This week’s post is based on the chapter Twenty-four Hours in the Life of a Woman written
by Stefan Zweig, and the movie The Grand
Budapest Hotel, directed by Wes Anderson.
It is clearly shown throughout Wes Anderson’s films that he
gets a lot of his influence from Stefan Zweig’s writings. There are some very
similar aspects found in both Zweig’s and Anderson’s storylines. Some of these
include the location, characters, plot, and theme. There is also a strong
common theme of nostalgia connecting both Zweig and Anderson.
In Twenty-four Hours
in the Life of a Woman, it starts out with a group of people at a hotel,
which is practically the central theme and hub of the story, similar to The Grand Budapest Hotel. It goes on to
talk about a married woman with two children running off with a man who
everyone thinks they just met. This incident turns the hotel upside down and
puts some of the hotel guests against each other. This gives the story a
somewhat melancholy feel, which is similar to some of the moods in Anderson’s
films, especially The Grand Budapest
Hotel. The storyline in The Grand
Budapest Hotel centers on the famous hotel, with the blossoming friendship
between the legendary concierge and a young, new bellhop. However, the
melancholy comes from the two wars going and the multiple deaths that occur in
the film. The nostalgia factor that also shows Zweig’s influence on Anderson is
shown both in of their works as well. In Twenty-four
Hours in the Life of a Woman, the main focus is on the reminiscing of the
twenty-four hours in a woman’s life, one day that changed her life forever.
This is similar to The Grand Budapest
Hotel, since it focuses on an old man who reminisces on his life as a
bellhop in that famous hotel. I feel like Anderson got most of his influence
from the authentic nostalgia that Zweig writes about, because it shows up a lot
in Anderson’s films. A final connection shown between Zweig and
Anderson is the acute detail that is present throughout both storylines. The
overall mood is also very intense and both have a very interesting style that
makes the audience intrigued and apart of the story.