Filming

Is Wes Anderson’s ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel’ Real?


The Academy Award-winning movie The Grand Budapest Hotel took us to a different time and place. Set in the fictional Eastern Europe’s Republic of Zubrowka pre-WWII, viewers were taken to a mountainside resort only the wealthy could afford. Filled with murder, mystery, and intrigue, and touched with a sprinkle of comedy, writer-director Wes Anderson took his audience to a hotel almost anyone would love to visit. But was that opulent pink location a real hotel? Let’s look.

A model of 'The Grand Budapest Hotel'

The Grand Budapest Hotel | Justin Baker/Getty Images

What was the ‘Grand Budapest Hotel’ about?

The film begins in the mid-1980s when a woman seizes the opportunity to read a book, “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” she finds in a cemetery. It was written by someone only known as The Author. The Author (Jude Law) had earlier ventured to Zubrowka to see the formerly affluent Grand Budapest Hotel that had fallen on hard times with few guests.

He befriends an elderly man, Zero Moustafa (F. Murray Abraham) the hotel’s owner. The two sit down to dinner, and Zero tells his story, according to IMDb. In 1932, the young Zero (Tony Revolori) is a bellhop trainee at the hotel whom the concierge, M. Gustave H. (Ralph Fiennes) takes a liking to.





Forrás