Benicio Del Toro Archives - LemonFire https://lemonfire.com.br/category/benicio-del-toro/ News And Entertainment Mon, 09 Jun 2025 18:23:54 +0000 pt-BR hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://lemonfire.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-76EB4555-6A61-465E-8AEC-4358655A1AA9-32x32.png Benicio Del Toro Archives - LemonFire https://lemonfire.com.br/category/benicio-del-toro/ 32 32 Wes Anderson doesn’t know if he chose Bill Murray to play God in ‘The Phoenician Scheme,’ but, ‘possibly God did’ https://lemonfire.com.br/wes-anderson-god-chosen-bill-murray-phoenician-scheme-11748582/ https://lemonfire.com.br/wes-anderson-god-chosen-bill-murray-phoenician-scheme-11748582/#respond Mon, 09 Jun 2025 18:23:54 +0000 https://lemonfire.com.br/wes-anderson-god-chosen-bill-murray-phoenician-scheme-11748582/ Writer-director Wes Anderson says he doesn’t think he chose Bill Murray to play God in his latest film, The Phoenician Scheme, but “possibly God did.” He describes Murray’s version of the Almighty as “an informal God,” and says his star “just didn’t seem that he was faking it.” Anderson also discusses the inspiration for the […]

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  • Writer-director Wes Anderson says he doesn’t think he chose Bill Murray to play God in his latest film, The Phoenician Scheme, but “possibly God did.”
  • He describes Murray’s version of the Almighty as “an informal God,” and says his star “just didn’t seem that he was faking it.”
  • Anderson also discusses the inspiration for the film’s version of heaven.

There’s divine casting, and then there’s divine casting.

In the case of Bill Murray, who plays the Almighty himself in The Phoenician Scheme, it’s the latter. “I don’t know that we chose Bill to play God,” writer-director Wes Anderson tells Entertainment Weekly, pausing to gleefully add, “possibly God did.”

Jokes aside, Anderson says the casting was a match made in heaven. “What I will say is when Bill walked onto the set in his robes and his beard, he could barely move. And yet he seemed very comfortable, and he occupied his throne in a relaxed manner. It just didn’t seem that he was faking it. We knew very quickly he was going to be an informal God who is creating without making a show of it.”

The film follows Benicio del Toro’s wealthy businessman Zsa-zsa Korda, who appoints his only daughter, Liesl (Mia Threapleton), a nun, as sole heir to his estate. As Liesl, Korda, and his tutor, kooky bug lover Bjorn (Michael Cera), embark together on a new enterprise, they come up against several bonkers assassination attempts, presumably from Korda’s many enemies. Each time, Korda enters a sort of liminal space —a black and white heaven —where he experiences moments of personal growth and introspection. Here, he encounters Murray’s God… among other things.

“I think some of the most important changes in Benicio’s character Zsa-zsa are taking place during these sort of visions that he’s having as he repeatedly dies, or keeps getting assassinated,” Anderson explains.

To create this heaven — a first for an Anderson joint — he knew he wanted it all to be real. “We wanted it to all exist in front of the camera, to not use computer visual effects, to have it all be there,” he says, adding, “and so we made something kind of like a 360-degree stage, a set of clouds painted, sculpted, and we created a sort of Biblical troupe for these scenes.” (Other members credited in this troupe include F. Murray Abraham, Charlotte Gainsbourg, and Willem Dafoe.) 

Director Wes Anderson and actor Bill Murray at the Berlin premiere of ‘The Phoenician Scheme’.

Matthias Nareyek/WireImage


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“I think it’s sort of the way biblical settings and characters were portrayed during the Renaissance, I think that’s really what we’ve done,” Anderson adds. “I mean, we’re so familiar with the Renaissance representation of stories from the Bible, and ours is the black and white version of that.”

The Phoenician Scheme, which was co-written with frequent Anderson collaborator Roman Coppola, also stars Riz Ahmed, Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Mathieu Amalric, Jeffrey Wright, Scarlett Johansson, Richard Ayoade, Benedict Cumberbatch, Rupert Friend, and Hope Davis. The film is now playing in theaters.



