50 Aesthetically Pleasing “Accidental Wes Anderson” Moments People Have Captured In Real Life (New Pics)
If I had to choose a favorite film director, Wes Anderson just might take the cake. His quirky films are extremely aesthetically pleasing, often featuring deliberate symmetry and pastel color palettes, contain brilliant writing and always leave me smiling as I’m exiting the theater. And if you’re a fan of Anderson’s work too, pandas, you’re in for a treat today!
Below, we’ve gathered some of our favorite posts from the Accidental Wes Anderson subreddit. This community features snapshots from real life that look like they could perfectly fit into the wild world of Wes Anderson, so we hope you’ll enjoy scrolling through the cinematic pics below. And keep reading to find conversations about Anderson’s signature style with journalist Nik Dirga and film expert Darren Mooney!
This post may include affiliate links.
Montmartre Paris
Accidental Budapest Hotel
The Chicken Really Did It For Me
To learn more about Wes Anderson’s signature style, we reached out to Nik Dirga, an American journalist based in New Zealand who’s very familiar with the director’s work. “I first came across Wes Anderson when I rented a VHS tape of Bottle Rocket on a whim way back in 1997 or so, and I've been a big fan ever since,” he told Bored Panda.
“I think what's always appealed to me the most about his style is the way he intricately crafts his worlds in a way that feels just a little askew from our own reality, but still has an emotional heart. I still get choked up by The Life Aquatic every single time I watch it, for instance,” Nik noted.
A Lavender Field Next To A Wheat Field
This is at Least the rhird time I seen this picture here on BP. still beautiful.
Palace Of The Winds, Jaipur
Every time I see monumental buildings I think of the level of craftsmanship required and the people who supplied the blood, sweat and tears to make their existence a reality...
These Cottages In Oceanside,california
“[Anderson’s] style has kept on evolving, and his recent movies like Asteroid City and The French Dispatch are so heavily designed and mannered that they feel a bit more artificial than Rushmore,” Nik went on to explain. “But that's also kind of the point - he's been playing with the very idea of storytelling itself, drawing attention to the fact that what we see on screen is only a story rather than pretending it's a documentary portrait.”
I Just Saw This Pic
Path Of Dogs
Accidental Isle Of Dogs
Nik also shared that you can actually spot “Wes-style” anywhere you go once you’ve trained your eyes a bit. “Start looking beyond the surface of suburban sprawls of Costcos and Burger Kings, and you can find an offbeat beauty in everything up to a display of neon-yellow Cheetos containers at a Walmart,” he noted.
“Wes fetishizes elements of reality but never entirely leaves reality behind. I think part of the reason Wes Anderson style has become a meme is that it lets us pause a second and think, ‘Hey, that old grocery store logo is kind of gorgeous in its own way, that thrift shop outfit makes you look a little like a movie star,’” Nik explained. “It lets us imagine real life as a movie.”
Room Service
A Train In Inner Mongolia, China
I Know This Sub Is Usually Buildings Or Scenery, But I Feel Like This Is Also Pretty Relevant
We also got in touch with film expert Darren Mooney, who runs The m0vie blog, to hear his thoughts on the topic. First, Darren broke down Anderson’s signature style for us. “I worry that this is going to sound very pretentious, but it's a very rigid formalism that draws the audience's attention to the artifice of the world,” he told Bored Panda.
“He does this by embracing the inherent unreality of film, presenting worlds that are very obviously constructed and not aspiring to verisimilitude or realism. He wants the audience to be aware that everything they see is constructed, and often draws attention to the artifice of the frame itself - symmetrical composition, limited planes of movement (dollies in and out or left to right, but rarely hand-held and rarely on multiple axes at once), shifting aspect ratios and even shifts between color style,” Darren explained.
This Hotel (Xpost /R/Architecture)
Bull Terrier In Abandoned Train, Belgium
The Georgian Hotel. 1415 Ocean Avenue, Santa Monica, California
“I am very fond of Anderson. In particular, I'm fonder of ‘late Anderson’, which is perhaps a rarer opinion,” Darren went on to share. “I really like Rushmore, but my favorite films of his are all from Fantastic Mr. Fox onwards. I think I prefer his style when it is completely disconnected from anything approaching reality or naturalism.”
“It's a lot easier to buy his characters and his style, for me, when these films take place in a realm completely separate from the mundane world,” the cinephile explained. “So my favorites would be the more stylised ones: The Grand Budapest Hotel, Asteroid City, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Moonrise Kingdom. I like most of his films, but I think his weakest is The Darjeeling Limited, because I'm not sure Wes Anderson is the guy to make a movie about India.”
