, I instantly began to cry and had to pause the movie. I’ve never been so simultaneously blindsided and affirmed and destroyed and reassembled.

    @OneUniti@OneUniti9 ай бұрын
  • If you watch closely on the balcony scene, Augie actually said "It's you, the wife who played my actress" which sounds wrong because it's supposed to be "It's you, the actress who played my wife". Glitches like this happens when the character is deep in their personal problem. Same thing happened when the narrator, played by Bryan Cranston, appeared in color in one of the scene where Midge's (Scarlett) method acting bit (the greasepaint on her cheek) is questioned for the second time by the cookie trooper mother, the first time is by Augie. Also the mother talks about Midge's second ex-husband in Utah when just in a couple previous scene, Midge tells Augie about it in one of the window scene. I see the two separate worlds in the movie (the play and the movie set) as the repserentation of the human world and the heaven (or at least the dream world) because of how the director and the writer acts like gods who wrote and made the story and then just leave it be, even the director is sleeping while the play is till on going, not intervening in the play. It is only when Augie enter the dream world/heaven that he can consults with god (the director) about what is the meaning of it's heart broken life and then the director doesn't really gives him the exact answer that Augie wanted but instead tells him to keep on living and being himself because that's the meaning of life itself, it is lo live. Also it is in this dream/heaven world that Augie met his supposed dead wife. Oh and one last thing, on the last scene, Augie overslept and missed everyone leaving the city because in the dream world/heaven, he missed his cue on the play by talking to the actress on the balcony scene. You can't wake up if you don't fall asleep.

    @cohandora@cohandora9 ай бұрын
    • I don't think the ex husband thing was a glitch, I think it was just meant to be a joke about obsessive fans knowing too much about celebrities lives

      @apersonwhomayormaynotexist9868@apersonwhomayormaynotexist98683 ай бұрын
  • I’ve seen Asteroid City 4 times, 3 in theaters and 1 at home. I still don’t feel as if I completely understand it, but I do very strongly feel that it is not only the best film of the year, but one of the greatest American motion pictures of all time. In the coming decades I hope to see Asteroid City rightly regarded as the astonishing creation it is.

    @rossfitzpatrick7549@rossfitzpatrick75498 ай бұрын
  • The way you used your own meta framing device to support your explanation was very clever. You say “I’m tired, and I’m not really sure my point is getting across,” maybe because you actually feel that way, but also to demonstrate a difference but also a connection between the “you” who is a confident narrator/KZheadr voice, itself unsure that it was getting the point across, and a “you” that is more private and personal. Meanwhile, the point you’re trying to make is about how, in the film, the actors (Johansson/Schwartzman) inform their characters, who are also actors that inform their characters, all of whom are searching for the meanings in their lives and jobs.

    @yonirekem7775@yonirekem77759 ай бұрын
    • Whoa... missed that one. I noted it, but did not integrate it into the narrative. Thanks.

      @jaywulf@jaywulf8 ай бұрын
  • Watch the full Asteroid City podcast discussion with Tom from Like Stories of Old on Nebula: nebula.tv/videos/watchcinemaofmeaning-the-exploring-distant-emotion-in-asteroid-city-cinema-of-meaning-bonus-episode?ref=thomasflight Get Nebula using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: go.nebula.tv/thomasflight

    @ThomasFlight@ThomasFlight9 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic video. I watched this movie 4 times, but you managed to pinpoint probably the biggest reason why this has grown to be one of my favorite ever movies- better than I ever could have. I love the ending of your video especially, with all of the hints at the movie- you even managed to include Augie’s “sometimes I sometimes feel” at 11:24 - really amazing work!

    @peerlangenheimmusic@peerlangenheimmusic9 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for this. I watched the movie for the first time yesterday, followed immediately by the “Beyond the screenplay” podcast episode about it - it was great to hear their comments and now yours. I loved the movie, and your interpretation of the “you can’t wake up if you don’t fall asleep” line is way.m better than what fuzzy notions were floating around in my brain. Thanks for this!

