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Authors: Wes Anderson

The Grand Budapest Hotel (9 page)

BOOK: The Grand Budapest Hotel
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LUDWIG

Checkpoint Nineteen ain’t no two-bit hoosegow. You got broad-gauge iron bars on every door, vent, and window. You got barb’ wire on every containment wall and barricade. You got seventy-two guards on the floor and sixteen more in the towers. You got a 325-foot drop into a moat full of crocodiles – but, like the best of ’em, it’s got a soft spot, which in this case happens to take the form of a storm-drain sewer system datin’ from the time of the original rock fortification way back in the Middle Ages. Now, nobody’s sayin’ it’s a stroll down a tree-lined promenade with a fine lady and a white poodle, but it’s got what you’d call ‘vulnerability’ – and that’s our bread and butter. Take a look.

Ludwig produces a crude but highly detailed map and floor-plan of the castle compound drawn with charcoal on a strip of butcher paper. M. Gustave examines it with fixed concentration. He says pointedly:

M. GUSTAVE

Who drew this?

LUDWIG

(
stiffening
)

What do you mean, ‘Who drew this?’ I did.

M. GUSTAVE

(
impressed
)

Very good. You’ve got a wonderful line, Ludwig. This shows great artistic promise.

Ludwig smiles slightly, pleased and slightly embarrassed.  M. Gustave points on the map:

M. GUSTAVE

Question: how do you intend to penetrate this lowest rudiment? If I interpret the legend correctly, it’s twenty-five inches of reinforced granite masonry, is it not? Digging with the throat-slitter, I expect that would take three to six months of continual effort, during which time several of our members will have been violently executed.

LUDWIG

You hit the nail on the head there, Mr. Gustave. We got fake documents, second-hand street clothes, and a rope ladder made out of sticks and bunk-linens – but we need diggin’ tools, and that’s provin’ hard to come by in this flophouse.

M. Gustave nods gravely. The others slump, listless, and sigh. M. Gustave taps rapidly on the table with the jerry-rigged shiv. Suddenly, he sits up straight and frowns. The others watch him, curious – then look where he is looking.

The camera zooms in slowly toward the crinkled wrapper of the Courtesan
au chocolat
as the five inmates all stare at it together.

Cut to:

Mr. Moustafa and the author at their dinner table surrounded by meats, sauces, and vegetables. Mr. Moustafa is immobile.

AUTHOR

(
voice-over
)

At this point in the story, the old man fell silent and pushed away his saddle of lamb. His eyes went blank as two stones. I could see he was in distress. ‘Are you ill, Mr. Moustafa?’ I finally asked. ‘Oh, dear me, no,’ he said. ‘It’s only that I don’t know now to proceed.’ He was crying.

Mr. Moustafa smiles sadly with tears streaming down his cheeks. The author looks worried.

MR. MOUSTAFA

You see, I never speak of Agatha, because – even at the thought of her name – I’m unable to control my emotions.

Mr. Moustafa dries his eyes with his napkin, but the tears instantly return. He shrugs.

MR. MOUSTAFA

Well, I suppose there’s no way around it. You see, she saved us.

Title:

ONE MONTH EARLIER

INT. CINEMA. NIGHT

A smoky small-town movie palace. On screen, a battle scene is in progress: tanks explode while an infantry unit charges out of a trench into a tornado of machine-gun fire. In the middle of the back row, a love scene is in progress: Zero and Agatha French-kiss in a clutch with her shirt half-unbuttoned and his fingers wrapped around her clearly visible, white breast. Her hand is jammed down into his trousers. No one else in the scattered audience appears to notice them.

MR. MOUSTAFA

(
voice-over
)

On our third, formal rendezvous, I had asked for her hand in marriage, and she had agreed. We did not have fifty Klubecks between the two of us. No one knew, of course; but, then, who would have cared? We were both completely on our own in the world – and we were deeply in love.