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Kelly Clarkson asks Benicio del Toro if bathtub scene was ‘hard’ https://lemonfire.com.br/kelly-clarkson-asks-benicio-del-toro-if-bathtub-scene-was-hard/ https://lemonfire.com.br/kelly-clarkson-asks-benicio-del-toro-if-bathtub-scene-was-hard/#respond Mon, 09 Jun 2025 13:42:55 +0000 https://lemonfire.com.br/kelly-clarkson-asks-benicio-del-toro-if-bathtub-scene-was-hard/ Kelly Clarkson wants y’all to get your minds out of the gutter. An interview with Benicio del Toro on the latest episode of Clarkson’s eponymous talk show went hilariously off the rails when she asked the Oscar winner if continuity was, ahem, “real hard in that area” for his bathtub scene in The Phoenician Scheme… […]

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Kelly Clarkson wants y’all to get your minds out of the gutter.

An interview with Benicio del Toro on the latest episode of Clarkson’s eponymous talk show went hilariously off the rails when she asked the Oscar winner if continuity was, ahem, “real hard in that area” for his bathtub scene in The Phoenician Scheme… and the studio audience reacted exactly the way you’d expect.

“You get so into trying to figure out the riddle of getting it right that you just forget [you’re in the bathtub], and then the next day you’re all crinkly like a prune,” del Toro told Clarkson of the scene in question.

“How do you not look like a prune by hour one?” Clarkson wanted to know.

“You get a good hair and makeup person to take care of it,” del Toro told her, to which Clarkson remarked that she “prunes up like 20 minutes in” the water. “Yeah, continuity… must have been real hard in that area, yes,” she added.

As del Toro and the audience immediately started to laugh, Clarkson realized the accidental innuendo. “No, no, no!” she shouted, standing up to comically chastise the audience. “I did not mean… I am way too tired,” she said with a laugh.

“I did not even mean that, I meant you’re pruny. Nasty people. No, no, that’s not on me. Usually it is,” she added, as the audience continued to laugh at her expense.

Del Toro previously opened up to Entertainment Weekly about the bathtub scene, which serves as the opening credits scene to the new Wes Anderson film. In the scene, Zsa-zsa Korda (del Toro) is shown recovering after his latest assassination attempt. Shot in slow motion from overhead, the sequence features a bandaged and bloodied Korda eating, reading, and smoking in his bath as assorted nurses and household staff flit around him as if in a ballet.

Initially del Toro, who had to sit in the tub for an estimated eight hours, had his doubts. To achieve the scene’s hypnotic slow-motion effect, Anderson asked his actors to move unnaturally fast, leading del Toro to question whether the technique would translate on screen. “So if I’m smoking, I got to smoke fast. If I eat, I got to eat fast,” the actor recalled. “So I said [to Anderson], ‘What? I mean, doesn’t that defeat the purpose? If you’re doing it in slow motion, we might as well shoot it normal.’ And he said, ‘No, no, no, it’s going to be different.’ I said, ‘Okay.'”

Benicio Del Toro and Kelly Clarkson on ‘The Kelly Clarkson Show’.

Weiss Eubanks/NBCUniversal


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In the end, the choreography paid off. Del Toro explained, “When I saw it, it’s just like, it is different than just shooting at a normal speed. It is different. It has this quality that is unique — it’s kind of like a musical in a way, without dancing, let’s put it that way. But the movement and the way it is, it’s a beauty.”

He added, “That’s one of those things that you think you’ve figured it all out. And here I am doing another movie with a great director, and he’s telling me to do this, and I go home, and I’m glad I was a prune for about five days after that sequence. It’s just really a cool sequence.”

The Phoenician Scheme is in theaters now. Watch Clarkson’s unintended double entendre above.



