Updated On: 25 August, 2023 01:16 PM IST | Los Angeles | Johnson Thomas
Wes Anderson’s latest is yet another highly stylized narrative of cosmic significance. Read more to find out why

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Wes Anderson’s latest is yet another highly stylized narrative of cosmic significance. It’s hard for the general audience to get emotionally connected with Anderson’s stories but there’s plenty of goodies to be had in the framing, visual design, and poignance with which he narrates his multi-pronged stories. “Asteroid City,” his latest collaboration with cinematographer Robert Yeoman, is certainly wondrously beautiful to look at.
This film opens in documentary format, black-and-white, circa 1955, in the United States of America, narrated by Bryan Cranston, who tells the story of the theatrical “Asteroid City,” in which some of the key figures are a fictional playwright named Conrad Earp (Edward Norton) and director Schubert Green (Adrien Brody). Earp’s play is set at a remote Western meteor crash site hosting a Space Camp in which several scholastically gifted teens are presenting futuristic inventions.