    @javbw@javbw9 ай бұрын
  • 6:18 I think You are reading something that isn’t there. The actor playing the alien is saying “ I have to figure out what the metaphor is because it’s not explicit in the text of the script of the play.” That is why the tenses are mixed. Because preparation for the play is continuous but the script is a static thing that already exists and has an end. It’s not a mixture of actor and character . It’s just actor saying 1 part of the creative process (the script) is done. But another part of the creative process (the actors interpretation) is not.

    @hastyscorpion@hastyscorpion9 ай бұрын
    • And it's also a meta-commentary that the movie (by WA) never really explains what the alien means.

      @DavidGuild@DavidGuild9 ай бұрын
  • It’s definitely one of my favorites, but to pick one is a tall task. They are all so different. One commonality is we always get to see Wes in the movie. His essence, his smile during a certain scene. It permeates the text, and I love that. It gives me so much to enjoy on my inevitable rewatches. David Lynch does that for me too. At times I’m watching a scene and I can see his joyous, giddy, expression in my mind. It’s attention to every detail because they all matter.

    @vibesmom@vibesmom9 ай бұрын
  • this video should literally play after the movie in the theater

    @kraigadams@kraigadams9 ай бұрын
  • Not sure if anyone else is seeing it but maybe the play is also a reflection on real-life actors and their craft. We literally get a lot of backstage that shows us how actors search for their characters, how their life influences their work, etc. Anderson has been in the theater/movie sphere for so long, he must have a ton of insights and philosophy on that I can't say it's my favorite Anderson movie (that title is forever held by Fantastic Mr. Fox), but I appreciate it a lot

    @annamishonova4269@annamishonova42699 ай бұрын
  • Asteroid City had so much potential. The insights were spot on. We can all tell for certain that you've made this fairly easy to digest from an audience's perspective.

    @nerd26373@nerd263739 ай бұрын
  • This might be the best video you've made, always so adept at articulating how complex and meta everything is

    @mattmueller5687@mattmueller56879 ай бұрын
  • People talking about Christopher nolan being complicated but wes anderson outdid it

    @mrink8822@mrink88229 ай бұрын
    • Nolan just wishes he is complicated and wants people to think he is complicated. He is anything but. That’s why always the $$$ spent on advertising his latest “technical” experiments. A soulless creator. Not sure why his name is even next to Wes’ at all, unless to show the difference between an artist and a… salesman?

      @cinexeon@cinexeon9 ай бұрын
    • Nolan is the faux complexity, what seems deep and isnt really, and he's catering to pretentious hipsters who can feel better about 'being smarter for understanding his movies'. Wes Anderson movies actually have depth. As pretty as Nolan's movies are, they are rather shallow, especially Tenet which seems like it has a lot of depth, when in reality the story is just told in an overcomplicated way to make people feel like the movie is deep. The only difference between some high budget action flick like Marvel or a Bay movie and a Nolan movie, is that those are honest about what they are, while Nolan movies pretend to be something they arent. Which is deep. They are just pretty summer blockbusters.

      @nemtudom5074@nemtudom50749 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@cinexeonit’s not a competition. Your guy’s movies aren’t better because you shit on somebody else’s movies. You don’t get to define what an artist is.

      @hastyscorpion@hastyscorpion9 ай бұрын
    • ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@nemtudom5074there is a pretty significant amount of irony to saying “ he is catering to pretentious hipsters who can feel better about being smarter for understanding his movies” and then immediately following that up with “Wes Anderson’s movies actually have depth” .

      @hastyscorpion@hastyscorpion9 ай бұрын
    • Guys what the fuck they're both really great

      @GellertTV@GellertTV9 ай бұрын
  • Beautifly said as always. I also really loved this movie and you've given me some really interesting things to think about next time I watch it and all the time until then. When I saw it the first time, one of my takaways was about the framing itself and to me it felt like Wes created basically a "Bottle Epsiode" and he created a story that would push on the the bottles walls as much as he could. By making the A story be a Play he's able to step away from the bottle while still keeping it in frame, or maybe staying inside a bigger bottle. I'll fully admit that's fairly likely not the impetus of the play but I think it's at least something valid to mull over in regard to the movie. After all one of the coolest things about art is interpetation.

