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‘The Phoenician Scheme' Review: A Brilliant Benicio del Toro Leads Wes Anderson's Poignant Narrative Jigsaw Puzzle

‘The Phoenician Scheme' Review: A Brilliant Benicio del Toro Leads Wes Anderson's Poignant Narrative Jigsaw Puzzle

Yahoo19-05-2025

It's been a challenging few years to be a fan of Wes Anderson (not that it's ever really been easy).
Since the commercial and critical success of The Grand Budapest Hotel, the filmmaker has released works that have doubled down on the quirkiness of his visual style and grown more intellectually meta-textual. One sparked minor controversy (Isle of Dogs) and another inspired more confusion than admiration (The French Dispatch). His most recent feature-length project instigated some eye-rolls (Asteroid City) and a 39-minute short released later that year was mostly ignored (The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, an underrated gem). In general, Anderson's movies have been criticized for being so insular and indulgent of the auteur's trademark aesthetics that they distance everyone except the stans and the stars.
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The Phoenician Scheme, Anderson's latest film, won't have true haters reconsidering their options, but it will entice those who've been feeling alienated to rejoin rank. The espionage comedy flaunts an excellent Benecio del Toro as Zsa-zsa Korda, a serpentine 1950s industrialist, who, after surviving another assassination attempt on his life, begins to consider his legacy.
In a well-meaning but poorly executed attempt at redemption, Zsa-zsa names his estranged daughter Liesl (an equally fine Mia Threapleton) as heir to his empire. The only problem is Liesl, on the verge of taking her oath to become a nun, doesn't want the job. She's still mad at her father for her mother's death. Their relationship is strained and, quite frankly, she wants nothing to do with a man so unabashedly sinful. But the two manage to strike a deal with Liesl agreeing to a trial period, in which Zsa-zsa will review the complex processes he uses to manipulate the market, scam his allies and cheat his competitors, and Liesl can decide if she wants to be heir.
Premiering at Cannes in competition before Focus releases it widely on June 6, The Phoenician Scheme marks a return for Anderson to the emotionally grounded and intimate narratives that made his more accessible works (like Rushmore, The Royal Tenenbaums and Moonrise Kingdom) so popular. Part of the film is inspired by Anderson's late father-in-law Fouad Malouf (to whom the project is dedicated), and in recent interviews the director has suggested that having his own daughter likely influenced thematic elements of the film.
Indeed, there's a sense that Anderson is considering a deeper set of questions here. The Phoenician Scheme tethers the filmmaker's existential interests (the unfettered power of the billionaire class, unchecked greed and environmentalism) to the kind of poignant humanistic narrative that's been missing from his latest offerings.
The relationship between Zsa-zsa and Liesl unspools with humor, insightful revelations and a bit of surprise. Del toro and Threapleton make a winning pair as a father and daughter learning to relate to one another. Anderson built del Toro's role around the actor, who repays him with a beauty of a performance, embodying the detached charisma of a morally dubious tycoon with cool ease. From the moment we meet Zsa-zsa, the depth of his ruthlessness is apparent, but he becomes disarmed in the face of his equally forceful daughter. Del Toro and Threapleton play their characters in a way that allows these two people, who initially seem diametrically opposed, to start to resemble one another. Most of this happens on a micro level, with facial expressions and an almost mirroring physicality.
