Finalement! Wes Anderson’s ‘The French Dispatch’ Delivered To Theaters; ‘Becoming Cousteau’ Dives In – Specialty Preview

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After a long Covid delay, The French Dispatch opens this weekend with distributor Searchlight Pictures and the industry hoping the whimsical Wes Anderson’s film brings a touch of Grand Budapest Hotel-ish coin to the specialty box office.

Hoping, but not counting on it, as the box office take beyond studio tentpoles has been largely dour and stubbornly unpredictable. The French Dispatch debuts in 52 theaters and 14 markets in a crowded field including the pop culture phenomenon called Dune.

Searchlight acquired The French Dispatch in September of 2019 and it was to have played at a Covid-canceled Cannes in 2020. It premiered on the Croisette this year instead, then screened at the BFI London Film Festival, Telluride, the New York Film Festival –hitting 25 fests in all.

Anderson’s tenth film — full name The French Dispatch of the Liberty, Kansas Evening Sun — brings to life a collection of stories from the final issue of an American magazine published in a fictional 20th-century French city. With Benicio del Toro, Adrien Brody, Tilda Swinton, Léa Seydoux, Frances McDormand, Timothée Chalamet, Lyna Khoudri, Jeffrey Wright, Mathieu Amalric, Stephen Park, Bill Murray and Owen Wilson. It’s written and produced by Anderson with Steven Rales and Jeremy Dawson from a story he conceived with Roman Coppola, Hugo Guinness, and Jason Schwartzman.

“The film appeals to art house fans of all ages and, of course, fans of Wes Anderson and the New Yorker,” Searchlight said. Stylized versions of the magazine’s editors, writers and stories populate the movie.

Deadline’s review says: “If Anthony Lane doesn’t like it, there will be a price to pay. Searchlight Pictures probably shouldn’t even bother to release it in the red states, except maybe in Austin.”

Cities do include Austin as well as NY, LA, Philadelphia, Washington D.C., Boston, Denver, San Francisco, Portland Ore. Toronto, Vancouver, Seattle, Phoenix and Chicago. Searchlight is holding regional promotional screenings in top 40 markets targeting leading print, radio, TV and online outlets.

The French Dispatch

“Because of the nature of moviegoing in recent months, this won’t reach the gross levels of Grand Budapest Hotel or Moonrise Kingdom [2012]. However the reviews are mostly good and there is an audience out there that wants to get out of the house, and this may be the film that will do that,” said Searchlight SVP-General Sales Manager Frank Rodriguez. “To me there is not that much difference between Moonrise Kingdom, Grand Budapest Hotel and this. Wes Anderson makes a certain type of film. Very dense, very humorous, very meticulous, with stories and characters that make you feel good.”

Rodriguez recalled that Best Picture Oscar-winner Budapest Hotel grossed over $200,000 per screen in four theaters on its opening weekend. That was a surprise even at the time — and two or three zeros more than most specialty per screen openings this year.

Rodriguez said Searchlight carefully handpicked the first crop of theaters, a mix of arthouses, upscale urban and suburban multiplexes and as “the best hipster theatres in the country.” He and other specialty distributors have noted a steep drop-off in opening per screen tallies from the top 40-60 theaters to the bottom 200. French Dispatch expands next week to over 500 theatres in more than 60 markets and will add to that the weekend of 11/5.

The arthouse audience tends to be older and slower to return to theaters, although No Time To Die appears to have lured the demo back to cinemas in the greatest numbers since Covid. Anderson’s fantastical films also appeal to a younger crowd. “I think the bottom line for us in terms of what will make for a successful opening is that specialty audiences return to theatres in numbers that resemble what they used to be,” Rodriguez said. A tall order, but it’s got to happen eventually, right?

Searchlight’s media campaign balances traditional and digital media including national television, national and local public radio including podcasts, high impact outdoor advertising and digital including Apple News, Conde Nast, Flipboard, The New York Times, Hulu, Roku, YouTube, IMDb, Fandango, Rotten Tomatoes, Letterboxd, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Snapchat and TikTok. Creative partnerships include Accidentally Wes Anderson, the fansite with 1.5 million followers. The Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) and American Cinemateque both host retrospectives. Iconic Fabled midtown Manhattan department store Bergdorf Goodman features a window display and promotions; the Casa Magazines stand in Greenwich Village has been rebranded for the opening weekend; and Flying Coffee created a special branded French roast for the film.

French Dispatch trailer here:

Also opening: Picturehouse brings National Geographic Documentary Films’ Becoming Cousteau to 300+ screens in 50+ markets. Directed by Liz Garbus, the film follows legendary ocean explorer, inventor, filmmaker, author, unlikely celebrity and environmentalist Jacques-Yves Cousteau, whose life and legacy have become synonymous with a love of science and the natural world. The film debuted at Telluride. It’s a Rotten Tomatoes’ 100% Certified Fresh with critics. Deadline review here.

Produced by Garbus, Dan Cogan, Mridu Chandra, Evan Hayes. Executive produced by Julie Gaither, Carolyn Bernstein, Ryan Harrington.

Netflix is putting Jeymes Samuel’s new school Western The Harder They Fall in theaters ahead of a Nov. 3 debut on the streamer. With Jonathan Majors, Zazie Beetz, Delroy Lindo, LaKeith Stanfield, Danielle Deadwyler, Edi Gathegi, R.J. Cyler, Damon Wayans Jr., Deon Cole, Regina King and Idris Elba. Written by Samuel and Boaz Yakin, produced by Shawn Carter, James Lassiter, Lawrence Bender and Samuel. When outlaw Nat Love (Majors) discovers enemy Rufus Buck (Elba) is being released from prison he rounds up his gang to seek revenge. See Deadline review. The film had its world premiere in August opening the London Film Festival.

Amazon’s limited release of Will Sharpe’s The Electrical Life of Louis Wain with Benedict Cumberbatch, Claire Foy, Andrea Riseborough. The true story of eccentric British artist Louis Wain, whose playful, psychedelic pictures transformed the public’s perception of cats forever. Set in the early 1900s, we follow Wain as he seeks to unlock the “electrical” mysteries of the world and, in so doing, to better understand his own life and the love he shared with his wife. Deadline’s review from Telluride. Streaming Nov. 5.

Learning To Live Together: The Return of Mad Dogs & Englishmen from Abramorama, directed and produced by Jesse Lauter. Joe Cocker’s legendary 1970 Mad Dogs and Englishmen tour, immortalized in a live album and concert film, is revisited fifty years later by the first-time filmmaker through the lens of the Grammy Award-winning Tedeschi Trucks Band’s reunion of the Mad Dogs. The film showcases performances from the reunion show, never-before-seen archival materials and commentary from the original members.

Also produced by Wayne Forte and Blake Budney. Executive Produced by Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi, John Beug, Thomas Tull, Alba Tull and Bert Ellis.

Campy comedy thriller The Estate  from Vertical Entertainment by first-time director James Kapner, with Eliza Coupe, Chris Baker and Greg Finley. A narcissistic son yearning for a life of luxury, and his father’s erratic gold-digging wife decide to kill their way into inheritance with the help of mysterious hitman.

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