Mel's
Cine-Files
By
Melissa Agar
The
Grand Budapest Hotel (Fox Searchlight, 2014) –
Director: Wes Anderson. Writers: Wes Anderson (s/p), Hugo Guinness (story). Inspired by the works of Stefan Zweig. Cast:
Ralph Fiennes, F. Murray Abraham, Mathieu Amalric, Adrien Brody,
Willem Dafoe, Jeff Goldblum, Harvey Keitel, Jude Law, Bill Murray,
Edward Norton, Saorise Ronan, Tilda Swinton, Tom Wilkinson, &
Tony Revolori. Color, 100 minutes.
I
want to live inside a Wes Anderson film. There is a sort of timeless
comfort to the look of Anderson’s films – it feels retro yet
contemporary at the same time. There is a saturation of color that
makes his world vibrant and vital, and the world is populated with
eccentric yet humane characters that are beautifully flawed and
honest. Plus, Bill Murray is lurking around every corner, and that is
never a bad thing.
In
his most recent film, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Anderson
takes us to the fictional republic of Zubrowka, a small Alpine nation
on the cusp of a major war in the early-to-mid 1930s. The titular
hotel is an oasis perched atop a mountain, a spa destination for
Europe’s wealthiest largely on the strength of its devoted
concierge, Gustave H. (Fiennes). Gustave is the picture of gentility
and courtesy, running his hotel with hospitable precision while
attending to the more intimate needs of the hotel’s wealthy,
elderly female guests.
When
one of those guests, Madame D. (Swinton in layers of glorious old age
makeup), dies shortly after leaving the hotel, Gustave falls under
suspicion leveled against him by her petty, greedy heirs,
particularly her slimy son Dmitri (Brody) and his creepy sidekick
Jopling (Dafoe). Once imprisoned for a crime he didn’t commit,
Gustave must rely on his young protégé, lobby boy Zero (newcomer
Revolori), to escape and prove his innocence without compromising the
trust of the hotel’s guests. All this is set against an impending
war, Zero’s blossoming love of a sweet confectionery maker named
Agatha (Ronan), and the quest to honor Madame D.’s final wishes –
whatever they might be.
The
Grand Budapest Hotel is a narrative as precisely layered as
the delicious confections made by sweet Agatha. It starts with a
young woman sitting down to read a book by a beloved unnamed Author
(Wilkinson). The book is initially narrated by the author but then
switches to his younger self (Law) reminiscing about the time he
stayed at the now-declining hotel to help relieve his writer’s
ennui. The Writer makes the acquaintance of a wealthy older gentleman
who owns the hotel, a grown-up Zero (Abraham). At this point, the
narration switches to adult Zero telling the Writer the story of his
adventures with Gustave. Each level of narration builds on the next
to create the ultimate treat, a funny, touching story about embracing
humanity even when such a thing seems next to impossible.
When
discussing Anderson, it’s impossible to leave out his art design,
and here, Anderson perhaps surpasses everything he’s done before
with lavish sets spanning eras that evoke a tone before a character
even says a word. Whether it’s the cotton candy saturation of the
1930s hotel or the sleek but sad decline of its 1960s incarnation,
the life of the hotel is as vibrant and real as the characters who
inhabit it.
Of
course, there have been plenty of “pretty” movies that have
fallen flat. (I, for one, never bought into the magic of The
Tree of Life despite the gorgeous cinematography.) The
richness of Anderson’s visual world would be nothing without the
characters that fill it. The cast here is led by a transcendent turn
from Fiennes. We’ve seen Fiennes be evil, romantic, and heroic
throughout the years, but this is the first time that he’s been
flat-out hysterical. He maintains the urbane sophistication that has
marked so much of his work but tempers it with wry commentary, bursts
of manic energy, and occasionally foul-mouthed exclamations. (His
reaction to learning of the murder of another character is
unprintable here but elicited gales of laughter throughout the
theatre.) Add to it his delightful chemistry with young Revolori and
you have an onscreen duo to rival one of Anderson’s best – that
between Max Fischer and Herman Blume in Rushmore. While
Gustave mentors Zero, Zero brings out a new side of Gustave, allowing
him to find a compassion and loyalty that adds deeper meaning to the
story the adult Zero shares with the Writer.
The
Grand Budapest Hotel may be Anderson’s funniest film,
filled with ridiculous characters and zany moments, with much of the
humor rooted in absurdist violence (such as a man having his fingers
chopped off). There are times when I felt odd laughing at moments
that would be shocking and horrifying in another director’s hands,
but the wink with which Anderson presents these moments leaves you
helpless with giggles. Anderson knows these moments are awkward and
disconcerting, but his choice to have the characters share in that
awkwardness and even comment on the absurdity tempers everything with
tremendous wit and skill. Hours later, the friends with whom I saw
the film were still giggling over things that in another film would
have caused at least one of them to leave the theatre in horrified
anger.
Anderson’s
films are not for everyone. Some dismiss his stuff as pretentious
hipster fare. Others find the dryness of his wit dull and lifeless or
accuse him of putting style over substance. For me, though, Anderson
is one of the finest auteurs working in contemporary cinema; one who
creates gorgeous storybooks of film filled with flawed, eccentric
characters who aren’t concerned with convention or even likability
but rather finding their foothold on life’s eternal challenges. The
couple of hours spent inside Anderson’s world are delicious and
comforting, and The Grand
Budapest Hotel rolls
out the welcome mat with pure charm and wit.
Grade: A
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