The Darjeeling Limited Movie Review
The Darjeeling Limited Review

"The Darjeeling Limited" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Wes AndersonProducer : Wes Anderson,Roman Coppola,Scott Rudin,Lydia Dean Pilcher
Screenwiter : Wes Anderson,Roman Coppola,Jason Schwartzman
Starring : Owen Wilson,Adrien Brody,Jason Schwartzman,Amara Karan,Anjelica Huston,Bill Murray,Irfan Khan,Camilla Rutherford
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.
Getting crowded in here.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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