    @JerryFlowersIII@JerryFlowersIII9 ай бұрын
  • This was amazing. Asteroid City is one of my favorite movies of the year

    @loganwelty7094@loganwelty70949 ай бұрын
  • I second all of this! My favorite parts I think were the moments of doubling or foreshadowing? Not sure how else to explain it but you reference it with the quickie griddle, there's also the part where Midge says she'll probably end up committing suicide in the bathtub and then we see what looks like that at first. I think my favorite scene is the one with Margot Robbie. I agree, this movie is really hard to explain, difficult to peel back all the layers, but it's genuinely incredible. Also the title screens? If we think of those in real life, I could see those being something we'd add in our minds when remembering our lives. Like okay these are the years I was in high school, then college. But I could also see those being important to the pandemic and how it has warped our general sense of time. Especially how one of the last title/scene cards says "to be played without interruption" that feels very much like what life has been like the past year or so. Not sure where I'm going with all that, but yeah! Great video

    @rileysmith3038@rileysmith30389 ай бұрын
  • A superb video that articulates many of the best points my circle of friends have raised with an editing panache we lack the time to develop. Allow me to list a couple of observations we've made that I believe tie in to the major strokes illustrated here. 1) There's an extra layer to the entire story that I haven't seen many pick up on, which is the unnamed and undefined cast of actors inbetween the "Conard Earp" world and our reality. Conrad Earp is a fictional character being portrayed, not directly by Edward Norton, but by an unknown actor who is in turned played by Ed. The only character we ever meet on this layer is The Narrator, as portrayed by Bryan Cranston, a very unique character. He presents the supposed writing of Asteroid City as a play, with all of its characters fictional and portrayed by actors - these are the ones played by the real life actors, highlighting just how many layers of dense refraction the ultimate drama shines through. 2) Midge Campbell / Mercedes Ford / Kim has a special role as the most heavily layered "charactor" in the narrative. It's Scarlett Johannsen, portraying an unknown actress, portraying Mercedes "Kim" Ford, portrayed Midge Campbell, who at last in part portrays a grief-stricken secretary in the 20s/30s looking for a divorce. In this regard she is the opposite of The Narrator, who is just a standard mono-layered character by Bryan Cranston - by studying these two we can learn a lot about how true personality transmits through the layers of fiction. 3) Pay very close attention to eyes and vehicles. These are the two most important symbolic devices throughout the entire movie. When you understand what they mean both individually and in tandem, to "take a ride through the eyes", you'll have a great grasp on that cryptic near-ending phrase "You can't wake up if you don't fall asleep".

    @lpsp442@lpsp4429 ай бұрын
    • Just left a comment where I also discussed your first point. I think a lot of people miss this because it's stated within the opening line of the movie and never brought up again, but it personally resonated with me very strongly to watch the film with the understanding that none of the events depicted ever took place in the world of the unnamed actors. It feels like it should devalue the emotional impact of the events we observe, if it's all fictional. But I think that's specifically why Wes Anderson would include it; to highlight that the events being fictional does not devalue their emotional influence.

      @nietzsche8297@nietzsche82975 ай бұрын
  • I had to come here to KZhead since it’s not possible to comment (or like) on Nebula. Great video which I watched before and again after watching the movie. The one thing you didn’t mention when talking about the layers of the film is that the deepest level (below TV show and theatrical “making-of”), the play itself, is by far the most cinematic. It is really in this colour section that design, camera movement, editing, etc. are the most utilized and the most important. Though the set is limited, it is not limited in the way of a play, but in the way of a large soundstage build. It doesn’t feel like a play, though that is ostensibly what it is. Whereas the parts about the making of the play are presented in a much more theatrical way.

    @rabbitfishtv@rabbitfishtv9 ай бұрын
  • Thomas Flight, in his own script for this video, made his speaking sound like the characters sound in the film: "I sometimes believe I sometimes do this" and "I think it's tempting to think this" and "What we are feeling is feeling like..."; brilliant stuff.

    @TCDriftingLeaf@TCDriftingLeaf2 күн бұрын
  • Thanks for taking on the topic, you put words to some of my thoughts where there were none yet. My favorite Anderson film so far

    @oncedidactic@oncedidactic9 ай бұрын
  • Excellent video & analysis. You're REALLY on to something with the FUSION between all these layers of reality & art, ETC. For whatever reason, I felt this movie-- and I think it's largely from this Fusion you're discussing-- more than I do many of Anderson's. Even though I know he's been doing this intricate framing & fusing since the get-go. It somehow feels more poignant, relevant, "special" though, in this film. Great work.

