
Wes Anderson always tries to out-Wes Anderson himself with every new movie — the framing devices within framing devices, the immense ensemble casts, the intricate and stunning production design and often complex, windy storylines and characters. Some times it pays off less than others, but The Phoenician Scheme is a delight from start to finish that aspires for big but also stays true to what it establishes itself to be. Benicio del Toro finds himself in his best film role since Sicario as a pitiful and apathetical tycoon, while Mia Threapleton gives a killer breakout performance as his maybe surrogate/maybe biological daughter. Their dynamic is filled with battles of wits and values, and Anderson again recruits a truly larger-than-life cast, all in kooky and entertaining fashion. Michael Cera, Riz Ahmed, Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Richard Ayoade, and Scarlett Johansson are only a few standouts here, and they really do keep on coming. Anderson also aspires for great scope with the fictional settings the leads journey into, which continue to wow and surprise; the sheer imagination of the sets is always a highlight for the director, as are the beautiful shots here.
The details of the titular deal that Benicio del Toro’s character is after may be so complicated and brisked past that they’re difficult to understand until much later on, but the caper-like plot developments are so exciting, thanks to an energy the film figures out in its opening moments and doesn’t let go of. It’s also one of the filmmaker’s funniest films in a long time, with the laughs being nearly constant but also revealing things about the characters and world we’re watching. If anything falls short here, Anderson seems to love a good anticlimax — a sudden pivot away from the big climax for a quiter, more meditative conclusion. Though this has worked in his favor before, the problem is that he’s actually trying to go for a grand finale here, but can’t help and make it feel way less than what it should be. It’s got the globe-trotting adventurousness of The Grand Budapest Hotel and The French Dispatch, and the director’s imagination doesn’t hold back. It’s certainly a step up from his previous Asteroid City, the laughs and story continuing to escalate and the pace never hitting the brakes until the very end.
