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The Grand Budapest Hotel (Official Thread): updated with trailer*

Posted on 10/14/13 at 11:11 pm
Posted by Blue Velvet
Apple butter toast is nice
Member since Nov 2009
20112 posts
Posted on 10/14/13 at 11:11 pm
Trailer coming in 3 days

quote:

Those expecting Wes Anderson’s signature fantastical visuals from the highly anticipated “The Grand Budapest Hotel” will not be disappointed with the film’s recently released poster, which features a detailed pink hotel and plenty of famous names.

The movie, set in the first half of the 20th century, follows a legendary concierge played by Ralph Fiennes, and his young protege, played by Tony Revolori. The newest film from the “Moonrise Kingdom” director also features some of his regulars, such as Bill Murray, Jason Schwartzman, Adrian Brody and Owen Wilson.

Also included in the jam-packed cast are F. Murray Abraham, Edward Norton, Mathieu Amalric, Willem Dafoe, Lea Seydoux, Jeff Goldblum, Jude Law, Tilda Swinton, Harvey Keitel and Tom Wilkinson. “The Grand Budapest Hotel” is the first film of Anderson’s in which he receives a sole screenwriting credit.

Though there is no firm release date yet, though the film is set to bow next year. The first trailer is expected to debut Oct. 17.
Variety


r/movies

Let's all join hands and welcome the next installment from a director who has never done anything except exceed where others have failed; a man who has never made a mistake. Let's embrace the upcoming haters, neophytes, and philistines as they attempt to troll a thread that surely won't reach 3 pages; but that's because we're all too busy reveling in the greatness of such masterpieces as The Voice, The Walking Dead, Sleepy Hollow, and HIMYM. I've won snob 2 years on this board and I'm shooting for a hat-trick now, bitches. The last Official Movie Thread I started was dynamite for those of you who were unfortunate enough to miss out. But seriously... Wes Anderson is a god and Moonrise Kingdom was one of the best films of last year.

Pretty good article on the poster and the foreshadowing


UPDATE: TRAILER IS HERE
This post was edited on 10/17/13 at 12:44 pm
Posted by Fun Bunch
New Orleans
Member since May 2008
115276 posts
Posted on 10/14/13 at 11:13 pm to
I'm a big fan of his work and thought Moonrise was spectacular. Can't wait.
Posted by Carson123987
Middle Court at the Rec
Member since Jul 2011
66368 posts
Posted on 10/14/13 at 11:18 pm to
can. not. wait.
Posted by Blue Velvet
Apple butter toast is nice
Member since Nov 2009
20112 posts
Posted on 10/15/13 at 9:55 am to
Ditto, kiddo.

ETA:

Update:

Kumar Pallana has died. Huff Post
quote:

A favorite of Wes Anderson, actor Kumar Pallana died yesterday at the ripe age of 94. He leaves behind an impressive body of work that includes roles in four Anderson films and some of the best and most under-appreciated comedic roles of the last two decades.

Pallana was born in India in 1918, the son of a car salesman. He trained as a gymnast, and upon making his way to the U.S. he found work as a juggler, then a singer, then as type-casted roles in several Westerns. Pallana said in an interview with Dallas Morning News in 2004, "I came to the United States in 1946. Back then, Indians couldn’t even get one foot in the door at the studios. There just weren’t that many roles for Indians. Oh sure, I got work — but I played a different sort of Indian."

Pallana abandoned the film industry eventually, settling down in Dallas with his family to open a yoga studio and coffee shop, called the Cosmic Cup. It was there he met Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson, who had both recently finished college and passed their time playing cards and music at Pallana's cafe while working on their first script, "Bottle Rocket."

The duo cast Pallana in their film debut, and the rest is history. Pallana will live on in the hearts of many, and in the spectacular performances he leaves behind.
Slate article with multiple youtube links











This post was edited on 10/15/13 at 9:17 pm
Posted by Blue Velvet
Apple butter toast is nice
Member since Nov 2009
20112 posts
Posted on 10/15/13 at 9:55 pm to


(Yes, Darjeeling is misspelled above.)

1. The Darjeeling Limited


2. Fantastic Mr. Fox


3. Moonrise Kingdom


4. The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou


5. The Royal Tenenbaums


6. Rushmore





Posted by Blue Velvet
Apple butter toast is nice
Member since Nov 2009
20112 posts
Posted on 10/15/13 at 9:56 pm to
quote:

Wes Anderson’s Worlds
by Michael Chabon

The world is so big, so complicated, so replete with marvels and surprises that it takes years for most people to begin to notice that it is, also, irretrievably broken. We call this period of research “childhood.”