EXT. TOWN SQUARE. NIGHT

Dusk. The
platz
in the center of Nebelsbad. A carnival fair is in full swing with a spinning carousel set to a Wurlitzer organ, a bustling gallery of games, and vendors serving beer and sausages. Agatha holds Zero’s arm as they walk through the crowd. He reaches into his uniform, pulls out a small gift-wrapped package, and thrusts it into her hands.

ZERO

Here.

AGATHA

(
startled
)

Thank you!

ZERO

It’s a book.

AGATHA

(
hesitates
)

I see.

ZERO

Romantic Poetry, Volume One
. M. Gustave recommended it. I have a copy of my own, as well. I ruined the surprise, I suppose.

AGATHA

I’ll go ahead and open it, anyway.

ZERO

OK.

Agatha carefully unwraps the package, folds up the paper, and puts the ribbon into her pocket. Zero flips open the book and points at a flyleaf.

ZERO

Read the inscription.

AGATHA

(
reading
)

‘For my dearest, darling, treasured, cherished Agatha, whom I worship. With respect, adoration, admiration, kisses, gratitude, best wishes, and love. From Z. to A.’

Agatha looks to Zero with tears in her eyes. He smiles sadly.

MR. MOUSTAFA

(
voice-over
)

M. Gustave insisted on an immediate and thorough
cross-examination

INT. STORAGE PANTRY. DAY

M. Gustave sits opposite Agatha at a long table with his hand resting on top of hers as he leans close to her recounting something vividly. They both laugh uproariously. M. Gustave says loudly, aside, to Zero:

M. GUSTAVE

She’s
so
charming!

Zero broods in the corner. The table is piled with long-stemmed flowers, and a large, cardboard box overflows with more.

MR. MOUSTAFA

(
voice-over
)

– during which he presented Agatha with a porcelain pendant and five dozen individually tissue-wrapped white tulips in a box the size of a child’s coffin.

Insert:

A white porcelain crossed-keys pendant hanging from a velvet ribbon around Agatha’s thin neck.

Agatha admires her pendant. Zero grumbles:

ZERO

It’s not right.

M. GUSTAVE

(
hesitates
)

I beg your pardon? (
Conspiratorially to Agatha.
) Why’s he sulking?

ZERO

She’s my girlfriend. You can’t just buy her things.

M. GUSTAVE

(
in disbelief
)

I’m only interviewing this vision of loveliness on
your
behalf. (
Conveying pearls of wisdom.
) Never be jealous in this life, Zero. Not even for an instant.

ZERO

(
to Agatha, like a lawyer
)

Is he flirting with you?

AGATHA

Yes.

Zero looks to M. Gustave with satisfaction. M. Gustave shrugs this off with a wave of the hand, then offers a benediction:

M. GUSTAVE

I approve of this union. (
Still flirting.
) Agatha, my beauty? Return to your beloved.

Zero and Agatha stand together quietly on display, happy. She clutches a tulip. M. Gustave nods sagely.

MR. MOUSTAFA

(
voice-over
)

Soon, we learned –

INT. PATISSERIE. DAY

The white-marble frosting counter in the back room at Mendl’s. There are three, unfinished Courtesans
au chocolat
in a row with their tops open. Agatha delicately places a little tool into the fillings of each: a
slender file, the head of a small hammer, and a half-scale chisel. As she closes them, she begins to apply a complex series of decorative ripples and swirls.

MR. MOUSTAFA

(
voice-over
)

– Not only was Agatha immensely skilled with a palette knife and a butter-cream flourish: she was also very brave.

Zero, keeping a lookout at the kitchen door, gives an urgent signal. Agatha swiftly covers the pastries with e damp cheese-cloth just as Herr Mendl crosses into the room, throws open a huge brick-oven, and checks on a batch of
gâteaux l’Opéra.

INT. SORTING HALL. DAY

A prison guard searches packages on a metal table. He slices a block of cheese into quarters. He chops-up a loaf of bread into sixths. He opens a double-sized pink pastry-box – and pauses. He stares at the three pristine Courtesans
au chocolat.

