Search results
Mar 28, 2014 · The Grand Budapest Hotel: Directed by Wes Anderson. With Ralph Fiennes, F. Murray Abraham, Mathieu Amalric, Adrien Brody. A writer encounters the owner of an aging high-class hotel, who tells him of his early years serving as a lobby boy in the hotel's glorious years under an exceptional concierge.
- (860K)
- Adventure, Comedy, Crime
- Wes Anderson
- 2014-03-28
The Grand Budapest Hotel is a 2014 comedy-drama film written, directed, and co-produced by Wes Anderson. Ralph Fiennes leads a seventeen-actor ensemble cast as Monsieur Gustave H., famed concierge of a twentieth-century mountainside resort in the fictional Eastern European country of Zubrowka.
- $173 million
- Alexandre Desplat
- $25 million
People also ask
Does Wes Anderson erect the Grand Budapest Hotel?
Who starred in the Grand Budapest Hotel?
What happened at the Grand Budapest Hotel?
What is 'the Grand Budapest Hotel' about?
Wes Anderson brings his dry wit and visual inventiveness to this exquisite caper set amid the old-world splendor of Europe between the world wars. At the opulent Grand Budapest Hotel, the concierge M. Gustave (Ralph Fiennes) and his young protégé Zero (Tony Revolori) forge a steadfast bond as they are swept up in a scheme involving the theft of a priceless Renaissance painting and the battle ...
- M. Gustave
In the 1930s, the Grand Budapest Hotel is a popular European ski resort, presided over by concierge Gustave H. (Ralph Fiennes). ... Wes Anderson blends his trademark fanciness with a more rompish ...
- (318)
- Wes Anderson
- R
- Ralph Fiennes
Mar 5, 2014 · Over the years, Wes Anderson‘s movies have steadily developed a lush, eccentric world that operates on its own terms, and “The Grand Budapest Hotel” excels at exploring it. Anderson’s ...
Mar 7, 2014 · Now, in “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” he leapfrogs back from the present day to 1985, 1968, and, ultimately, to 1932, to tell a story of work and art, friendship and love that is about the rise ...
Mar 7, 2014 · An odd thought occurred to me a few hours after I saw writer/director Wes Anderson's "The Grand Budapest Hotel" for the first time. It was that Anderson would be the ideal director for a film of "Lolita," or a mini-series of "Ada."