Showing posts with label edward norton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label edward norton. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

The Grand Budapest Hotel


This is one of the few films we've shown this year that I actually saw in advance of our screening.  I'd missed it at the cinema and caught up with it on DVD - but it definitely repaid a second look, especially on our big(gish) screen.

Here are my notes:

The Grand Budapest Hotel

USA 2014                    100 minutes

Director:                      Wes Anderson

Starring:                        Ralph Fiennes, Edward Norton, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe and Tony Revolori

Awards and Nominations

  • Nominated for nine Oscars, including Best Film, Director and Original Screenplay, and won four Oscars
  • Won BAFTAs for Best Original Screenplay, Best Soundtrack, Costumes and Production Design and nominated for six more including Best Film, Director, Leading Actor (Ralph Fiennes), Best Supporting Actor and Original Screenplay
  • A further 95 wins and 110 nominations

“In some hands, this convoluted, labyrinthine narrative would end up a sprawling mess, but such is Anderson's storytelling discipline – informed and sustained by the precision of the cinematography and set design – that it never gets away from him. As Gustave skips from hotel lobby to prison camp, from railway carriage to drawing room, the architecture of this picaresque remains entirely lucid."

Andrew Pulver

 In its 1930s glory days the Grand Budapest Hotel, located in the Central European Republic of Zubrowka, is presided over by Gustave H. (Ralph Fiennes), the hotel’s devoted concierge.  Among his many other duties Gustave H. courts a series of elderly women, including Madame D (an almost unrecognisable Tilda Swinton), who flock to the hotel to enjoy his “exceptional service”.  Following the death of Madame D. Gustave H. attends her funeral: he suspects that she has been murdered and learns that she has bequeathed him a valuable painting in her will, but her family want it and her son Dmitri (Adrien Brody) will stop at nothing to get it back.

Wes Anderson wrote the screenplay from an original story he had co-written, but it was inspired by the writings of Stefan Zweig, an Austrian novelist, playwright and journalist.  In the 1920s and 1930s Zweig was one of the most popular writers in the world but now he is best known for his novel Letter from an Unknown Woman, filmed in Hollywood by Max Ophuls in 1948.  Anderson’s inspiration for his story was Zweig’s 1927 novella Twenty Four Hours in the Life of a Woman (filmed in 1952 and remade twice since) as well as his 1939 novel Beware of Pity, filmed in Britain in 1946.

 
The film had its premier at the 2014 Berlin Film Festival where Wes Anderson received the Grand Jury Prize.  On it general release the film received excellent reviews with many critics commenting particularly on the performance of Ralph Fiennes (in a role written originally written for Johnny Depp) as Gustave H.  In a recent profile of Fiennes Anne Billson reviewed his film career to date and with regard to The Grand Budapest Hotel commented:

 

“His Gustave H., in Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel, is probably the most likeable character he has ever played.  Amid the film's colourful assembly of caricatures, his fey but ferociously efficient concierge is full of regretful nuance, provides the film with its moral backbone, and heartbreakingly embodies the values of a lost epoch. It's a lovely performance.”

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Moonrise Kingdom

Now that the distractions of Christmas and the New Year are finally over we can get back to the serious business of screening films - and this week's selection looks a real treat.

I'd missed the reviews of this when it came out, but then noted it when it appeared in the Top Ten Films of 2012 lists that many critics poduced last month.

Here are my notes:


Moonrise Kingdom

USA 2012                    94 minutes

Director:                      Wes Anderson

Starring:                        Bill Murray, Bob Balaban, Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Frances McDormand, Harvey Keitel and Tilda Swinton

Awards and Nominations

  • Nominated for 2013 Golden Globe (Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy)
  • Nominated for Palme d’Or at 2012 Cannes Film Festival
  • A further 11 wins and 27 nominations
 “The success of Moonrise Kingdom depends on its understated gravity.  None of the actors ever plays for laughs or puts sardonic spins on their material.  We don’t feel that they’re kidding.  Yes, we know these events are less than likely, and the film’s entire world is fantastical.  But what happens in a fantasy can be more involving than what happens in life, and thank goodness for that.”

Roger Ebert

In 1965, on a small island called New Penzance off the coast of New England, a young boy and girl fall in love, make a secret pact, and then run away together into the wilderness.  The people of the town are mobilised to search for them as a violent storm is brewing off-shore; as a result the peaceful community is turned upside down, which turns out not be a bad thing. 
The film is an original story by Wes Anderson who co-wrote on the script with Roman Coppola, who had also worked with Anderson on The Darjeeling Limited (2007), his previous film.  Anderson’s films often include an interesting and often surprising choice of music.  In Moonrise Kingdom young children listen to an extract from Britten’s The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra in which the various instruments are separated and identified while the film closes with the fugue section that reunites all the instruments, suggesting the society being taken apart and then brought back together.  Meanwhile Captain Sharp (Bruce Willis), the lonesome policeman listens to rueful country songs by Hank Williams while the romantic 12-year-old heroine loves the music of Françoise Hardy.

Wes Anderson made his name with the quirky comedy Rushmore (1998) and the comedy-drama The Royal Tenenbaums (2001).  In all his films he likes to work with the same cast and crew: amongst a number of regular players including Jason Schwartzman and Owen Wilson, Bill Murray has appeared in every film that Anderson has made to date and this has secured his reputation as a star of independent cinema. The current film also includes an eclectic cast list that includes such diverse talents as Bruce Willis, Frances McDormand (best known for her Oscar winning role in Fargo (1996)) and Tilda Swinton (who started her career by appearing in a number of films by Derek Jarman before moving to more mainstream films although still working with directors such as the Coen brothers in Burn After Reading (2008)).

The film received its world premier in competition at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival.  It subsequently opened to unanimous critical praise from critics and appeared in many lists of the top ten films of 2012.

Here's a link to the trailer: