"}},{"@type":"Question","name":"What was the point of the alien in Asteroid City?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Many of the central characters in Asteroid City are preoccupied with death and grief. The alien is that struggle embodied, turned literal. It is not a figure of danger but of absurdity. It appears, it takes something, it leaves, like the Grim Reaper."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"What does the end of Asteroid City mean?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"The woman, played by Margot Robbie in a brief but crucial cameo, recites from memory the climactic scene she and Jones would have shared: a reunion in space, where Auggie gets another chance to say good-bye to the mother of his children and the love of his life."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"What do the black and white scenes mean in Asteroid City?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Asteroid City has two parallel narratives running simultaneously and complementing one another. Black-and-white scenes tell the behind the scenes story of the production of a play / television show (it's unclear) written by famed playwright Conrad Earp (played by Anderson regular Edward Norton)."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Why did they say you can't wake up if you don't fall asleep in Asteroid City?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"The mantra near the end of the film; 'You can't wake up if you don't fall asleep' underlines the point echoed by the film itself that we live in and perceive different multi-layered realities that range from pure fantasy to the harsh reality of physical existence."}}]}}

Asteroid City movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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Asteroid City movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert (1)

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Max Fischer, the arrogant and beleaguered co-protagonist of director Wes Anderson’s 1998 second feature, the classic and still-beloved “Rushmore,” had a lot of boasts in his repertoire, one being “I wrote a hit play.” Both an academic disaster and a relentless “can-do” guy, Fischer was performing an adolescence that would spare him having to confront its difficult parts, one of them being the emotional privation of losing his mother.

I don’t need to tell you that Wes Anderson’s movies are highly stylized, nor do I need to tell you that many critics of his work have complained that his stylization works at the expense of emotional credibility and that “Rushmore,” which was released three decades ago, represents his most successful balancing act of visual design and genuine poignance. It’s a matter of taste. I’ve never been alienated by the lively neatness of Anderson’s frames. And as far as I’m concerned, “Asteroid City,” his latest collaboration with cinematographer Robert Yeoman, may be the most incandescently beautiful of all their movies so far. Additionally, its emotional impact is substantial. Imagine a gorgeous butterfly landing on your heart and then squeezing on that heart with sharp pincers you never knew it had.

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One of the key figures of “Asteroid City” is a fictional playwright named Conrad Earp (Edward Norton). He has written, we learn, a hit play, more than one, in fact.

This film opens in lustrous black-and-white and square Academy ratio, taking the form of a TV documentary, circa 1955,in the United States of America. Before screening the film, my wife and I talked about what I might experience, and reflecting on the last few Anderson movies, we asked, “Voice-over or no voice-over?” to which the answer turned out to be “Yes, and no.” Thefaux documentary is narrated by a nattily suitedBryan Cranston, who tells the story of the theatrical “Asteroid City,” a Carter Earp work, which is presentedhere by Anderson and company in gorgeous color and widescreen and cinematic brio.

If this sounds hard to follow—already!—well, it’s not. Anderson’s new movie is the most ingeniously conceived and seamlessly executed of his anthology/nesting multi-narratives. Earp’s play is set at a remote Western meteor crash site hosting a sort of Space Camp. The place is, as the settings for all of Anderson’s movies have tended to be, beautiful geographically/geologically (the orange of the desert and the cloudless blue sky create the visual equivalent of eating a Creamsicle on a sunny day) as well as in terms of building layout and design. None of the details, from the copy on the diner front to the displays of the vending machines, are extraneous.