MR. MOUSTAFA

(
voice-over
)

I believe she was born that way.

The guard gingerly closes the box, slides it aside, unscathed, and moves onto the next package.

INT. LAWYER’S OFFICE. DAY

An art-deco office looking out directly onto the clock tower of Lutzbahn Station. Deputy Kovacs sits behind a wide desk. The box containing Madame D.’s will rests beside him. Its contents have been neatly organized into dozens of little stacks and piles.

Dmitri and his three sisters are seated across from Deputy Kovacs in leather armchairs. Jopling stands in the corner stroking a Siamese cat and staring out the window. Curtains sway in the gentle breeze. Deputy Kovacs sounds concerned:

DEPUTY KOVACS

Something’s missing. A crucial document, either misplaced or, conceivably, destroyed. I don’t know what it contains, I don’t know what it represents, I don’t know what it
is
– but there are traces and shadows of it everywhere. (
Motioning to the stacks of paper.
) Now, I don’t want to alarm you, and I don’t expect to see any significant change in the magistrate’s ultimate decision
vis-à-vis
your own inheritance; but, especially given the circumstances of the death, as well as the disappearance of the key witness in the murder case (Serge X.), I suggest we immediately bring this matter to the attention of the municipal inspector so there can be absolutely no question of impropriety at any future date. Agreed?

DMITRI

(
simply
)

Not agreed.

DEPUTY KOVACS

(
puzzled
)

Not agreed?

DMITRI

(
with finality
)

Not agreed.

Silence. The three sisters are stoic. Jopling is stony. Dmitri and Deputy Kovacs stare at each other blankly.

DMITRI

Can I ask you a question, Vilmos?

DEPUTY KOVACS

Yes, Dmitri?

DMITRI

Who you working for?

DEPUTY KOVACS

I beg your pardon?

DMITRI

I thought you’re supposed to be
our
lawyer.

DEPUTY KOVACS

(
hesitates
)

Well, in point of fact, I’m the executor of the estate. In this particular situation – I represent the deceased.

DMITRI

Oh, yeah?

DEPUTY KOVACS

Yeah. A provision for my fees was included in the –

DMITRI

Just wrap it up, and don’t make waves. Agreed?

DEPUTY KOVACS

(
long pause
)

I’m an attorney, Dmitri. I’m obligated to proceed according to the rule of law. Not agreed.

Dmitri’s eyes peer sideways. He says quietly, menacing:

DMITRI

This stinks, sisters.

Deputy Kovacs looks insulted. Dmitri stands up, walks to the door, and exits. The cat squeals. Jopling follows Dmitri out the door. Deputy Kovacs’ mouth falls open. He points, astonished, across the room:

DEPUTY KOVACS

Did he just throw my cat out the window?

The three sisters turn around quickly. They answer simultaneously:

MARGUERITE

I don’t think so.

LAETIZIA

Jopling?

CAROLINA

No. Did he?

Deputy Kovacs waits for the punchline – but it does not come. He dashes to the window and looks down at the sidewalk.

Cut to:

A pedestrian in a bowler hat far below standing over a sprawled speck on the sidewalk. He looks up.

Insert:

Four small hammers tap rapid-fire at four half-scale chisels, chipping away into a cement pot-hole. They are making good progress.

INT. LUDWIG’S CELL. NIGHT

M. Gustave, Pinky, Günther, and Ludwig work diligently by candlelight under a wooden table. Periodically, Wolf scoops up the powdery debris with a soup ladle and throws it aside.

Ludwig looks up suddenly, alerted. He holds up a finger.

LUDWIG

Shh!

M. Gustave, Pinky, and Günther stop tapping at once. They listen attentively. Feet creak along the thick, wooden floor outside the cell – and come to a halt directly in front of the door. Silence.

There is a loud but muffled sneeze.

