The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014) Poster

Tony Revolori: Zero

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Quotes 

  • M. Gustave : Serge X, missing. Deputy Kovacs, also missing. Madame D, dead. "Boy With Apple", stolen. By us. Dmitri and Jopling, ruthless, cold-blooded savages. Gustave H, at large. What else?

    Zero : Zero, confused.

    M. Gustave : Zero, confused, indeed. The plot thickens, as they say. Why, by the way? Is it a soup metaphor?

    Zero : I don't know.

  • Zero : What happened?

    M. Gustave : What happened, my dear Zero, is I beat the living shit out of a sniveling little runt called Pinky Bandinski, who had the gall to question my virility. Because, if there's one thing we've learned from penny dreadfuls, it's that when you find yourself in a place like this, you must never be a candy ass; you've got to prove yourself from day one. You've got to win their respect. You should take a long look at HIS ugly mug this morning.

    [Takes a sip of water and laughs] 

    M. Gustave : He's actually become a dear friend.

  • M. Gustave : [of Mme. Céline]  She was dynamite in the sack, by the way.

    Zero : She was 84, Monsieur Gustave.

    M. Gustave : Mmm, I've had older. When you're young, it's all filet steak, but as the years go by, you have to move on to the cheap cuts. Which is fine with me, because I like those. More flavorful, or so they say.

  • M. Gustave : [Regarding "Boy with Apple"]  I'll never part with it. It reminded her of me; it will remind me of her, always. I'll die with this picture above my bed. See the resemblance?

    Zero : Oh... oh, yes.

    M. Gustave : [Just minutes later]  Actually, we should sell it. Sooner rather than later.

  • M. Gustave : It's quite a thing, winning the loyalty of a woman like that for nineteen consecutive seasons.

    Zero : Um... yes, sir.

    M. Gustave : She's very fond of me, you know.

    Zero : Yes, sir.

    M. Gustave : I've never seen her like that before.

    Zero : No, sir.

    M. Gustave : She was shaking like a shitting dog.

    Zero : ...Truly.

  • M. Gustave : Why do you want to be a lobby boy?

    Zero : Well, who wouldn't - at the Grand Budapest, sir. It's an institution.

  • [after having escaped from Checkpoint 19] 

    M. Gustave : How's our darling Agatha?

    Zero : [Reciting]  "'Twas first light, when I saw her face upon the heath, and hence did I return, day by day, entranced, though vinegar did brine my heart, never w..."

    M. Gustave : Very good! I'm going to stop you there because the alarm has sounded, but remember where we left off, because I insist you finish later!

  • M. Gustave : I'm not angry with Serge; you can't blame someone for their basic lack of moral fiber. He's a frightened little yellow-bellied coward. It's not his fault, is it?

    Zero : I don't know, it depends.

    M. Gustave : Well, you can say that about most anything, "it depends". Of course it depends.

    Zero : Of course it depends, of course it depends.

    M. Gustave : Yes, I suppose you're right; of course it depends. However, that doesn't mean I'm not going to throttle the little swamp rat.

  • M. Gustave : [sees soldiers enter the hotel]  The beginning of the end of the end of the beginning has begun. A sad finale played off-key on a broken-down saloon piano in the outskirts of a forgotten ghost town. I'd rather not bear witness to such blasphemy.

    Zero : Me neither.

    M. Gustave : The Grand Budapest has become a troops' barracks. I shall never cross its threshold again in my lifetime.

    Zero : Me neither.

    M. Gustave : Never again shall I...

    [Zero spots Agatha] 

    Zero : Actually I think we might be going in there right now after all!

  • [Zero has just shown M. Gustave the newspaper article announcing Mme. Céline's death] 

    M. Gustave : Dear God!

    Zero : I'm terribly sorry, sir.

    M. Gustave : We must go to her.

    Zero : We must?

