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Wes Anderson’s Europe: Every Filming Location from The Grand Budapest Hotel to The French Dispatch

Photo by Moreno Matković on Unsplash

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Wes Anderson has cultivated a distinctive visual style so recognizable that his films exist almost as alternate realities—carefully composed, symmetrically arranged, pastel-colored alternate universes where whimsy and melancholy coexist. While Anderson’s films are deeply fictional, they’ve been increasingly shot on location in Europe, and his aesthetic has transformed how audiences perceive European architecture, design, and the very concept of “Europeanness.”

For Anderson fans and design enthusiasts, following his European filming locations creates a unique form of travel—not tourism toward conventional landmarks, but pilgrimage toward architectural and design inspiration. This guide maps Anderson’s European locations, explains his aesthetic choices, and helps you plan a trip that captures the director’s distinctive vision.

The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014): Görlitz, Germany

The Most Distinctive Anderson Film

The Grand Budapest Hotel, Anderson’s most successful and beloved film, tells the story of a legendary concierge and a lobby boy navigating a hotel’s history across decades. The film shifts aspect ratios and color palettes to represent different time periods, creating a visual narrative that’s as important as the plot.

Anderson famously chose to film this predominantly in Görlitz, a former East German industrial town on the German-Polish border. The decision was transformative—not just for the film’s aesthetics, but for Görlitz’s subsequent tourism and cultural renaissance.

Görlitz: The Real Grand Budapest

Görlitz is a stunning example of Central European Baroque, Art Nouveau, and industrial architecture. Located about 100 km southeast of Dresden, the city was partially destroyed in WWII but its historic core survived. For decades, it was a somewhat forgotten East German town. Anderson’s choice to film there changed everything.

Specific Filming Locations in Görlitz:

Görlitzer Warenhaus (Department Store):
This Art Deco department store served as the primary exterior and interior location for the Grand Budapest Hotel itself. Built in 1913, the building features stunning architecture that Anderson recognized as perfect for his aesthetic.

The building is now open to visitors as a cultural space. You can walk through the same corridors, see the distinctive geometric floor patterns, and understand why Anderson chose it. The building’s interior has been partially preserved and partially adapted for contemporary use.

Neisse Street (Neißestraße):
Many establishing shots of the hotel’s exterior were taken along this elegant street lined with Belle Époque architecture. You can walk the same streets and recreate those aesthetic experiences.

Marienplatz (Town Square):
The town’s main square, with its historic town hall and architectural symmetry, appears throughout the film as establishing shots.

The Reichenbacher Turm (Reichenbach Tower):
This 16th-century tower dominates Görlitz’s skyline and appears in the film’s broader city establishing shots.

The Synagogue:
While not extensively featured, Görlitz’s 19th-century synagogue (now a cultural center) is architecturally significant and reflects the city’s pre-WWII Jewish community.

Visiting Görlitz:

Görlitz has transformed from a declining industrial town to a destination for architecture enthusiasts and Anderson fans. The city is extraordinarily walkable and compact—you can explore most of it on foot in 1-2 days.

What to See:

  • Walk the historic center with its cobblestone streets and Belle Époque architecture
  • Visit the Reichenbacher Turm for city views
  • Explore the Görlitzer Warenhaus interior
  • Visit small museums documenting city history
  • Browse independent bookstores, galleries, and design shops that have opened to cater to visitors
  • Cross the bridge to the Polish side (Zgorzelec) to experience the German-Polish border

Accommodation:
Budget hotels and guesthouses (€40-70 per night) offer authentic experiences. The town’s tourism infrastructure has improved but remains modest compared to major tourist destinations.

Dining:
Small restaurants and cafés throughout the historic center offer Czech and German cuisine. Expect €8-15 for casual meals, €20-35 for dinner.

Getting There:
Görlitz is accessible by train from Dresden (about 1.5 hours) or Berlin (about 3.5 hours). The train station is a 10-minute walk from the historic center.

Best Time to Visit:
Summer (June-August) offers pleasant weather and maximum tourist amenities, but also brings crowds. Spring (April-May) and fall (September-October) provide ideal weather with fewer visitors.

Anderson’s Specific Aesthetic Choices:

Anderson shot The Grand Budapest Hotel in Görlitz because:

  • Architectural Symmetry: The city’s Belle Époque architecture features the geometric symmetry Anderson obsesses over
  • Color Palette: The city’s pastel-colored facades perfectly match Anderson’s color philosophy
  • Architectural Layering: Multiple architectural styles (Renaissance, Baroque, Art Nouveau) exist in close proximity, allowing Anderson to show historical depth
  • The Uncanny Familiar: Görlitz is recognizable as “European” without being a cliché like Paris or Venice
  • The French Dispatch (2021): Angoulême, France

    Anderson’s Love Letter to France

    The French Dispatch is Anderson’s most recent European film and perhaps his most explicitly French. The film follows an American newspaper bureau in a fictional French city called Ennui-sur-Blasé. Anderson filmed it on location in Angoulême, a medieval city in southwestern France.