The feet begin to creak again and fade away until they are inaudible. Ludwig signals to the others. They resume their tapping.

INT. GARRET. NIGHT

An attic bedroom the size of a broom closet. The walls and ceiling are  bare planks. Thick beams hold the crooked roof in place. A small skylight window is propped open with a pencil. Zero and Agatha are naked under the rough sheets of her narrow bed. They share a plate of little miniature Courtesans au chocolat. Zero whispers:

ZERO

There’s something I haven’t told you, Agatha.

A look of dread crosses Agatha’s face. She says reluctantly:

AGATHA

OK.

ZERO

We stole a painting. It’s very valuable (maybe five million Klubecks, in fact). I don’t know if anyone’s even noticed it’s missing yet – but if something should happen to me and M. Gustave –

AGATHA

(
evenly
)

You stole – art?

ZERO

(
defensive
)

One picture. Anyway: we need to make a plan for your survival. Hide this.

Zero produces a square of tissue-paper the size of a large postage stamp with neat, minuscule handwriting all over it. Agatha squints at it.

ZERO

It’s in code, and you might need a magnifying glass to read it, but it tells you exactly where and how to find ‘Boy with Apple’. Don’t take less than half the retail asking price. Also –

AGATHA

Zero. I’m a
baker
.

ZERO

(
correcting her
)

You’re a
pastry
chef. One of the best in the –

AGATHA

Not a ‘
fence
’ (if that’s the term). I don’t trade in stolen property.

ZERO

(
hesitates
)

I said it wrong. She
willed
it to him!

A door bangs open down the hall. In an instant: Zero jumps out of the bed, leaps with both feet at once into his trousers, and shimmies up out of the skylight.

Cut to:

Zero’s point-of-view from the roof. The bedroom door creaks open and Herr Mendl looks in at Agatha. She is now calmly reading her volume of romantic poetry. He grunts:

HERR MENDL

Go to sleep.

AGATHA

Yes, Herr Mendl.

The door closes. Agatha looks up to Zero. He holds up the sliver of paper. She shakes her head and whispers:

AGATHA

No.

ZERO

(
pause
)

OK, but take it, anyway.

Zero releases the square of tissue-paper. Agatha sits up quickly as it descends, darting and fluttering, and moves her hand around underneath it while she watches trying to estimate where it is going to land.

At the last second, she reaches up and cleanly plucks it out of the air between thumb and finger.

Zero smiles. He runs away, shoeless, past gutters and chimneys, jumping noiselessly from roof to roof, into the night.

INT. OFFICE BUILDING. NIGHT

A bank of elevators in an art-deco lobby. A bell rings, and a pair of doors slides open. Deputy Kovacs emerges and navigates his way through a maze of suds buckets and women on their hands and knees scrubbing the floor. He does not notice:

Jopling sitting in a chair behind a column reading the evening edition of the
Trans-Alpine Yodel.

EXT. STREET. NIGHT

The evening sky is bright blue. Crowds hurry in and out of shops and restaurants. Deputy Kovacs crosses the street and stands next to an old
lady at a tram stop. He checks his watch. The tram arrives, and the door opens.

Deputy Kovacs assists the old lady, then boards behind her. He takes a seat. He looks out the window. Just as they pull away, he sees Jopling exit the building and climb onto his motorcycle.

Deputy Kovacs frowns.

Jopling kick-starts his engine and follows the tram, close behind, for three blocks. At the next intersection, a policeman blows a whistle, holds up his hand, and makes Jopling wait while a stream of opposing traffic crosses.

The tram rounds a corner and stops. Deputy Kovacs jumps up and ducks out onto the street. He looks left and right. He hurries up a path toward a grand, colossal, domed palace. A sign carved in stone above the door reads: ‘Kunstmuseum Lutz’.

As he goes inside, Deputy Kovacs looks back to see Jopling’s motorcycle pulling slowly to the curb.

BOOK: The Grand Budapest Hotel
7.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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