Friday, September 28, 2007

darjeeling limited

Making a film in India can never be easy," says director Wes Anderson whose newest film, The Darjeeling Limited, was shot mostly in Rajasthan. "Every little place in the country is so fascinating that you feel like making one film after another."

Darjeeling Limited opens the New York Film Festival on September 28, and focuses on three bickering brothers who go on a spiritual journey in India hoping to reconcile with each other.

Anderson, whose hit films include The Royal Tenenbaums, wanted to shoot the film in Darjeeling. "But I hardly saw the sun when I spent a few days there while working on the script," he chuckles. "By then, I had fallen in love with Rajasthan, and that is how we ended up with most of our work shot on a moving train through the state."

The 38-year-old director cast Owen Wilson, Oscar-winner Adrien Brody (The Pianist) and Jason Schwartzman (who also co-wrote the screenplay) as the brothers who have not spoken to each other in a year. Veteran actress Angelica Huston plays a small but pivotal role as the estranged mother of the three men.

London-based newcomer Amara Karan, who among other interesting encounters with the three brothers has a scorching kissing scene, is the steward on the train. And in a very brief appearance, Irrfan Khan appears as the grieving father whose son dies in a drowning accident.

Anderson says by putting the tense brothers, who are suspicious of each other, in a constantly fast moving India, he was able to create a kind of quiet drama he has never created before.

Eschewing the standard practice of shooting the interior scenes of a train on a sound stage in a studio, he opted to shoot them on a hired train. The train itself is one of the big 'characters' in the film. But India is an even bigger character, he says.

"India gets under your skin in no time," Anderson, who fell in love with India when he watched Jean Renoir's The River and practically every film of Satyajit Ray. "I have travelled widely and can't think of any other place that is filled with colours like India. Another amazing thing I found when I visited India by myself four years ago was how people look at you as if you are from another planet. This happens in smaller towns and villages. I feel I am an alien. But soon, I realise I can never be alone in India. Friendships are made in no time."

Owen Wilson plays Francis, the eldest of the three brothers in the film, and is a control freak. Wilson is a close friend of the filmmaker from their college days in Austin, Texas. The actor, who is recovering from a suicide attempt recently, is seen heavily bandaged throughout the film. It is suspected that he had tried to kill himself.

'Francis sees himself as one trying to keep the family together,' he says in the production notes. 'Because our father is dead, our mother is AWOL, Francis is literally damaged. And there is Jack (Schwartzman), coming out of a bad relationship. There is also Peter, who is having trouble with his wife. So Francis has united the brothers on this great spiritual adventure in India, and he has the funny idea they're going to have a spiritual journey -- whether they like it or not.'

But a lot of things go wrong till the three find sudden inspiration to alter their lives. 'For much of the film, the story reminded me of one of those family vacations you had growing up where everything would in a disaster,' Wilson muses.

The second brother Peter (Brodie) is intensely unhappy with his life for a number of reasons including the thought of becoming a father soon. And the youngest brother Jack is a writer who finds plenty of 'inspiration' in the crises in his own family. Like his siblings, he too has a mean streak in him.

Despite visiting a number of temples and shrines, the brothers don't come any closer. But an unexpected incident lands them in the middle of the desert in a small village. Watching a tragedy unfold, and seeing the villagers addressing it with dignity, the brothers start another kind of journey. And this time, it looks like they may learn a few life lessons.

Anderson has said that he always wanted to do a film about three brothers because he is one of three brothers. 'We grew up fighting and yet, they are the closest people in the world to me,' he has said in an interview. 'Of course, all the characters in the movie are fictional.'

As the three watch things happen unexpectedly to them, they learn to approach each other in a different way. "They learn to approach death in a different way too," Anderson says, adding that their minds go back to their father's death and how they had behaved after the funeral.

Anderson, who also got Schwartzman's cousin Roman Coppola to work on the script, talks about how they started plotting the story in the cafes in Paris, and went to India in 2006 to do more writing. They travelled by train and went to dozens of temples looking for plot ideas.

"We did all the things in the movie -- acted the whole movie out together, the three of us," Anderson says though he hastens to add that they did not carry a dead child or buy a deadly snake, or have an affair on the train as shown in the film.

Coppola says Anderson would create a kind of yin and yang through out the shoot. On one hand everything was 'crisply choreographed and designed,' and yet he would stay open to the utterly spontaneous confusion, comedy and chaos. "In the middle of all this, there was always something beautiful," Coppola adds. "The whole spirit behind the movie was to put these difficult, enigmatic and strange characters on the train and then to move fast into chaos, to really roll with the punches, hoping a lot of unexpected happen."

Many of the film's scenes -- including a nerve wracking trip Bill Murray makes at the very beginning of the film in a cab to the train station -- were shot on the crowded streets.