    @matthewlong3710@matthewlong37109 ай бұрын
  • thanks a lot @thomasflight i've been kinda lost into that experience, i wasnt sure he was talking about creation and creativity process until you shared your thought.. it put me into a state of doubt, i wasnt sure anymore what was the point of the movie, i was breath-taking and anxiety mode until i understood that he just wanted us to stop "sleeping" by watching the movie, and start thinking, by giving us the opportunity to ask questions and be ok to dont understand the movie and think deferently about the experience of a movie. Thanks a lot for your video, keep doing this you're really helpfull and your cinematography culture is something i cant stand on easily by the fact of not rushing in your words, you take time, you got a good calm voice, and that help a lot to understand. THANKS

    @ga1732@ga17329 ай бұрын
  • I will say, having seen this recently I felt distant and removed from the movie as opposed to feeling like I was 'taken for a ride,' like I might say with other cinema experiences that I've enjoyed....and I also want to say thank you for sharing your thoughts and take on the metathemes of this film. I now feel more connected to Anderson's work and have a different appreciation for the film.

    @Diegosees@Diegosees9 ай бұрын
  • Great analysis as always Glad I was able to catch this in the theaters and looking forward to subsequent viewings

    @ilford6x6@ilford6x69 ай бұрын
  • I’d only seen two of Wes Anderson’s movies so in preparation for Asteroid City decided to watch the rest in order (though I lost steam before Isle of Dogs.) It was so satisfying to see Wes Anderson truly in his bag with Asteroid City and to see the Jason Schwartzman collaboration come full circle.

    @na-pb1he@na-pb1he8 ай бұрын
  • I've been thinking about this film a lot, and I really appreciate your explanation of it. You may have been tired, but your thorough and thoughtful explanation excited me even more about this film!

    @christopherjaynes1896@christopherjaynes1896Ай бұрын
  • i remember sitting in the movie theatre with my friend watching this movie, and breaking down sobbing during the balcony scene between the two actors. my friend, at the end of the movie, asked why I started crying so much, because she was much more confused about the whole thing than i was. i was hit very hard by this movie, in many different ways, as both an actor and a writer, and especially as a person just confused by the world I'm still trying to newly navigate as a sophomore in college. this movie helped me understand things in life a bit more, and quickly became one of my favorites. thank you wes anderson, and thank you thomas for making this video diving into it. great stuff!

    @unethical_science@unethical_science9 ай бұрын
    • I hate the fact that you cried about an uncertain world but nevertheless I think this will be a good lesson and character building moment for the youth of the Western world . The looming recession , global conflict, internal division, etc. Typical struggles that happen in 3rd world countries caused by the Western world.

      @analyticalmindset@analyticalmindset9 ай бұрын
    • I got hit quite hard by this particular scene as well. And I'm a middle age man from China. That's the magic of theatre or let's say art. When done right, It often kindly reflects on the universal suffering without our mind consciously acknowledging it (which is the reason why your friend got all confused). However, body recognises it, subconsciously. Therefore, you cried. So did I. I'm grateful Mr. Anderson have brought us such an incredible piece of art.

      @riva2003@riva20038 ай бұрын
    • ​@@analyticalmindsetwtf is your problem?

      @asellandrofacchio7263@asellandrofacchio72636 ай бұрын
    • @@asellandrofacchio7263 it's pretty obvious, western privilege built off the suffering of people from the third world like myself. It will be good for westerners to struggle a bit with the way the world is shifting. It will build their empathy and compassion in mass. Obviously there are a select few with this empathy already.... but I. Am talking about in mass

      @analyticalmindset@analyticalmindset6 ай бұрын
  • Only noticed watching this that during the crater madness where Augie steps through the door does that scene actually look like a play with people flying on wires, different actors doing different version of chaos, and the set suddenly looks fake. Until then Asteroid City looked "real"

    @cornishcactus@cornishcactus9 ай бұрын
  • I LOVED this film I genuinely don't get why so many people didn't like it as much

    @thefuckisgoingon@thefuckisgoingon9 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for another great presentation. much appreciated.