As with all Anderson films, The Phoenician Scheme boasts an enchanting world in which viewers can get lost. The director shows off his meticulous attention to detail and symmetrical composition, as well as a muted and moody color grading that serves as a steady reminder of the film's darker themes.
Collaborating again with Roman Coppola (Asteroid City) on the story, Anderson constructs one of his most complicated narratives yet. After Liesl agrees to the trial run, Zsa-zsa retrieves six show boxes that contain blueprints for three complex infrastructure projects across the fictional Modern Greater Independent Phoenicia. Each part of the plan requires Zsa-zsa and now Liesl to persuade a number of industrial barons and powerful bankers to help finance the project.
Just before they embark on their journey, though, Zsa-zsa realizes that his enemies have fixed the price of a key tool, which has increased the cost of construction around the region. Now, he must manipulate all these people to give more money so they can shrink the deficit. It's a challenging jigsaw and there's a bit of math involved, but fully grasping it isn't a requirement for enjoying The Phoenician Scheme.
What's important to keep in mind are the key players, who include Anderson regulars and a few newcomers. Joining Zsa-zsa and Liesl on their journey is Bjorn (Michael Cera, hilarious), an entomologist from Oslo whom Zsa-zsa hires to teach him about insects. He's a strange figure, who slowly falls for and tries to woo Liesl. There's also Prince Farouk (Riz Ahmed), Leland (Tom Hanks) and Reagan (Bryan Cranston), with whom Zsa-zsa must play basketball in order to get their blessing for constructing a railway (and also for more money).
Other people the pair must deal with include the American shipping magnate Marty (Jeffrey Wright, ripe to lead an Anderson film one day); Zsa-zsa's second cousin Hilda (Scarlett Johansson); and Zsa-zsa's shadowy and somehow even more morally dubious brother, Uncle Nubar (Benedict Cumberbatch). As Zsa-zsa and Liesl race across the region in their private jet, a radical militia led by a man named Sergio (Richard Ayode) trails them. They aren't Zsa-zsa's only problem: Everywhere he goes, the tycoon must watch out for assassination attempts.
As with all Anderson films, the actors commit to the weird and zany rules of the director's world. People talk fast, dispensing information with efficiency, and there are some wonderful (and explosive) set pieces. Working again with Adam Stockhausen in production design and Milena Canonero in costuming, Anderson constructs the world of Zsa-zsa and all his shady dealings as one of gluttonous consumption. It's hard not to think about the current cadre of tech moguls — Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg among many others — when you watch the unscrupulous scheming. In one of my favorite gags, Zsa-zsa succinctly sums up what feels like a motto for the one percent: 'I am not a citizen at all. I don't need my human rights.'
The Phoenician Scheme moves so briskly that its tenderness sneaks up on you. One minute Zsa-zsa and Liesl are fighting about what really happened to her mother (an ongoing mystery), and the next the two seem like they might be finding common ground. It's within this narrative thread that The Phoenician Scheme reveals its optimistic core. Before Zsa-zsa survived his sixth assassination attempt, he briefly died and entered a kind of liminal, heaven-as-fever-dream space. (These interludes are in black-and-white and pop up frequently throughout the film). This confrontation with mortality and God doesn't make the atheist billionaire more religious, but it does push him to re-evaluate what's important to him and reach out to his daughter. It's that specific brush with death that propels the first real, and most honest, deal of his life.
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Benicio Del Toro: Imagination runs amok in 'Phoenician Scheme'
Benicio Del Toro: Imagination runs amok in 'Phoenician Scheme'