The Space Camp this small not-quite-town is hosting is a gathering of several scholastically gifted teens whose futuristic inventions—one of them literally a disintegration ray—are going to be stolen by the U.S. government (here presenting its most benign face via Jeffrey Wright’s General Gibson). The brilliant kids all bring their own drama. Woodrow (Jake Ryan) is the oldest son of war photographer Augie Steenback (Jason Schwartzman), who, as a competition for a scholarship begins, hasn’t yet told the teen, or his three young daughters, that their mother is three weeks dead. Woodrow, nicknamed “Brainiac” by his beloved mom, finds an immediate and, of course, initially awkward affinity with fellow “Junior Stargazer” Dinah (Grace Edwards), the daughter of Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson), a movie star whose dedication to the craft is matched by her free-floating melancholy. Other Stargazers have different issues—Ricky Cho (Ethan Josh Lee), a healthy skepticism of authority; Clifford Kellogg (Aristou Meehan), a compulsion to challenge adults to dare him to pull ill-advised stunts. The ease with which Anderson packs characters and their odd traits into a never-flagging narrative (the movie keeps fizzing and buzzing throughout its 105-minute running time) is remarkable.

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The human drama of the Asteroid City portion of the film, which finds Augie, his father-in-law Stanley(Tom Hanks), and the Steenback children, among others, negotiating with awful grief, is interrupted by not one but two visitations by an alien spacecraft. The new knowledge of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe solves nobody’s problems—it just obliges them to stay in the desert for at least another week. Looking out their cabin windows at each other, Augie and Midge compare notes, with Midge concluding, “We’re just two catastrophically wounded people who don’t express the depths of our pain because ... we don’t want to.”

Johansson is utterly beguiling in a half-enigmatic, half-quietly-blunt mode, while Schwartzman’s performance is revelatory. The actor—who played Max Fischer and has participated in nearly all of Anderson’s films since—shows a new maturity here, gravitas practically, playing a helpless man rather than a stunted adolescent. The nature of his role—in addition to playing Augie, he plays the actor playing Augie, an actor-playwright Earp is initially reluctant to cast—allows him to forge two discrete romantic affiliations (one a maybe, one a definitely), which makes his performance doubly tricky to execute, and doubly pleasurable to watch.

All of the film’s action—and there’s so much of it, and all of it revels in the joy of creation, of performance, of human invention that seeks a cosmic splendor—eventually concentrates on the banal and yet all-consuming question, “What is the meaning of life?” Of course, the movie's charactersdon't always put the inquiry so plainly. Here it takes the form of the statement, articulated like a plea: “I don’t understand the play.” Followed by the heartbreaking query, “Am I doing it right?”

“Asteroid City” portrays a gorgeous gallery of people in various guises, performing art and performing life, all trying to do it right. It’s a sui generis contraption that nevertheless has its heart in the modern classics—I felt echoes of “Our Town” and “Citizen Kane” and such throughout. But most clearly, by the end, I heard the voice of a different master. Recommending the film to an old friend, I told him that “Asteroid City” was comparable to another great cinematic celebration/interrogation of performance as life, life as performance: Jean Renoir’s “The Golden Coach.” Yeah, it’s that good.

Now playing in select theaters and available nationwide on June 23rd.

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Film Credits

Asteroid City movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert (9)

Asteroid City (2023)

Rated PG-13for brief graphic nudity, smoking and some suggestive material.

105 minutes

Cast

Jason Schwartzmanas Augie Steenbeck / Jones Hall

Scarlett Johanssonas Midge Campbell / Mercedes Ford

Tom Hanksas Stanley Zak

Jake Ryanas Woodrow Steenbeck

Jeffrey Wrightas General Grif Gibson

Tilda Swintonas Dr. Hickenlooper

Bryan Cranstonas The Host

Willem Dafoeas Saltzburg Keitel

Edward Nortonas Conrad Earp

Adrien Brodyas Schubert Green

Liev Schreiberas J.J. Kellogg

Hope Davisas Sandy Borden

Stephen Parkas Roger Cho

Rupert Friendas Montana

Maya Hawkeas June Douglas

Steve Carellas The Motel Manager

Matt Dillonas Hank

Hong Chauas Polly Green

Margot Robbieas The Actress

Jeff Goldblumas The Extra-Terrestrial

Tony Revolorias Aide-de-Camp

Grace Edwardsas Dinah Campbell

Aristou Meehanas Clifford

Sophia Lillisas Shelly

Ethan Josh Leeas Ricky

Fisher Stevensas Detective #1

Preston Motaas Dwight

Jack Eymanas Kim

Bob Balabanas Larkings Executive

Director

  • Wes Anderson

Writer (story by)