    @petrisalo6915@petrisalo69159 ай бұрын
  • Excellent analysis Thomas.

    @sanjaysami4315@sanjaysami43156 ай бұрын
  • I love this movie. Where Wes Anderson used to break the 4th wall, in Asteroid city he now breaks it and enters it, then breaks and enters it then breaks and ... I don't know what else, Infinity?

    @hannah6096@hannah60969 ай бұрын
  • I love you channel, Thomas! Thank you very much for the effort you put into it! 🤗

    @vladpke@vladpke8 ай бұрын
  • You're in the highest tier of quality content on this website, Thomas!

    @elstcman5@elstcman59 ай бұрын
  • After watching this, it’s making me finally ask a question that I’ve been wanting to ask about your videos: what do you read in relation to filmmaking? If you do, why not mention them? This essay made me think of Deleuze’s Cinema books, Branigan’s exploration of the POV shot, Feuer’s discussion of musicals and dreams, and so many other film books and articles. I love your work, but I’ve been feeling mixed for a while (especially with the metamodern videos). I think you do great work, so these questions and critiques are mainly things I’m noticing as a film and media academic.

    @tmkscholar@tmkscholar9 ай бұрын
    • The short answer is if I'm not mentioning it I probably haven't read it. I'm aware of Deleuze's work a bit but haven't read any of those sources you mention. If my thinking on a film or subject is heavily influenced by someone's writing I generally try to cite it directly. But I don't do much extensive reading on film theory per-se. In general I've read/absorbed much more general philosophy and media theory (McLuhan, Neil Postman, John Berger, Eisenstein, David Bordwell, Zizek, Camus, Baudrillard, etc) the truth is I'm not writing in an academically rigorous way, but I'm also not an academic and not trying to operating in any kind of academic capacity. In the Metamodern video I do cite in the description every direct source that I used for that video, the rest is just me apply the understanding I gained via those sources. Hope that clarifies.

      @ThomasFlight@ThomasFlight9 ай бұрын
    • Totally get it! There are film theory writings that definitely isn’t digestible and way out there for your videos (Deleuze and the ones you mentioned being great examples 😅) Some of my fav books and articles recently have been from makers perspective or about practice (Eisenstein, Deren, Tarkovsky, Walter Murch, many French directors). I wanted to ask because a lot of the questions and observations you make remind me of writing or commentary I have read or am reading for exams. Thanks for the reply! I usually share your Parasite Video Editing if I use the film in class for editing

      @tmkscholar@tmkscholar9 ай бұрын
    • Deleuze is to win@@ThomasFlight

      @thequalitones171@thequalitones1714 ай бұрын
  • His entire filmography is one of using other forms of media to create a fourth wall in the narrative, but using the components of the adopted media of other art forms to highlight how it's a bit of a farse to ignore the fact that art is performative. All his characters use their art to be their identity because meaning is a desperate need for all humans. Whether watching a play, documentary, film, or listening to music you seek that validation but can only have get it from the artiface. People are the only saving grace. But we almost always find our path through art. This is why Wes Anderson is brilliant.

    @janedoe3043@janedoe30439 ай бұрын
  • I feel like another layer is Anderson directly commenting on his own work. So much has been said about how he uses theater like visuals and artifice to create distance, and then suddenly things get real and emotional. I think this is being said outright when the lighting and colors get the most real and everyone says "You can't wake up if you don't fall asleep" This is Anderson saying directly how he makes films. He puts us to sleep with pretty visuals and cute staging and then wakes us up with something real.

    @Piratejackyar@Piratejackyar7 ай бұрын
  • In my first view, I thought it was one of the Wes Anderson films I liked the least, but after watching this, I will certainly give it another chance with a second view. Great vid 🎉

    @ersantigres@ersantigres9 ай бұрын
  • Loved this video so much. Seen Asteroid City twice in theatres and I believe it to be Wes' best film. And your interpretation of "the experiences and emotions of the filmmaker coming through the layers of the film", this is exactly what I felt when watching this movie, Barbie, and Beau Is Afraid this year. An incredible year in which we get to feel the filmmaker rather than trying to break down the story or plot to find a message. It's human emotions, interpreted. And that's what makes a movie like this so phenomenal.

