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My Life in Culture: Media and Communication Studies lecturer Dr. Susan Liddy
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A Derry home, full of personality and touches of fun, proves the power of embracing colour
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Megan Burns

The rise of the tennis aesthetic (thank you Zendaya)
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Sarah Finnan

Rodial founder Maria Hatzistefanis: 15 lessons in business
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PODCAST: Season 3, Episode 4: Trinny Woodall of Trinny London
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IMAGE

Ask the Doctor: ‘Is a Keto diet safe, or could it raise my cholesterol?’
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Image / Editorial

The Grand Budapest Hotel


By Bill O'Sullivan
12th Mar 2014
The Grand Budapest Hotel

You leave The Gran Budapest Hotel wishing that the brilliance of colour, the enthusiasm for life, the intensity of feeling, and the quixotic characters could follow you out of the cinema and populate the real world. redWes Anderson’s latest is perhaps his most brilliant, but certainly it is his most stylish creation. We are brought to a mid-century central European Alpine hotel where the hotel manager, Gustave, played by a mannered Ralph Fiennes at his best, has got into a spot of trouble. Between running The Grand Budapest Hotel with a militaristic precision and flair, he is fond of bedding his octogenarian patrons which lands him into the slapstick comedy that ensues. Everything is sheer chocolate-box perfection, crisp and vivid.Wes_2 The hyperbole and stereotype of the characters, from Willem Dafoes? hilarious leather donning psychopath, to Jude Law’s everyman neutral narrator, all compliment the graphics and style of the chinese-box piece. The real heart of the piece however lies in the comic duo formed by Fiennes and convincing new-comer, Tony Revolori, who plays Zero the lobby boy. If only there were a Wes to style our every day?

Roisin Agnew @Roxeenna