This movie
was directed by Wes Anderson, produced
by Wes Anderson, screenplay by Wes
Anderson and the story was by Wes Anderson,
Steven M. Rules, and Scott Rudin.
The base of
the movie is the grand Budapest Hotel in the Alps and the hotel's concierge
over a period of time that Germany was ravaging over Europe and how the Third
Reich effected every one - and believe or not, it is a comedy, with its serious
ponders.
I enjoyed it
because it was a good history lesson and the cinematography. The cinematographer, Robert Yeoman did a
great job - I think either he or the director
Wes Anderson was compulsive on showing human motion in a comparison way..... hard to
explain. Think of ducks walking single
file with the mama duck leading...... there is plenty of that kind of orderly
kind of motion..... plus some chase scenes, which any action packed movie will
have some good chase scenes - it is an unwritten law.
The cameo of
stars came and went and some came back.
The main star, the concierge
Monsieur Gustave was played by Ralph Fiennes; Jude Law was an author; Jeff
Goldblum had reoccurring part; so did Ed
Norton; Bill Murray, Owen Wilson, and
many more.
Once during
the movie we snoozed. We went back to
see what we missed and overlapped ourselves maybe 20 to 30 minutes and in the
parts we saw the second time we discovered one thing neat about the movie that
each time you watch it, I think you will notice something visually or implied
that you haven't noticed before.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.