    M. Gustave : Tout de suite. She needs me, and I need you, to help me with my bags and so on.

    [to a voice within his suite] 

    M. Gustave : Attendez-moi, darling.

    [to Zero] 

    M. Gustave : How fast can you pack?

    Zero : Five minutes.

    M. Gustave : Do it. And bring a bottle of the Pouilly-Jouvet '26, in an ice bucket, with two glasses, so we don't have to drink the cat piss they serve on the dining car.

  • M. Gustave : Excuse me. Have you seen a pastry girl with a package under her arm in the last minute and a half?

    Otto : Yep. She just got on the elevator with Mr. Desgoffe und Taxis.

    M. Gustave : Thank you.

    Zero : I'm sorry, who are you?

    Otto : Otto, sir. The new lobby boy?

    Zero : Well, you haven't been trained properly, Otto. A lobby boy never provides information of that kind. You're a stone wall. Understood?

  • Zero : [Reading a letter from M. Gustave]  "My dear and trusted colleagues..."

    M. Gustave : [narrates]  I miss you deeply as I write from the confines of my regrettable and preposterous incarceration. Until I walk amongst you again as a free man, the Grand Budapest remains in your hands, as does its impeccable reputation. Keep it spotless, and glorify it. Take extra-special care of every little bitty bit of it as if I were watching over you like a hawk with a horse-whip in its talons, because I am. Should I discover a lapse of any variety during my absence, I promise swift and merciless justice will descend upon you. A great and noble house has been placed under your protection. Tell Zero if you see any funny business.

    Zero : [finishing the letter]  "Your devoted Monsieur Gustave."

  • Zero : Do you have an alibi?

    M. Gustave : Of course. But she's married to the Duke of Westphalia. I can't allow her name to get mixed up in all this monkey business.

    Zero : Monsieur Gustave, your life may be at stake.

    M. Gustave : I know. The bitch legged it! She's already on board the Queen Nasstasja, halfway to Dutch Tanganyika.

  • M. Gustave : [interviewing will walking]  Experience?

    Zero : Hotel Kinsky, Kitchen Boy, 6 months. Hotel Berlitz, Mop and Broom Boy, 3 months. Before that I was a Skillet Scrubber.

    M. Gustave : Experience, zero.

    [to various workers] 

    M. Gustave : Straighten that cap. Pleasure's all mine. These are not acceptable.

    [back to Zero] 

    M. Gustave : Education?

    Zero : I studied reading *and* spelling. I started my primary school. I almost finished...

    M. Gustave : Education, zero.Good morning Cicero. Call the plumber. Family?

    Zero : [hesitates]  Zero.

  • M. Gustave : Give me a few squirts of L'air de Panache, please, will you?

    [Zero doesn't move] 

    M. Gustave : Can I not get A squirt, even?

    Zero : I forgot the L'air de Panache.

    M. Gustave : Honestly, you forgot the L'air de Panache? I don't believe it. I mean, how could you? I've been in jail, Zero! Do you understand how humiliating this is? I smell! That's just marvelous, isn't it? I suppose this is to be expected back in... Where do you come from again?

    Zero : Aq-Salim-al-Jabat.

    M. Gustave : Precisely. I suppose this is to be expected back in Aq-Salim-al-Jabat, where one's prized possessions are a stack of filthy carpets and a starving goat, and one sleeps behind a tent flap and survives on wild dates and scarabs. But it's not how I trained you! What on God's earth possessed you to leave the homeland where you obviously belong and travel unspeakable distances to become a penniless immigrant in a refined, highly-cultivated society that, quite frankly, could've gotten along very well without you?

    Zero : The war.

    M. Gustave : ...Say again?

    Zero : Well, you see, my father was murdered and the rest of my family were executed by firing squad. Our village was burned to the ground and those who managed to survive were forced to flee. I left because of the war.

    M. Gustave : I see. So you're, actually, really more of a refugee, in that sense?

    Zero : Truly.

    M. Gustave : [chagrined]  Well, I suppose I'd better take back everything I just said. What a bloody idiot I am. Pathetic fool. Goddamn, selfish bastard. This is disgraceful, and it's beneath the standards of the Grand Budapest. I apologize on behalf of the hotel.

