A scene from the movie accessible to the public eye<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\nTo talk of a cast, perhaps no Wes Anderson<\/em> movie is complete without Owen Wilson<\/strong><\/em>. Apart from starting their cinematic journey together, they are inseparable like Song Kang-ho<\/em> and Bong Joon-ho<\/em>, or Robert De Niro<\/em> and Martin Scorsese<\/em>. Wilson<\/em> plays a character called Herbsaint Sazerac<\/em> here. Named after the drink formerly called Absinthe<\/em>, we can concur that he portrays a journalist, from the camera dangling by his neck. Tilda Swinton<\/strong><\/em>, who made her debut as an Anderson<\/em> collaborator in the Moonrise Kingdom<\/em><\/strong>(2012), also appears here as a character named J.K.L. Berensen<\/em>. The renowned protagonist of The Pianist<\/strong><\/em>(2002), Adrien Brody <\/em><\/strong>also shows up as an art dealer called Julien Cadazio<\/em>. Modeled after a real-life British art dealer called Joseph Duveen<\/em>, his character shares a parallel with Dmitri<\/em> from The Grand Budapest Hotel<\/em><\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n