![]() ![]() He was a 24-year-old actor, taking advantage of the pause between the second phase of his career and the third and thinking hard, daily, about how to play the next few years. ![]() He ran from site to site, with notes he'd kept while reading Dylan's memoir, Chronicles: Volume One, barreling up stairs and peering into windows. In the city, we spent time walking around Greenwich Village, Timothée in an identity-concealing face mask and bucket hat and sunglasses, able to search out old Dylan addresses in an invisibility cloak. He marveled at the way the artist could be out there so much, making such an impact, while also keeping the real person obscured behind the music, the characters in the songs, the language. He fixated on both the art and the persona. Timothée was late to the party but helplessly obsessed. (He learned how to drive on Beautiful Boy.) All the while Dylan was top of mind. He knew what the cabin might seem like-like some young actor taking himself way too seriously, “treating himself like an artist.” But he was back and forth between Woodstock and New York all month, bombing up and down the interstate in the Honda sedan he'd rented from Enterprise. Sweater, $890, by Gucci / Pants, $268, by Polo Ralph Lauren / Shoes, $895, by Marsèll / Socks, $27, by Falke They were still hydrogen and oxygen, and Timothée Chalamet was all of a sudden water. Of course they couldn't possibly comprehend the chemical reaction that had just transpired. Outsiders who had witnessed the arrival may have regarded this 22-year-old as being in possession of wealth and clout, but he was suddenly back on his own dime, which amounted to maybe five or six dimes, reticent to stay with family and friends whose lives he felt he was disrupting with all his new baggage. Coat, $4,550, pants (his own), and boots (price upon request) by Prada / Tank top, $42 (for pack of three), by Calvin Klein Underwear / Rings, $1,650 (on index finger) and $6,300 (on middle finger), by Cartierīut the day after the Oscars, the moment the clock struck midnight and his carriage turned into a pumpkin, Chalamet was right back where he'd been before the whole fantasy had begun: in New York, with no credit card, no apartment, and no longer any structured demands on his time and attention. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.Timothée Chalamet covers the November 2020 issue of GQ. is opening another Chalamet vehicle, “Dune.” Watch the first clip from Anderson’s latest below. The date happens to be the same day Warner Bros. “The French Dispatch” opens in theaters October 22 from Searchlight Pictures. ‘The French Dispatch’ doubles down on it, with a freewheeling triptych of stories that make the case for his appeal by amplifying it.” Kohn continues, “The sight of the pair mounted on her bike, speeding upward through a black abyss, is one of the most lyrical, even haunting, images in Anderson’s repertoire it evokes the constant sense of mystery and journeying to exotic destinations, both real and imagined, that often exist at the center of his work.”Įlsewhere in his review, Kohn writes of the film, “It’s hard to imagine another living filmmaker with a style as instantly recognizable as Wes Anderson, a feat that works against him no matter how expansive his approach. Oscars 2023: Best Production Design Predictions Oscars 2023: Best Original Screenplay Predictions Timothée Chalamet Begs Apple TV+ for a Job in Hilarious Ad Timothée Chalamet Feels His Talent Is Overlooked by Apple TV+ in Latest Ad Spot “However, he does give us Chalamet’s Zeferelli in a bizarre love triangle with an older woman and the radical French motorcyclist (Lyna Khoudri) whose ideology doesn’t quite line up with his own.” “It’s the McDormand/Chalamet segment that allows Anderson to bring much grander ambitions to bear, as he maps out the story of student revolutionaries in smoke-filled bars with such overt early Godard overtones it’s a wonder he doesn’t include a reference to the children of Marx and Coca-Cola,” Kohn writes. ![]()
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