  • Roman Coppola
  • Wes Anderson

Cinematographer

  • Robert D. Yeoman

Editor

  • Barney Pilling

Composer

  • Alexandre Desplat

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Asteroid City movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

Asteroid City movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert? ›

I've never been alienated by the lively neatness of Anderson's frames. And as far as I'm concerned, “Asteroid City,” his latest collaboration with cinematographer Robert Yeoman, may be the most incandescently beautiful of all their movies so far. Additionally, its emotional impact is substantial.

What is the point of the Asteroid City movie? ›

The film explores themes of loneliness and the power of human connection in a complex and layered story set in a desolate desert town. The lack of clear meaning or resolution in some aspects of the film actually serves to reinforce its central theme of embracing uncertainty and moving forward in life.

What's the plot for Asteroid City? ›

Set in 1955, Asteroid City takes place in the fictional desert town of the title, where each year, astronomers young and old convene from across America to celebrate the Arid Plains meteorite that impacted there millennia earlier.

Did Asteroid City get good reviews? ›

Anderson's best films- perhaps tellingly all written alongside Owen Wilson- have heart and soul to match their kooky characters and painstakingly intricate visuals. 'Asteroid City' is a heartless, soulless exercise in pretension; a meandering mess of a motion picture.

What was the last movie reviewed by Ebert? ›

Roger Ebert continued to review movies until the end of his life, despite the challenges of his cancer, which inspired others facing the same disease. Terrence Malick's To the Wonder was Ebert's last review and showcased the director's iconic style and departure from his previous period pieces.

Is there a moral to Asteroid City? ›

Verdict: Asteroid City is about accepting your role in the communal play that is life, and acting it out even in those moments when the meaning is lost on you.

Is Asteroid City about the meaning of life? ›

Asteroid City's main idea

The central idea of the movie is, no more no less, the meaning of life. A “poetic meditation on the meaning of life” as Wes Anderson himself tagged the movie. How people observe, encounter, and overcome its absence.

Is Asteroid City based on a true story? ›

In the play, a youth astronomy convention is held in the fictional desert town of Asteroid City. War photojournalist Augie Steenbeck arrives early to the Junior Stargazer convention with Woodrow, his intellectual teenage son, and his three younger daughters.

What were Roger Ebert's final words? ›

Sometime ago, I heard that Roger Ebert's wife, Chaz, talked about Roger's last words. He died of cancer in 2013. “Life is but a tale, told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

Were Siskel and Ebert friends? ›

After Siskel's death, Ebert reminisced about their close relationship saying: Gene Siskel and I were like tuning forks, Strike one, and the other would pick up the same frequency. When we were in a group together, we were always intensely aware of one another.

What movie did Roger Ebert write? ›

What was the point of the alien in Asteroid City? ›

Many of the central characters in Asteroid City are preoccupied with death and grief. The alien is that struggle embodied, turned literal. It is not a figure of danger but of absurdity. It appears, it takes something, it leaves, like the Grim Reaper.

What does the end of Asteroid City mean? ›

The woman, played by Margot Robbie in a brief but crucial cameo, recites from memory the climactic scene she and Jones would have shared: a reunion in space, where Auggie gets another chance to say good-bye to the mother of his children and the love of his life.

What do the black and white scenes mean in Asteroid City? ›

Asteroid City has two parallel narratives running simultaneously and complementing one another. Black-and-white scenes tell the behind the scenes story of the production of a play / television show (it's unclear) written by famed playwright Conrad Earp (played by Anderson regular Edward Norton).

Why did they say you can't wake up if you don't fall asleep in Asteroid City? ›

The mantra near the end of the film; 'You can't wake up if you don't fall asleep' underlines the point echoed by the film itself that we live in and perceive different multi-layered realities that range from pure fantasy to the harsh reality of physical existence.

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