There follows a program of renewed inquiry, often involuntary, into the nature and effects of mortality, entropy, heartbreak, violence, failure, cowardice, duplicity, cruelty, and grief; the researcher learns their histories, and their bitter lessons, by heart. Along the way, he or she discovers that the world has been broken for as long as anyone can remember, and struggles to reconcile this fact with the ache of cosmic nostalgia that arises, from time to time, in the researcher’s heart: an intimation of vanished glory, of lost wholeness, a memory of the world unbroken. We call the moment at which this ache first arises “adolescence.” The feeling haunts people all their lives.

Everyone, sooner or later, gets a thorough schooling in brokenness. The question becomes: What to do with the pieces? Some people hunker down atop the local pile of ruins and make do, Bedouin tending their goats in the shade of shattered giants. Others set about breaking what remains of the world into bits ever smaller and more jagged, kicking through the rubble like kids running through piles of leaves. And some people, passing among the scattered pieces of that great overturned jigsaw puzzle, start to pick up a piece here, a piece there, with a vague yet irresistible notion that perhaps something might be done about putting the thing back together again.

Two difficulties with this latter scheme at once present themselves. First of all, we have only ever glimpsed, as if through half-closed lids, the picture on the lid of the jigsaw puzzle box. Second, no matter how diligent we have been about picking up pieces along the way, we will never have anywhere near enough of them to finish the job. The most we can hope to accomplish with our handful of salvaged bits—the bittersweet harvest of observation and experience—is to build a little world of our own. A scale model of that mysterious original, unbroken, half—remembered. Of course the worlds we build out of our store of fragments can be only approximations, partial and inaccurate. As representations of the vanished whole that haunts us, they must be accounted failures. And yet in that very failure, in their gaps and inaccuracies, they may yet be faithful maps, accurate scale models, of this beautiful and broken world. We call these scale models “works of art.”

From Rushmore to Moonrise Kingdom (shamefully neglected by this year’s Academy voters), Wes Anderson’s films readily, even eagerly, concede the “miniature” quality of the worlds he builds, in their set design and camera-work, in their use of stop-motion, maps, and models. And yet these miniatures span continents and decades. They comprise crime, adultery, brutality, suicide, the death of a parent, the drowning of a child, moments of profound joy and transcendence.

Vladimir Nabokov, his life cleaved by exile, created a miniature version of the homeland he would never see again and tucked it, with a jeweler’s precision, into the housing of John Shade’s miniature epic of family sorrow. Anderson—who has suggested that the breakup of his parents’ marriage was a defining experience of his life—adopts a Nabokovian procedure with the families or quasi families at the heart of all his films, from Rushmore forward, creating a series of scale-model households that, like the Zemblas and Estotilands and other lost “kingdoms by the sea” in Nabokov, intensify our experience of brokenness and loss by compressing them. That is the paradoxical power of the scale model; a child holding a globe has a more direct, more intuitive grasp of the earth’s scope and variety, of its local vastness and its cosmic tininess, than a man who spends a year in circumnavigation.

Grief, at full scale, is too big for us to take it in; it literally cannot be comprehended. Anderson, like Nabokov, understands that distance can increase our understanding of grief, allowing us to see it whole. But distance does not—ought not—necessarily imply a withdrawal. In order to gain sufficient perspective on the pain of exile and the murder of his father, Nabokov did not, in writing Pale Fire, step back from them. He reduced their scale, and let his patience, his precision, his mastery of detail—detail, the god of the model-maker—do the rest. With each of his films, Anderson’s total command of detail—both the physical detail of his sets and costumes, and the emotional detail of the uniformly beautiful performances he elicits from his actors—has enabled him to increase the persuasiveness of his own family Zemblas, without sacrificing any of the paradoxical emotional power that distance affords.

Anderson’s films have frequently been compared to the boxed assemblages of Joseph Cornell, and it’s a useful comparison, as long as one bears in mind that the crucial element, in a Cornell box, is neither the imagery and objects it deploys, nor the Romantic narratives it incorporates and undermines, nor the playfulness and precision with which its objects and narratives have been arranged. The important thing, in a Cornell box, is the box.

Cornell always took pains to construct his boxes himself; indeed the box is the only part of a Cornell work literally “made” by the artist. The box, to Cornell, is a gesture—it draws a boundary around the things it contains, and forces them into a defined relationship, not merely with one another, but with everything outside the box. The box sets out the scale of a ratio; it mediates the halves of a metaphor. It makes explicit, in plain, handcrafted wood and glass, the yearning of a model-maker to analogize the world, and at the same time it frankly emphasizes the limitations, the confines, of his or her ability to do so.

