seemed to be grounded in their violence — he certainly wasn't above the comedic potential of slapstick, but the most upsetting moments of violence felt appropriately jarring, such as the self-harm in "The Royal Tenenbaums." It wasn't until "The Grand Budapest Hotel," when Deputy Vilmos Kovacs (Jeff Goldblum) had his fingers chopped off by a slamming door, that it felt like Anderson learned how to use violence as both a dramatic element and a punchline.

While the moments of violence in Anderson's films are often extreme, they're also artfully executed, keeping them part and parcel of the director's tightly controlled aesthetic. In this fashion, Anderson's violence perfectly captures something about it that few filmmakers do, which is its uncanny valley quality. "The Phoenician Scheme" happens to be Anderson's most violent movie to date, and it absolutely works given the way it uses its violence to serve the overall tone of the film and its lead character's predicament.