    @JonathanWymer@JonathanWymer9 ай бұрын
  • I know you said you weren’t sure if thee video was getting your thoughts across, but this really helped solidify this movie really connected with me. I absolutely loved the meta framing and the enotionak crutch of the movie wheen Scwartzman and Robbie talked about a "what if"

    @Bjhorn279@Bjhorn2799 ай бұрын
  • You shed so much new light on to the film for me, thank you so much for your fantastic critique.

    @alecgwin1443@alecgwin14438 ай бұрын
  • You have broken down this better than anyone. I kind of love this movie, but I need it to watch at home to understand it better

    @godzilla2721@godzilla27219 ай бұрын
  • To provide an answer to the quandary at 6:30, that wasn't Midge Campbell reacting to Augie Steenbeck burning his hand, that was Mercedes Ford reacting to Jones Hall burning his hand.

    @Ass_Blaster_Disaster_Master@Ass_Blaster_Disaster_Master9 ай бұрын
    • right but that's the point.... it's all three scarlet, midge, AND mercedes scarlet literally mercedes litterally within the fiction of the movie we are watching "asteroid city" midge within the fiction of the fiction of the movie we are watching actually there is a fourth layer we don't get the name of. which is the actor scarlet is playing in this fictional television program.

      @Grimmlocked@Grimmlocked9 ай бұрын
  • Thank you, finally some love for asteroid city

    @nestorarranz3179@nestorarranz31799 ай бұрын
  • I LOOVED YOUR INTERPRETATION OF THE FILM

    @berruorhan439@berruorhan4395 ай бұрын
  • I feel like this movie was, in a lot of ways, Wes Anderson feeling the need to outdo himself in his Wes-Andersoneyness. I thought it was interesting and pretty, but if his goal was to evoke a certain sense of the deep-rooted reality that acting and production is based off of, then he didn’t really do it in a very understandable way.

    @gerarddip@gerarddip9 ай бұрын
  • I loved this movie a ton, and am really glad you covered it.

    @omgitsbees@omgitsbees8 ай бұрын
  • I love your whole interpretation and how it peaks at 9:50! What you get to is precisely the emotion that authors such as Luigi Pirandello in Six Characters Looking for an Author or Miguel de Unamuno, when he refers to characters of 'flesh and bone', write about! I found it very disappointing how too many people dismissed this film as nothingness and a waste of acting power when it is extremely complex writing, producing, filming and acting something which is equal parts dreamy and a slap in the face. This film was a beautiful experience to me and its one of those instances in which I love to envy a writer/director like Wes, knowing that I'll probably never write something as good as this.

    @aviewerman@aviewerman9 ай бұрын
  • I watched in theaters 3 times trying to catch everything and find myself getting lost in the story. One of my favorite movies of the year

    @A62119@A621199 ай бұрын
  • I really loved watching this. Thank you ✨

    @noonehitwonder@noonehitwonder7 ай бұрын
  • This was great and got me thinking harder on the film again

    @codyeasonBGR@codyeasonBGR8 ай бұрын
  • Your explanation is wonderful, Mr. Flight

    @Saleemsan@Saleemsan9 ай бұрын
  • Who else saw the first thumbnail and prepared for their lunch break to see a new one. I know why they change but it always catches me off guard lol Excited to watch the video after I see asteroid city this evening.

    @sapaulgoogdmen9542@sapaulgoogdmen95429 ай бұрын
    • Every youtuber has a moment of post-posting clarity where they suddenly think of the perfect thumbnail

      @ThomasFlight@ThomasFlight9 ай бұрын
  • Thank for this videos. And this one, even if you might feel is chaotic, it's perfect for Asteroid City

    @tomanicodin@tomanicodin8 ай бұрын
  • This film is so bloody mindboggling. It's almost a commentary on commentary itself. It's not just _meta_ , it's _meta-meta_ .

    @kinhamid9665@kinhamid96659 ай бұрын
    • It’s not really that mind boggling. It’s not hard to comment on your art with in your art. It just means you are uncomfortable with sincerity.

