Until the end of the month, Secret Cinema, which often bases its extravaganzas on cult classics, will be putting on their version of Wes Anderson's newly release film, The Grand Budapest Hotel. A giddy, deadpan and meticulously stylish caper set during
Near the end of Wes Anderson's utterly delightful and predictably twee The Grand Budapest Hotel, one of the film's many interlocking narrators, played by F. Murray Abraham, describes the protagonist M. Gustave (Ralph
Near the end of Wes Anderson's utterly delightful and predictably twee The Grand Budapest Hotel, one of the film's many interlocking narrators, played by F. Murray Abraham, describes the protagonist M. Gustave (Ralph
Wes Anderson sweats the details. All of them, all the time, to an extent that can be maddening. But not in "The Grand Budapest Hotel," where the writer-director's familiar style blends with a group of unexpected factors to create a magnificently
Times critics on “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” “The Face of Love” and “Bethlehem.”