UPI

time42 minutes ago

  • UPI

Benicio Del Toro: Imagination runs amok in 'Phoenician Scheme'

1 of 5 | Benicio Del Toro attends the photo call for "The Phoenician Scheme" at the Cannes Film Festival on May 19. Photo by Rune Hellestad/UPI | License Photo NEW YORK, June 6 (UPI) -- Oscar-winning actor Benicio del Toro says writer-director Wes Anderson meticulously plans every scene in his movies, but still welcomes input from his cast. "The approach is the same approach that I do on any movie I do. Just, I think, Wes wants you to be in the moment. He wants you to tell the truth, whatever that means," Del Toro, 58, said in a recent virtual press conference to promote his second collaboration with Anderson, The Phoenician Scheme, in theaters nationwide on Friday. "You have all this dialogue," Del Toro said, "but you can still bring a piece of yourself into it. And there's room for the imagination, too, to run amok. And you've got to have fun. Even if you're drowning, you've got to have fun." Co-starring Scarlett Johannson, Michael Cera, Bryan Cranston, Bill Murray and Tom Hanks, the espionage comedy is set in 1950 and follows Zsa-zsa Korda (Del Toro), an industrialist and arms dealer who wants to bring his estranged daughter Liesl (Mia Threapleton) -- a Catholic nun -- into his dangerous, top-secret business. It's Wes Anderson's world, we're just scheming in it. Focus Features (@FocusFeatures) June 6, 2025 "It's layered. It's full of contradictions, which makes it really yummy for an actor to try to bring to life," Del Toro said. "There is an element of my character wanting a second chance at mending a broken relationship. And I think that in the process in order to achieve that, he has to change and he does change. And I like to think that people can change. Not everyone changes, but I think some people can, and for the better." After previously working with Anderson on the 2021 hit The French Dispatch, Del Toro is used to the filmmaker's dense, quirky language. But, this time around, he has a larger role and a lot more to say. "There were a couple of moments where I went up to Wes and I said: 'Well, maybe we can take this dialogue out.' And, then, I went back to it and it wasn't as good," Del Toro recalled. "I had to go up to him and go like, 'I think you need to put it back because we're passing information that I think you need.' But that's why I couldn't join these people [in the cast] every day for dinner. I had to go up into my room and talk to myself." "You had a lot to say," Anderson agreed. "You took the time to absorb everything." Del Toro said another contribution he made to the project concerned Michael Cera's character Professor Bjorn, the tutor of Zsa-zsa's nine sons, who has a habit of sticking around when sensitive information is being shared. "I remember telling Wes, 'Well, I'm giving a lot of private information to my daughter and there is this stranger sitting right there. I feel uncomfortable as the character, giving all this information in front of a stranger. I'm telling her about my bank accounts and my everything, deals, with secrecy,'" Del Toro said. "Wes said to me, 'Well, we'll polygraph him.' And I went, 'Well, OK.' And, very quickly, he came up with this idea of a lie detector, which is a portable pocket polygraph," he added. "In 1950, it was probably the size of this building, but he made it into the pocket version." Despite the heightened reality, Anderson said this is essentially a father-daughter tale. "His whole business plan is really a mechanism for him to get back together with her," Anderson said of Zsa-zsa and Liesl. "He's acting like he's making her his successor and, really, it's more about what's going to happen between the two of them right now," Anderson added. "The business plan almost becomes like a ritual for him to be reunited with his daughter. ... In that sense, his plan goes great." Anderson first approached Del Toro about starring in this film after they wrapped up The French Dispatch. "I had a sort of the idea of a Euro tycoon, somebody who would've been in a [Michelangelo] Antonioni movie or something, that visual," Anderson said. "I did have this idea that he was probably hurting, that he was going to be in physical distress. Somehow, that was the image of this guy who you sort of can't kill." Over the course of time, however, this fictional man with a plan in a suit started mixing with Anderson's father-in-law Fouad Malouf, who, the filmmaker described as "an engineer and a businessman and he had all these different projects and different places." "He was a kind, warm person, but very intimidating," Anderson said. "He had all his business in these shoe-boxes. He walked [Anderson's wife] through his work at a certain point, because he thought if he is not able to see everything through, she needs to know what he's got. "And her reaction was what you say in the movie," Anderson turned to Threapleton, who immediately chimed in, "This is just crazy." "So, yeah, it was a mixture of those two things," Anderson quipped. "Fouad and whatever the first thing I said was."

Diddy's Ex-Girlfriend Testifies To Participating In 'Sleazy' Freak Offs, Crying During 18-Hour Session
Diddy's Ex-Girlfriend Testifies To Participating In 'Sleazy' Freak Offs, Crying During 18-Hour Session

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Diddy's Ex-Girlfriend Testifies To Participating In 'Sleazy' Freak Offs, Crying During 18-Hour Session