      @hastyscorpion@hastyscorpion9 ай бұрын
    • @@hastyscorpionSelf-awareness doesn’t absolve you of your wrongdoings, but it also doesn’t make you insincere.

      @ZacLJones@ZacLJones9 ай бұрын
  • here's another wall for you: I bumped into jason schwartzman hanging out at the mall outside the theater right after watching this film

    @anonymerer@anonymerer9 ай бұрын
  • This movie feels like looking too closely at an impressionistic painting … too close analytically, and you can see brush strokes and the seemingly random colors, but if you step back and take in the whole perspective it begins to form a cohesive idea … ❤❤❤

    @Bass.sick.b1tch@Bass.sick.b1tch5 ай бұрын
  • literally just finished watching this movie like 30 mins ago and then boom, a thomas flight video

    @mattignite@mattignite9 ай бұрын
  • Reminds me of M. C. Escher's works where the Figure becomes the Ground and the Ground becomes the Figure -- with no clear line delineating the two.

    @zanderwohl@zanderwohl9 ай бұрын
  • This episode is so relevant and accurate, thank you Thomas

    @Klimexetixs@Klimexetixs9 ай бұрын
  • The film is joyful in its use of absurdism - yet so deeply profound. For me, Anderson's message is non-dual -- it hits us on the head that the reality we have constructed for ourselves is just story, just another dream layer. The actors themselves shout, "you can't wake up if you don't fall asleep." Most people live their lives asleep to the fact they are just a created character in a story. Just a single example: Johansson's character is referred to many times as being a comic genius, yet there is no time when we actually see this for ourselves - there is no true experience of it, it is just a story everyone repeats.

    @julietwochholz9755@julietwochholz97556 ай бұрын
  • I'm pretty sure that I thought this movie was a masterpiece and one of my favourites of Wes Anderson... Emotional on so many levels, hilarious, beautiful. Totally shocked because I actively disliked Isle of Dogs and French Dispatch and came in expecting this to be "self-indulgent Wes Anderson". Don't know how you could say there was no story or emotions in this one!

    @veonnisual@veonnisual9 ай бұрын
    • I feel that as well about it being very self indulgent, there was too much stuff going on, so many layers. It reminded me that other movie “Synecdoche, New York” which was not so fun to watch.

      @Irkennalpha@Irkennalpha9 ай бұрын
    • I like the two that you disliked way more than this one, which was kind of meh for me xD

      @andresperedo1275@andresperedo12759 ай бұрын
    • It’s got a ton of good elements but it feels half baked in a lot of ways. I really feel like it failed to explore nearly every theme it seemed to, a lot of his defenses feel a little like trying to justify deficiencies in the script. Like claiming that some lines are written like it’s a writer’s first take at a line, I don’t think it’s that deep or necessarily intentionally linked to the other elements of the story in most cases, he’s just never been good at writing natural dialogue. A film doesn’t need great dialogue to be successful but I really feel that asteroid city only explores its themes at surface level throughout the run time because it’s constantly hopping to a new theme, the audience could almost forget about the themes around grief for much of it, which feels like it should be a crucial plot element since conversations around it capped off the start and end. The way it wraps up too feels unfinished, the characters really go through very little development, and you could say that’s intentional but that’s also why a lot of people left unsatisfied. Also isle of dogs is indeed his worst film, but I would rank French dispatch and basically everything else he’s done above asteroid city from a storytelling standpoint. Visually, asteroid city is beautiful and I wish the other elements supported the strong art and visual direction. Even the soundtrack was pretty lackluster imo, it feels just a single arpeggio through the entire film’s runtime. Another element that felt half finished.

      @Kdkjdjewerdnxa@Kdkjdjewerdnxa9 ай бұрын
  • these are the reasons why Asteroid City might be my favorite Wes Anderson. a movie about the relationship between reality and performance/creation

    @Dalligator@Dalligator9 ай бұрын
  • the lines that stuck the most with me were the final exchange between schwartzman's and brody's characters: "i need a breath of fresh air," "but you won't find one." sometimes i do need to step back and think about why things are the way they are, but this life shit keeps going.