    Angoulême: The French Comic Book Capital

    Angoulême, located in the Charente region about 120 km northeast of Bordeaux, is one of France’s oldest cities. It’s built on a hillside above the Charente River and features medieval ramparts, narrow winding streets, and a distinct cultural identity centered on comic books (bande dessinée) and festivals.

    Specific Filming Locations in Angoulême:

    The Old Town (Vieille Ville):
    The majority of The French Dispatch was filmed in Angoulême’s medieval Old Town. The narrow streets, stone buildings with shuttered windows, and hidden courtyards perfectly captured Anderson’s vision of a timeless European city.

    Key locations include:

  • Place Hallé: This central plaza appears in establishing shots
  • Cathedral (Cathédrale Saint-Pierre): The Romanesque cathedral appears in multiple sequences
  • The Ramparts: Medieval walls surrounding the old town appear in several shots
  • Narrow Streets and Alleyways: The film’s distinctive aesthetic is built from these medieval streets with their geometry and proportions
  • The Charente River:
    Scenes involving the river and its surroundings were filmed along the Charente, which flows below the old town.

    Modern Angoulême:
    While not the focus, lower Angoulême (the modern city) also appears in establishing shots.

    Visiting Angoulême:

    Angoulême is less famous than major tourist destinations, which means it retains authenticity and avoids overtourism.

    What to See:

  • Walk the medieval Old Town with no specific itinerary; getting lost in the streets is the point
  • Visit the Cathedral with its distinctive Romanesque facade
  • Walk the ramparts for views of the Charente Valley
  • Visit the Centre de la Bande Dessinée (Comic Book Museum), reflecting the city’s cultural identity
  • Explore the city’s many art galleries and design shops
  • Attend the International Comics Festival if visiting in January
  • Accommodation:
    Budget €45-75 for guesthouses, €80-120 for midrange hotels. The Old Town has charming hotels with character.

    Dining:
    Southwestern French cuisine features duck (confit, magret), foie gras, and local wines. Budget €12-20 for casual meals, €25-50 for dinner in better restaurants.

    Getting There:
    Angoulême is accessible by train from Paris (about 2.5 hours) or Bordeaux (about 1.5 hours). The train station is outside the Old Town; local buses connect to the historic center.

    Best Time to Visit:

  • January: International Comics Festival; the city is packed, accommodations fill quickly
  • Spring/Fall: Ideal weather, fewer tourists than summer
  • Summer: Pleasant but increasingly crowded due to Anderson tourism
  • Why Angoulême?

    Anderson chose Angoulême because:

  • Medieval Authenticity: The Old Town is genuinely medieval without being a museum or theme park
  • Compact Scale: The Old Town is small enough to feel intimate and filmable
  • Architectural Variety: Stone buildings of different ages create visual interest
  • Cultural Identity: The city’s identity as a comic book capital appealed to Anderson’s sensibility
  • The Charente River: The landscape element added visual interest beyond architecture
  • Isle of Dogs Connections: Japanese and European Aesthetic Fusion

    Isle of Dogs (2018): While this stop-motion film is primarily set in Japan and doesn’t feature European locations directly, Anderson’s approach to the film reflects his fascination with architectural and cultural aesthetics that he explores similarly in his European works. The film’s meticulous compositional approach and color choices demonstrate the same philosophy applied to a different cultural context.

    Anderson’s European Aesthetic: Understanding His Approach

    Color Palettes:
    Anderson obsesses over specific color schemes for each film. The Grand Budapest Hotel uses magentas, peach, and pale greens. The French Dispatch uses warmer golds and terra cottas. Understanding these color choices helps you appreciate how he photographs European architecture.

    Symmetry and Composition:
    Anderson frames shots with rigorous symmetry—centered subjects, balanced compositions, and geometric precision. European medieval and Belle Époque architecture, with its attention to proportional design, naturally supports this compositional approach.

    Nostalgia and Melancholy:
    Both films are deeply nostalgic—The Grand Budapest Hotel for a pre-war European sensibility, The French Dispatch for mid-century journalism and European cultural life. This nostalgia shapes how you should approach visiting these locations: they’re about appreciating what exists, not mourning what’s lost.

    The Uncanny European:
    Anderson treats Europe not as a destination for conventional tourism but as a dreamland where European architectural traditions create an alternate reality. He’s drawn to genuine European locations that have remained somewhat frozen in time or overlooked by mainstream tourism.

