Grand Hotel: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(Trivia)
(Trivia)
Line 19: Line 19:
* [[Unreliable Narrator]]: Dr. Otternschlag.
* [[Unreliable Narrator]]: Dr. Otternschlag.
* [[Weimar Republic]]
* [[Weimar Republic]]
* [[What Could Have Been]]: [[Buster Keaton]] was up for the Lionel Barrymore part. Garbo wanted her old boyfriend John Gilbert, a silent star whose career (like Keaton's) was in decline, to play the Baron.
* [[White Dwarf Starlet]]: Grusinskaya.
* [[White Dwarf Starlet]]: Grusinskaya.
* [[Your Days Are Numbered]]: Otto Kringelein has a terminal illness, so he spends all his money to live the end of his life in luxury.
* [[Your Days Are Numbered]]: Otto Kringelein has a terminal illness, so he spends all his money to live the end of his life in luxury.

Revision as of 18:52, 19 June 2014

"I want to be alone. I think I have never been so tired in my life."
Grusinskaya
"Grand Hotel... always the same. People come, people go. Nothing ever happens."
Dr. Otternschlag

Adapted from Vicki Baum's novel, this 1932 Metro Goldwyn Mayer film, directed by Edmund Goulding and featuring an all-star cast including Greta Garbo, John Barrymore, Joan Crawford, Wallace Beery, and Lionel Barrymore, won the Oscar for Best Picture. It tells the intertwining stories of the various guests who check into Berlin's famous Grand Hotel (based on the Real Life Adlon Hotel). Their stories are observed by Dr. Otternschlag (Lewis Stone), who's too drunk to notice that stuff does happen in the Grand Hotel.

Tropes used in Grand Hotel include: