From left, Benicio Del Toro as Zsa-Zsa Korda, Mia Threapleton as Sister Liesl and Michael Cera as Bjorn in director Wes Anderson’s “The Phoenician Scheme.” (TPS Productions/Focus Features)
Review by Ann Hornaday (3 stars)
When the history of the decline of American moviegoing is written, one savior will deserve mention: Wes Anderson.
During a period of churning audiences and a lemminglike rush toward streaming, the eight-time Oscar nominee has made movies that have reliably coaxed spectators back into brick-and-mortar theaters. Like Christopher Nolan and James Cameron, Anderson has become a reliable brand. Subscribe for unlimited access to The Post You can cancel anytime. Subscribe
That brand — visually squared-off and symmetrical, tonally eccentric, referentially promiscuous, and