More alleged details of Sean 'Diddy' Combs' personal life are exposed as witnesses testify regarding his romantic relationships and freak offs. On Thursday, (June 5), an ex-girlfriend of Combs, who is identified as 'Jane', testified that during their three-year relationship, a majority of intimate encounters involved other men. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the woman explained that her relationship with the Harlem native began with lush vacations and only the two of them in bed. As their relationship progressed, Jane claimed it started to involve drug use and escorts as Combs initiated the 'freak offs.' She also testified that 90% of their sexual encounters involved other men. 'I just thought that it was a night of fun; I didn't think that we'd be doing it again,' she explained. 'I just wanted to satisfy my partner.' In her testimony, she further detailed how she became trapped in the relationship due to Combs providing for her financially and informed the jury, 'I felt obligated to perform because my partner was paying my rent.' According to Rolling Stone, Jane Doe returned to the stand on Friday and continued to reflect on her account during her time with the 55-year-old. 'It's dark, sleazy, and makes me feel disgusted with myself,' she claimed to have told Combs in 2023 about not wanting to participate in the freak offs. 'I don't want to play this role anymore. I'm so much more than this,' and 'I feel like it's the only reason you have me around and pay for the house.' That same year, she alleged to have agreed to participate in a 'sober' party, despite Combs still using cocaine and ecstasy. During this freak off, Jane Doe claimed that she vomited, however, the Bad Boy Records founder dismissed her health concerns. 'Sean came in and I told him I had just thrown up,' she testified. 'And he was like, 'That's good, you'll feel better. Let's go, the third guy is here.'' TMZ reports that she also testified to crying during two freak offs, the first one being a surprise session when she thought she would have a one-on-one night with Combs. The session, she claims, lasted 18 hours and took place at the Waldorf Hotel in Beverly Hills early in their relationship. The second time she burst into tears was after a 'hotel night' while she was in the shower, high on drugs. Combs is charged with one count of racketeering conspiracy; two counts of sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion; and two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution, and has pleaded not guilty. Earlier this week, U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian warned the Grammy-winner that he could be removed from the courtroom for 'absolutely unacceptable' behavior after allegedly making facial expressions towards the jury. The trial is expected to last all of June and into July. More from Judge Warns Diddy He Could Be Kicked Out Of Court For His "Absolutely Unacceptable" Behavior Bryana Bongolan, Cassie's Friend, Testifies Diddy Threatened Her Life And Said "I Can Kill You" 50 Cent Reacts To Cam'ron Asking Male Sex Worker About His Son's Mother, Daphne Joy

Regal to offer $1 family movie tickets this summer. Here's what to know
Regal to offer $1 family movie tickets this summer. Here's what to know

Miami Herald

time3 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Regal to offer $1 family movie tickets this summer. Here's what to know

Regal Cinemas is offering $1 tickets on family-friendly movies all summer long. Starting Tuesday, June 10, moviegoers can snag discounted tickets on select family films every Tuesday and Wednesday as part of its Summer Movie Express, the theater chain said. More than 400 participating theaters will screen two PG-rated movies each week until Aug. 6, offering $1 tickets for the first show of the day, according to a news release. 'Once again, we are excited to bring back this highly anticipated summer program of crowd-pleasing entertainment for groups of all sizes at an incredibly affordable price,' Brooks LeBoeuf, senior vice president of U.S. Content for Regal, said in the release. Family movies playing this summer include 'Sing 2,' 'IF,' 'PAW Patrol, The Movie,' and more. Customers can also grab discounted concessions, including a $5 snack pack that comes with a small drink, snack-sized popcorn and fruit snacks, according to the movie theater's website. The summer months are usually the busiest for most theaters, and 'foot traffic is everything,' The Hollywood Reporter reported in May 2024. Citing industry experts and data, the outlet reported that the profit margin on single tickets is around 33% and jumps to '56 percent on a concession.' Rival AMC Theaters is also looking to woo moviegoers with half-priced tickets for Stubs Rewards members every Wednesday this summer, McClatchy News reported. The discount launches July 9 and will be available in addition to the Tuesday ticket discount currently offered to the chain's rewards members. Find your nearest Regal theater here.

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