Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - As an incomprehensible film representative, what did the film The Grand Budapest Hotel say?

As an incomprehensible film representative, what did the film The Grand Budapest Hotel say?

The Grand Budapest Hotel was written by Wes? Anderson, screenwriter and director, Ralph? Tony Fiennes? Rivoli Adrian. Broudy, William? Dafu and Jude? Luo and other actors co-starred. He was nominated for Best Music/Comedy Film at the 72nd Golden Globe Award, Best Film at the 87th Academy Awards and Best Film at the 64th Berlin International Film Festival.

The Grand Budapest Hotel, the whole story is simple. Before the war, Gustav, the most famous concierge in Europe, and Zero, the waiter, took an adventure. The film is set before the war. Most of Mr. Gustav's audience are women in their seventies and eighties, and this group of people just retains the aristocratic demeanor. When they were young, they criticized this situation. Most of them are widowed when they reach middle age. When they are old, they like to stay in hotels all over Europe. At that time, in addition to the reputation of the best hotel in Europe, The Grand Budapest Hotel probably had the artistic conception of the most famous aristocratic wife sanatorium in Europe.

Mr Gustav is a key figure in the hotel. He is charming and humorous, and he is the favorite of middle-aged and elderly women, not to mention like it. So, an 80-year-old aristocratic old lady stayed in the hotel for ten years and refused to leave. Our concierge sent her away. As a result, the bad news came soon. The old lady died suddenly, and the affectionate porter rushed to her funeral at once. What awaits him is a murder case and a desperate journey that is about to begin.

Exciting colors, unique characters, fast camera movement and take-off rhythm, and unstoppable coolness and praise. For such a director, no matter how subtle the role is, the actors will be willing to accept it, because even the smallest role has enough personality for the audience to remember. Spatial four-fold narrative, step by step, like a Russian doll. Open and pull out a kaleidoscope of yesterday's world in turn: a single-line story made up of many different characters. Scene switching is like a dream relay. Reality and illusion are intertwined, seriousness and absurdity coexist, and ups and downs are inherent. The overall impression is quite interesting and substantial. ?