Cinematographer Robert Yeoman, who has photographed all the five films Anderson has made, confesses immediately he has never been challenged more on any film as on The Darjeeling Limited.

'Shooting on the Indian streets is somewhat uncontrollable,' he says in the film's production notes, 'and the sight of a camera always draws huge crowds. Wes likes to carefully place each of his actors in the frame but we often had to deal with the spectators in the background.'

And how did they manage to work quickly? 'We worked often with no lights for day scenes,' he says. 'We also learned how to take the advantage of all this randomness. I hope the film got a particular energy by all the unpredictability.'
It was a boarding school in Rushmore, a gorgeous city home in The Royal Tenenbaums, and a grand oceanic vessel in The Life Aquatic; Wes Anderson has a jones for condensed spaces. In The Darjeeling Limited, it's a luxurious locomotive rolling through the sublime terrain of Darjeeling, India. Stowed away amongst the German tourists and the toppling luggage are the Whitman Brothers (Jack, Francis, and Peter), a gang of American buffoons trying to find enlightenment, salvation, and relief amidst the sand dunes.

The eldest Whitman brother, Francis (Owen Wilson), found time for an epiphany as he lay on the ground after a motorcycle accident, leaving to wonder why his younger brothers weren't with him. His remedy consists of a brotherly train trip accompanied by a surprise visit to their estranged mother's parish. Don't worry: There's a laminated itinerary if you get confused. The youngest, Jack (Anderson staple Jason Schwartzman), comes aboard to shed the skin of his ex-girlfriend while Peter (Anderson newbie Adrien Brody), the middle brother, has begun feeling desperation over his impending fatherhood. Moreover, they are digging and scratching at every surface to hide the grief over their father's passing; the event that caused their initial scattering.

Tourists at heart, the Whitman boys grab up every ritual, ceremony, and rare specimen of India that they can get their hands on, including a venomous snake and a can of mace. The constant interruptions, the flings with Indian girls, the compulsive stealing; the brothers grieve but not properly. With each absurd grasp at the unknown, the brothers move further away from the act of accepting their father's death and closer to maddening stasis. It is even apparent in the opening scene: an older man (the required Bill Murray) running for a train is outrun by a long-limbed Peter. The old man's inability to drop his cumbersome luggage becomes a key symbol of the film; a brilliant image that will come back at the film's culmination.

After spiritual incarnations involving feather-burying, bell-ringing, and temple-worshipping fail, the moment of truth finally comes when the brothers attempt to save three kids from drowning; two survive but one dies. In an open Renoir reference, the boys hang around an Indian village and are there for the child's funeral, dumbstruck by the heroic sadness of the boy's father (Irfan Khan). Though they still must visit mom (Anjelica Huston), it's in the village that the boys finally come to terms with their father and their repressed melancholy.

The village finds hope in these lost Americans, even if Francis' initial reaction to the drowning kids is "Look at these assholes!" Beautifully shot by Anderson's ace cinematographer Robert D. Yeoman, the filmmaker's search for the unknown leads to a whimsical sense of spirituality for both him and the Whitman boys, easily delineating Darjeeling as the auteur's best work to date. The use of songs by the Kinks, the Marc Jacobs designs, the dazed pastels; its all Anderson to a T, but it's the first time these elements have allowed Anderson to roam free, rather than cooping him up inside.
Remember those life-altering family trips you took as a child? Cross-country drives or never-ending plane trips with not enough space between you and your brother? This week's pick, The Darjeeling Limited, is essentially a modern version of those.

Starring Owen Wilson (who's on the mend, yay!), Adrien Brody and Jason Schwartzman, and written by the awesome Wes Anderson, the film follows a trip across India by three brothers looking to reconnect. Of course they're thrown off course by all sorts of issues (Indian cough syrup, pepper spray) and end up in the desert with a random array of belongings and a whole new challenge.


This film was shot entirely in India, so, in that vein we offer you some great things to check out in-country.


Where To Stay: The Oberoi, Bombay -- Check into this sleek high-rise of a hotel for some seriously swank digs. Every single floor has its own butler and rooms feature spacious separate areas with traditional furniture. When booking, ask for one overlooking the Arabian Sea so you won't miss out on the view.


Where To Eat: Masala Art, Delhi -- Stop and eat at Masala Art, where you'll get a performance and a meal. Chefs reinvent typical Indian cuisine, and mealtime demonstrations yield crowd-pleasing fare. This could mean achari jhinga (prawns flavored with raw mango) or paneer makai bhurjee (soft cheese scrambled with corn and spices).


What to See: Marble Palace, Calcutta -- Built in 1855, this palace was the inspiration of a member of Bengal's landed gentry and features multiple levels with various exotic birds just wandering around. Marble inlay floors make it popular for film sets. To take a tour, you have to get a pass from West Bengal Tourist Office one day in advance.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home