Hannah Strong’s “Colours of Wes Anderson: The Films in Palettes” is a playful, insightful tour of the director’s cinema through the single most unmistakable element of his style: colour. Drawing on stills from across the filmography—from “Bottle Rocket” and “Rushmore” to “The Grand Budapest Hotel”, “Isle of Dogs”, and “Asteroid City”—Strong pairs curated frames with infographic palettes that reveal how Anderson uses hue and saturation to shape character, rhythm, and tone. Short essays break down the emotional and narrative work done by mustard yellows, sorbet pinks, washed?out blues, and tobacco browns; special features explore recurring motifs, production design partnerships, and the way colour helps stitch together dioramas, costumes, and miniature worlds into a coherent visual language. The book also functions as a reference for designers and fans: each chapter collects key palettes with hex?like labels, notes on contrast and harmony, and suggestions for how similar combinations can be used in photography and graphic projects. Rather than treating Anderson’s style as mere quirk, Strong argues that his attention to chroma is a storytelling engine—guiding the eye, encoding memory, and creating mood. Printed on quality stock with generous image reproduction, this compact hardback is both a coffee?table object and a smart piece of film criticism. For cinephiles, art directors, and anyone who has ever paused an Anderson frame to marvel at its candy?box precision, it offers a new way to see familiar movies: not just as narratives and performances, but as carefully composed studies in colour theory brought to life.