grand-budapest-hotel poster

The Grand Budapest Hotel is the latest from Wes Anderson, and what great fun it is.  My review of Monuments Men pointed out that putting the likes of George Clooney, Matt Damon, Cate Blanchett, Jean Dujardin, Bill Murray and Hugh Bonneville in the same film was no guarantee of a good film.   Following that logic, what should we make of the following turning up together:  Ralph Fiennes, Bill Murray, F. Murray Abraham, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe, Jeff Goldblum, Jude Law, Edward Norton, Tom Wilkinson, Saoirse Ronan, Owen Wilson and (a wonderfully made up) Tilda Swinton?  

characters

The answer is a near masterpiece of cameos that add up to a highly entertaining and memorable film.

In a complex serious of flashbacks, Tom Wilkinson plays an author remembering his younger self (Jude Law) being recounted, a number of years before, the life story of The Grand Budapest’s mysterious elderly guest Zero Moustafa, played by Abraham.  (Are you still with me?) 

jude law

Featuring strongly in this life story, Ralph Fiennes plays hotel concierge and lothario Gustave H., seducer of his elderly and wealthy guests.  He is supported in this role – for everything outside the bedroom that is – by trainee Bellboy, and Gustave’s protege, Zero (in the younger form of Tony Revolori).

fiennes and zero

Following the murder of one such guest (Tilda Swinton), Gustave is not surprised to feature strongly in her will, awarded a priceless Renaissance painting – Boy with Apple.   This is much to the displeasure of her son Dimitri (Adrien Brody) and his evil henchman Jopling (Willem Dafoe).   What follows is a madcap pursuit across snowy landscapes, various grisly murders, a couple of civil wars, some disconnected fingers, a prison break and a downhill ski chase.  

GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL_426.jpg

All the cast seem to enjoy themselves immensely, but it is the production design and cinematography that really shines through:  every single shot of the film is just a joy to look at, from the bright pastel colours of some scenes (as below) to the oak-panelled finery of the elderly lady’s mansion.  Beautifully crafted, beautifully lit, beautifully filmed.  Bringing a film out so early in the new Oscar-year must be risky:  but one can only hope that the voting members have a long enough memory to recognise this movie.

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There are some interesting crossovers to recent films:  both ‘The Book Thief’ and ‘The Monuments Men’ were filmed – as this was – in Studio Babelsberg in Potsdam.   No coincidence then that the steam train chugging through the East European countryside looked startlingly similar to that in the opening scenes of ‘The Book Thief’;  and if you have Bill Murray and Bob Balaban in town for Monuments Men, then why not stick them together for this film too?  Simples! 

Alexandre Desplat turns up AGAIN with another quirky and fitting score.

All in all, if you like the quirky style of films of the likes of Moulin Rouge then you’ll love this.   Highly recommended.

Fad Rating:  FFFF.

(Note:  below is the 18+ red band trailer (but a better representation of the film’s comedy))

By bobwp

Dr Bob Mann lives in Hampshire in the UK. Now retired from his job as an IT professional, he is owner of One Mann's Movies and an enthusiastic reviewer of movies as "Bob the Movie Man". Bob is also a regular film reviewer on BBC Radio Solent.

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[…] was pleased to have predicted in my review of last year’s “The Grand Budapest Hotel” just how many of the Oscar’s art categories that film would appear in, and I will similarly pin […]

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[…] he is trained in spiritual control by “The Ancient One” (Tilda Swinton, “Hail Caesar”, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”) ably supported by her assistant Mordo (Chiwetel Ejiofor, “12 Years a Slave”) and librarian […]

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