The golden filter, the rapid but regular movement in the long lens, with the achievements of "Youth and Young", "Genius" and "Life in the Water", it has become a consistent style in Wes Anderson's movies. In "Ling", he almost feasted without thinking about this unique attribute that belongs to him. However, it is a pity that this film is not as natural as his first three works in the standard edition. He tried to show the lost friendship between family brothers through an exotic trip, but the formal carrier of the journey is in this yellowish color. The scene was interpreted somewhat artificially. The American-style humorous lines were originally his masterpiece. In this film, they became deliberately not funny jokes. In contrast, the story is slightly less imaginative. Perhaps it is "Young Youth". The teacher-student sentiment in "Living in the Water" and the family ethics in "Life in the Water" were packed too thrillingly by Anderson’s brain-filled directorial power that dominates everything, so Venice’s "Crossing the Darjeeling", which was ignored by Venice, once converged the unscrupulous The frenzy of fantasies can only be reduced to the tastelessness of a rich feast. Even so, this film still captures the viewers' hearts with its exquisite photography and the ability to capture a flash of light.
View more about
The Darjeeling Limited reviews