Geometric Sunset
This House, And This Crosswalk
Residential Block In Japan
We also asked Darren if he’s seen anything in real life that reminds him of a Wes Anderson film. “Unsurprisingly given Anderson's fondness for old Europe (The French Dispatch, The Grand Budapest Hotel), it's European cities and environs that feel most Andersonian to me,” he shared.
“Paris and Vienna can feel quite quaint and old-fashioned and unreal in a way that reminds me of Anderson's style, while the French and German countryside occasionally has houses that feel like they could have come from an Anderson production,” he noted. “But even then, there's something magical about Anderson's worlds that I don't know I've ever felt replicated in reality, if that makes sense?”
Radios At A Local Bar
A Lone House
Would love to have a week long retreat there... Just me, a log burner and a couple of good books (with a supply of food & drink, of course).
This Laundromat/Bar
Darren went on to note that Anderson is a rare modern director with a distinct visual and aural aesthetic that cannot be replicated. “You can look at thirty seconds of a given film and go, ‘That's a Wes Anderson movie.’ That's rare, particularly in an era where a lot of major movie-making is being pushed towards a more homogenous style,” he explained.
“Anderson is arguably to this modern generation of audiences what Tim Burton was to the previous generation. ‘Baby's First Auteur’, so to speak. And there's something beautiful in that, which you see in these trends,” Darren added. “People try to imitate it or reference it because it's so distinctive and recognizable. That's incredibly valuable, particularly now.”
Thought This Belonged Here
My Kitchen In My New Apartment
Tried To Pay Homage To This Sub, Spent Longer Than I Care To Admit Trying
The cinephile went on to note that “Anderson's movies are largely about the idea of authorship, about the idea that somebody is telling you the story you're hearing; the magazine in The French Dispatch, the novelist in The Grand Budapest Hotel, the show about the play in Asteroid City.”
“This is what makes the AI ‘Wes Anderson trailer’ fad so frustrating to me, personally,” Darren says. “Because it takes something that is personal and is about how art is fundamentally personal, and reduces it to an algorithmic piece of content. I actually quite like the human efforts to replicate Anderson, because you inevitably see more humanity in them, and that is what the appeal of Anderson's art is, to me.”
The Standard In Copenhagen
Jaipur, Rajasthan
Cinema In Germany
Are you feeling inspired to have a Wes Anderson movie marathon after scrolling through this list, pandas? My personal favorites are The Royal Tenenbaums, Rushmore, Isle of Dogs and Asteroid City. But you can start wherever you’d like! Keep upvoting the pics that you think would perfectly blend into Anderson’s world, and if you’d like to see even more accidentally Wes Anderson style photos from Bored Panda, check out this list next!
Streetcar In Lisbon, Portugal
Strong Isle Of Dogs Vibes
A Bavarian Hotel
This Little Lighthouse In Kamouraska, Québec [oc]
Hotel In Prague
The Building I Live Next Door To
Adjacent Bedrooms
Woolwich Town Hall | London, England | C. 1906
If you visit Woolwich thinking the rest of it looks like this you're going to be disappointed.
My Cat... But He Knew What He Was Doing. This Wasn’t No Accident!
"Girl Pool" By Maria Svarbova
Bar
Bus In Ukraine
i wonder if the Russians have blown this place up yet. Slava Ukraine!
Pink Restaurant In London
A Bakery In Nice, France
This Cottage In Quebec
The Toronto Reference Library
I've been here. It is labyrinthine, epic in its liminal quality, and as dense in texts as it looks.
Wind Shaped Tree (Marc Alcock)
Hong Kong Playground By Ludwig Favre
Politics In Moldova
In Mallorca (Ramin Nasibov, 2018)
That skirt took me a minute. I kept thinking the red ring was over her blue dress in that spot
My Puppy Looks Like She's Straight Out Of The Isles Of Dogs
Maybe This Grocery Store? [oc]
North Korea
So many of these had me saying, "wow". So evocative and moving. Thank you for this article.
This is probably my favorite thread on BoredPanda. Amazing photos!
I love these kind of posts they give me "off the beaten path" travel ideas.
some of these look like they're from a quirky dark sci-fi movie :D
So many of these had me saying, "wow". So evocative and moving. Thank you for this article.
This is probably my favorite thread on BoredPanda. Amazing photos!
I love these kind of posts they give me "off the beaten path" travel ideas.
some of these look like they're from a quirky dark sci-fi movie :D