Wes Anderson to the now-disgraced TV journalist Charlie Rose as they discussed his latest film, The Darjeeling Limited, in 2007. “You have no life outside of movies?” returned the older man, clearly prepared to believe it of the floppy-fringed young man before him. “Not a lot,” sighed the director.
Anderson was 38 at the time but had already been making Hollywood movies for more than a decade, ever since he’d turned the post-graduation short film he’d written with his University of Texas room-mate Owen Wilson into the feature-length Bottle Rocket (1996).
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