The things in Anderson’s films that recall Cornell’s boxes—the strict, steady, four-square construction of individual shots, by which the cinematic frame becomes a Cornellian gesture, a box drawn around the world of the film, as in Moonrise Kingdom’s dressing room scene, with the little bird-girls framed by strips of light bulbs; the teeming, gridded, curio cabinet sets at the heart of The Life Aquatic, The Darjeeling Limited, and Fantastic Mr. Fox—are often cited as evidence of his work’s “artificiality,” at times with the implication, simple-minded and profoundly mistaken, that a high degree of artifice is somehow inimical to seriousness, to honest emotion, to so-called authenticity. All movies, of course, are equally artificial; it’s just that some are more honest about it than others. In this important sense, the hand-built, model-kit artifice on display behind the pane of an Anderson box is a guarantor of authenticity; indeed I would argue that artifice, openly expressed, is the only true “authenticity” an artist can lay claim to.

Anderson’s films, like the boxes of Cornell or the novels of Nabokov, understand and demonstrate that the magic of art, which renders beauty out of brokenness, disappointment, failure, decay, even ugliness and violence—is authentic only to the degree that it attempts to conceal neither the bleak facts nor the tricks employed in pulling off the presto change-o. It is honest only to the degree that it builds its precise and inescapable box around its maker’s x:y scale version of the world.

“For my next trick,” says Joseph Cornell, or Vladimir Nabokov, or Wes Anderson, “I have put the world into a box.” And when he opens the box, you see something dark and glittering, an orderly mess of shards, refuse, bits of junk and feather and butterfly wing, tokens and totems of memory, maps of exile, documentation of loss. And you say, leaning in, “The world!”
Posted by Carson123987
Middle Court at the Rec
Member since Jul 2011
66368 posts
Posted on 10/15/13 at 9:58 pm to
Posted by Tino
:yawn:
Member since Dec 2004
86225 posts
Posted on 10/15/13 at 10:08 pm to
I'm excited....love Wes Anderson
This post was edited on 10/15/13 at 10:17 pm
Posted by Carson123987
Middle Court at the Rec
Member since Jul 2011
66368 posts
Posted on 10/15/13 at 10:09 pm to
didnt know you were a fan
Posted by JumpingTheShark
America
Member since Nov 2012
22881 posts
Posted on 10/15/13 at 10:10 pm to
when you make a bunch of movies with the same actors and the same type of humor over and over and they still get universal praise...you're doing it right. cant wait for this to come out
Posted by Blue Velvet
Apple butter toast is nice
Member since Nov 2009
20112 posts
Posted on 10/15/13 at 10:42 pm to
Posted by Blue Velvet
Apple butter toast is nice
Member since Nov 2009
20112 posts
Posted on 10/16/13 at 9:38 am to
Last day of waiting.
Posted by HumbleNinja
Ann Arbor
Member since Jan 2011
2997 posts
Posted on 10/16/13 at 9:50 am to
Beyond excited.

My first experience with Wes Anderson was seeing Life Aquatic in theaters with my whole family as just a 12 year old. Even though it wasn't considered his strongest work, I very much enjoyed it and have seen all of his films since.

Rushmore, Fantastic Mr. Fox, and Moonrise Kingdom are probably my top 3. Tough to narrow it down, I've enjoyed all of his films.
Posted by Jizzamo311
Member since Dec 2008
6341 posts
Posted on 10/16/13 at 2:01 pm to
Can't wait!
Posted by Blue Velvet
Apple butter toast is nice
Member since Nov 2009
20112 posts
Posted on 10/17/13 at 12:24 am to
Today's the day!


:orko:


Waiting...

















Posted by Blue Velvet
Apple butter toast is nice
Member since Nov 2009
20112 posts
Posted on 10/17/13 at 12:21 pm to
And we're live!

Should hit theaters on March 7, 2014.

TRAILER
Posted by Murray
Member since Aug 2008
14412 posts
Posted on 10/17/13 at 12:26 pm to
God this looks good. I love that Jeff Goldblum is in it. He's perfect for Wes Anderson.
Posted by Tino
:yawn:
Member since Dec 2004
86225 posts
Posted on 10/17/13 at 12:30 pm to
Posted by SlimCharles140
Member since Dec 2011
1908 posts
Posted on 10/17/13 at 1:26 pm to
Posted by Pectus
Internet
Member since Apr 2010
67302 posts
Posted on 10/17/13 at 1:48 pm to
Looks LOL funny.

Cinematography looks great as always...

Her birthmark is the shape of Mexico, BTW.
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