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Michael Cera breaks down his ‘The Phoenician Scheme’ twist https://lemonfire.com.br/michael-cera-breaks-down-his-the-phoenician-scheme-twist/ https://lemonfire.com.br/michael-cera-breaks-down-his-the-phoenician-scheme-twist/#respond Mon, 09 Jun 2025 03:17:15 +0000 https://lemonfire.com.br/michael-cera-breaks-down-his-the-phoenician-scheme-twist/ The Phoenician Scheme star Michael Cera explains how his character’s big twist was crafted, and how he created his dual roles. Plus, he reveals that he would accidentally only answer to “Bjorn” on set. Cera also opens up about the “fun” of getting to finally talk about his character’s secret. This article contains spoilers for […]

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  • The Phoenician Scheme star Michael Cera explains how his character’s big twist was crafted, and how he created his dual roles.
  • Plus, he reveals that he would accidentally only answer to “Bjorn” on set.
  • Cera also opens up about the “fun” of getting to finally talk about his character’s secret.

This article contains spoilers for The Phoenician Scheme.

Will the real Agent Karlsen please stand up?

One of the biggest surprises in writer-director Wes Anderson’s newest film, The Phoenician Scheme, revolves around Michael Cera’s character, Bjorn. First introduced as a kooky Norwegian bug enthusiast, tutor, and sort of assistant to Benicio del Toro’s business tycoon Zsa-zsa Korda, Bjorn’s true identity is later revealed in a third-act twist — he’s really Agent Karlsen of the Covert North American Special Services. His mission is to infiltrate (but not sabotage, no, never sabotage!) Zsa-zsa’s operation. Like his alter ego, though, he really does have an affinity for insects and Zsa-zsa’s daughter, Liesl (Mia Threapleton).

Michael Cera can be seen as Agent Karlsen in this still from ‘The Phoenician Scheme’.

Focus Features


“I guess that the turn to Agent Karlsen was sort of more or less informed by the front half of the character being Bjorn, because it just had to be a big contrast created,” he tells Entertainment Weekly. “So creating Bjorn was the biggest job, and it’s weird because he is, I mean, the truth of the character is that he’s Agent Karlsen pretending to be this Professor Bjorn. But it actually feels more to me like Bjorn is the real guy.”

So much so that when Anderson would refer to Cera as Karlsen on set, he didn’t even respond.

“When we were shooting, Wes would often, if he’s back behind his monitor somewhere and he had to call out to us to readjust us or something in the frame, he would say, ‘Bjorn, go to the left a little.’ And I would always respond to that,” Cera says. “And then when I was doing scenes as Agent Karlsen, he would say, ‘Agent Karlsen, move over.’ And I wouldn’t hear him addressing me, and so he would be not able to get my attention, and then he would go, ‘Bjorn!’ Then I would hear him.”

Cera wasn’t even aware he was doing this until Anderson pointed it out to him later on.

“He went, ‘You only respond when I call you Bjorn,'” he recalls. “I didn’t even realize it, but I just got so used to that, I guess. So, that was funny.”

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Cera has a theory about why this was the case. The actor worked closely with his director to perfect the faux Norwegian accent, perfectly coiffed hair, and over-prescribed glasses that make up Bjorn, before figuring out those same elements for Karlsen. As a result, much of the latter was informed by the former.

“[Crafting Bjorn] felt like the bigger piece in a way. There was more to build there because there’s a whole voice — and Agent Karlsen has a voice too — but Bjorn had the accent, which just took a lot of preparation work, and creating the look for Bjorn was where our focus was,” Cera explains. “And then, I didn’t even get [to create Karlsen’s] hair. We had to do Bjorn’s hair first, even the days when I would just be Agent Karlsen, we’d kind of do the hair as Bjorn first and then change it.”

Michael Cera, Mia Threapleton, Benicio del Toro, and Mathieu Amalric in ‘The Phoenician Scheme’.

Courtesy of TPS Productions/Focus Features


Now that the film, which also stars Riz Ahmed, Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Mathieu Amalric, Jeffrey Wright, and Scarlett Johansson, is out in the world, Cera is able to talk about all facets of his dual role.

“I think the movie is not that secretive, where it’s like, it’s not a precious secret, but I think the movie unfolds and reveals itself in really a fun way,” he says. “I think it’s a fun experience as a viewer, I hope.”



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