    @alessandro7450@alessandro74509 ай бұрын
  • Both myself and my boss love Wes movies and I saw Asteroid City first. Absolutely loved it. It smacked right up against Royal Tenenbaums for me as a near favorite for me. It was even better on the second viewing. My boss was just "eh" on it. He said he just didnt connect with any of the characters and felt like the whole play aspect should have just been skipped. I dont think he really understood the background story.

    @nissanfan64@nissanfan649 ай бұрын
  • I love your videos! So nice to listen to a fellow film nerd. :)

    @RitaHayworth346@RitaHayworth3469 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for the content. This is an exceptional execution of your product. You deliver that which you know and this is my favorite example of it. Thank you for all you do.

    @jeremy812@jeremy8128 ай бұрын
  • this was a very nice video and i too enjoyed it very much; i love analyzing media and films in general, and at some point i felt like the movie itself was trying to tell me to just feel, enjoy the moment and not try to get a concrete understanding of every scene im glad other people had a similar experience to mine

    @perdiditinmundo9178@perdiditinmundo91788 ай бұрын
  • Spot on interpretation ❤

    @homoousias@homoousias9 ай бұрын
  • Another masterpiece from Thomas Flight per usual. Hooray :D 🎉

    @magma_fire_bagwan@magma_fire_bagwan9 ай бұрын
  • Your voice is so soothing oh my word

    @Octobris@Octobris9 ай бұрын
  • I totally understand what you're trying to say and have in fact been thinking the same thing while getting back into stories and fiction lately... Things don't have to be realistic in order to be real. Great video, thanks for affirming what I was feeling!

    @phoenixnumber1@phoenixnumber19 ай бұрын
  • Thomas! I would have not enjoyed this movie as much as I did had I not seen your video on “Why Wes Anderson movies look like that” prior to watching it. Thank you for contributing to the experience of film

    @isabellasantiago6473@isabellasantiago64739 ай бұрын
  • Interesting and astute analysis...nice!

    @jorsetti@jorsetti9 ай бұрын
  • "What is Asteroid City about?" They ask. "I have no idea" I reply, "But I enjoyed every second of it"

    @JamesChurchill3@JamesChurchill39 ай бұрын
  • This is probably the best video essay on the movie!

    @invancouver691@invancouver6919 ай бұрын
  • I have yet to see the film, but i think you (and presumably WA) touched on something deep and profound about the truth inside of fiction. The fiction provides a setting for the actor to display to the audience their truth in ways that we rarely encounter in real life. Thanks for this

    @TheloniousCube@TheloniousCube4 ай бұрын
  • Great video Thomas

    @warmweathr@warmweathr9 ай бұрын
  • There is as scene in the movie where they're seated at a dining table and the colors are so stark it made me think of a Norman Rockwell painting.

    @kenburnett2445@kenburnett24454 ай бұрын
  • I interpreted augie burning his hand as a commentary on criticism of "it doesnt make sense for the character to do this, why would they do that" Sometimes there does not need to be a reason. People do things for no reason all the damn time.

    @Coolio_Ash@Coolio_Ash9 ай бұрын
  • "cast into that uncertainty,.." Brilliant dude.

    @JimGrimaldiFilms@JimGrimaldiFilms7 ай бұрын
  • Love it, thanks. This movie is really about narrative but I feel every anderson movie is, it is just sometimes is more in your face, like here and on the french dispatch. And it annoys me like the world seem to think he is all about pastel colours, cute palettes and this kinds of shots and this list of actor.... and kinda not respecting him because of this (yes AI generated trailers I am looking at you) while everyone love other narrative shenanigans like the ones from kaufman (wich I also love), as being more serious film for some reason. Like you can use pastel and still be respected can't you? Anderson shows us you don't have to be dark and gray and unnerving to make great and sometimes puzzling storytelling.

    @panstolen@panstolen9 ай бұрын
  • The fact that you told your piece in black and white as well as in color using B-roll footage of the shoot to elaborate on the staging of a play inside a play by making it a play within a play within a movie that exists within your essay is not lost on us. ❤

    @richteffekt@richteffekt4 ай бұрын
  • Woow this is the analysis I was looking for!

    @narbigcito@narbigcito9 ай бұрын
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