    Zero : It's not your fault, Monsieur Gustave. You were just upset I forgot the perfume.

    M. Gustave : Don't make excuses for me! I owe you my life. You are my dear friend and protégé and I'm very proud of you. You must know that! I'm so sorry, Zero.

    Zero : We're brothers.

    [they hug] 

  • M. Gustave : Why are we stopping at a Barley Field?

    [Title Card: 19th October, The Closing of the Frontier] 

    M. Gustave : [the train comes to a stop, the Doors to the cabin room swing open, soldiers stand at the doorway] 

    M. Gustave : Well, Hello there, chaps.

    Franz : Documents, please.

    M. Gustave : With pleasure.

    [Hands the officer his papers] 

    M. Gustave : It's not a very flattering portrait, I'm afraid, I was once considered a great beauty.

    [Notices the soldier's name tag, it reads: "Cpl F. Müller."] 

    M. Gustave : What's the F. Stand for, Fritz? Franz?

    Franz : Franz.

    M. Gustave : [Cheerfully]  I knew it!

    [Zero hands the soldier his papers] 

    M. Gustave : He's making a funny face.

    M. Gustave : [to the soldier]  That's a Migatory Visa with stage three worker status, Franz darling, he's with me.

    Franz : [Hesitates, looks at Zero]  Come outside, please.

    M. Gustave : Now wait a minute, sit down, Zero. His papers are in order, I crossed referenced them myself with The Bureau of Labor and Servitude. You can't arrest him simply because he's a bloody immigrant, he hasn't done anything wrong!

    [a moment of disbelief, the soldier looks, then grabs Zero by the arm and rises him from his seat. A light struggle breaks out, Gustave, angered, yells at them] 

    M. Gustave : Stop it! Stop, damn you!

    Zero : Never mind, Mousier Gustave! Let them proceed!

    M. Gustave : Ow, that hurts!

    [Zero and Gustave are roughly shoved against the wall] 

    M. Gustave : You filthy, godamn, pock-marked, fascist assholes! Take your hands off my lobby boy!

    [a whistle blows, and the door to the wagon opens. Everyone stops moving. Inspector A.J. Henckels walks into the room, he stands at the doorway] 

    Henckels : What's the problem?

    M. Gustave : This is outrageous! The young man works for me at the Grand Budapest Hotel in Nebelsbad.

    Henckels : Mousier Gustave?

    [pauses] 

    Henckels : My name is Henckels, I'm the son of Dr. and Mrs. Wolfgang Henckels Bergersdörfer. Do you remember me?

  • [Gustave sees soldiers enter the Hotel] 

    M. Gustave : The beginning of the end of the end of the beginning has begun. A sad finale played off-key on a broken-down saloon piano in the outskirts of a forgotten ghost town. I'd rather not bear witness to such blasphemy.

    Zero : Me neither.

    M. Gustave : The Grand Budapest has become a troops' barracks. I shall never cross its threshold again in my lifetime.

    Zero : Me neither.

    M. Gustave : Never again shall I...

    [spots Agatha] 

    M. Gustave : Actually, I think we might be going in there right now, after all.

  • M. Gustave : Let's make a solemn blood-pact. We'll contact the black-market and liquidate "Boy with Apple" by the end of the week, then leave the country and lay low somewhere along the Maltese Riviera until the troubles blow over and we resume our posts. In exchange for your help, your loyalty, and your services as my personal valet, I pledge to you: one-point-five percent of the net sale-price.

    Zero : One-point-five.

    M. Gustave : Plus room and board.

    Zero : Could we make it ten?

    M. Gustave : Ten? Are you joking? That's more than I'd pay an actual dealer and you wouldn't know chiarascuro from chicken giblets. No, one-point-five is correct.

See also

Release Dates | Official Sites | Company Credits | Filming & Production | Technical Specs


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