    Suggested Wes Anderson European Itinerary

    10-Day “Anderson’s Europe” Journey

    Days 1-4: Görlitz, Germany

  • Arrive via Dresden or Berlin
  • Spend 2-3 full days exploring the historic center
  • Visit the Görlitzer Warenhaus multiple times at different times of day
  • Walk every street in the Old Town
  • Visit nearby smaller towns like Bautzen (also in the region) for additional Belle Époque architecture
  • One day as a buffer day for bad weather or additional exploration
  • Days 5-10: Angoulême, France

  • Take a train from Görlitz to Angoulême (requires connections; expect 8-10 hours of travel)
  • Spend 4-5 days in Angoulême’s Old Town
  • Walk the ramparts multiple times
  • Explore the Cathedral
  • Visit the Comic Book Museum
  • Take day trip to nearby medieval towns in the Charente region (Cognac, Jarnac)
  • Spend a morning at the Charente River area for landscape appreciation
  • Extended Version (15 Days):

    If you have more time, add:

  • Days 11-13: Bordeaux, France — France’s wine country, about 2 hours from Angoulême, offers wine tourism and Belle Époque architecture
  • Days 14-15: Lyon or Provence — Additional French cities with architecture Anderson would appreciate
  • Practical Wes Anderson Tourism Tips

    Transportation:

  • Rent a car for flexibility between Görlitz and Angoulême, or use trains and local transportation
  • Both cities have excellent train connections to larger European hubs
  • Driving between them (approximately 1,000 km) is feasible over 2-3 days if you want to explore regions en route
  • Photography Approach:
    Anderson’s aesthetic is incredibly photogenic. Many visitors take photographs specifically attempting to match Anderson’s compositions—centered subjects, color-coordinated scenes, symmetrical framing. This is wonderful and encouraged, but also:

  • Spend time simply observing and experiencing locations without photographing
  • Appreciate architecture for its own merit beyond its cinematic utility
  • Respect that these are lived-in communities, not film sets
  • Budget:

  • Accommodations: €50-80 per night average across both cities
  • Meals: €15-30 per day
  • Museum/attraction entries: €5-15 per location
  • Transportation: €150-300 for flights/trains between major cities
  • Total 10-day budget: €1,200-1,800 for one person
  • Best Time to Visit:

  • Spring (April-May): Ideal weather, flowers blooming in both regions, before peak summer crowds
  • Fall (September-October): Pleasant weather, regional wine harvest seasons, fewer tourists
  • Winter (December-January): Atmospheric but cold; January means Angoulême’s comic book festival
  • What to Bring:

  • Camera with wide-angle lens (Anderson’s compositions suit wide perspectives)
  • Comfortable walking shoes (both cities involve substantial walking)
  • Notebook for architectural observations
  • Reading material set in or about these regions or time periods
  • Recommended Pre-Visit Preparation

    Films to Watch:

  • The Grand Budapest Hotel (obviously)
  • The French Dispatch (for Angoulême context)
  • Isle of Dogs (for understanding Anderson’s broader aesthetic)
  • Moonrise Kingdom (for European sensibility even though set in New England)
  • The Grand Hotel Budapest (watch behind-the-scenes making-of if available)
  • Books and Reading:

  • Biographies of Wes Anderson exploring his aesthetic philosophy
  • Art books on Belle Époque and Baroque architecture
  • Regional histories of Görlitz and Angoulême
  • Comic books and bande dessinée (French comics), given Angoulême’s cultural focus
  • Design Inspiration:

  • Study Anderson’s use of color; notice how European architecture naturally provides these palettes
  • Observe compositional techniques in his films, then look for those compositions in actual spaces
  • Understand how architectural proportions create his signature visual style
  • Conclusion: Europe as Anderson Sees It

    Visiting Wes Anderson’s European filming locations offers something distinct from conventional tourism. You’re not visiting sites for their historical importance or conventional tourist appeal, but for their aesthetic resonance and architectural inspiration.

    Both Görlitz and Angoulême benefit from their selection as Anderson filming locations while remaining fundamentally authentic European cities with their own histories, cultures, and contemporary lives. They’re not theme parks recreating Anderson’s vision; they’re genuine European locations that inspired and enabled that vision.

    The experience of visiting these locations is about training your eye to see the beauty in architectural proportion, color relationships, and compositional geometry. It’s about understanding how Anderson’s seemingly artificial aesthetic actually corresponds to genuine European architectural traditions. It’s about appreciating that these cities’ medieval and Belle Époque designs were created centuries before filmmaking existed, yet they naturally align with an contemporary artist’s vision of how spaces should look and feel.

    Whether you’re a devoted Anderson fan or simply interested in experiencing European architecture through a distinctive artistic lens, these locations offer rewards. Plan your journey, bring a camera (or don’t—sometimes observation is enough), and prepare to see Europe not as a conventional tourist destination, but as a living canvas of architectural and design inspiration.

    And remember: Anderson’s films teach us that beauty exists in careful composition, thoughtful color choices, and attention to detail. These same principles apply to how you travel—move slowly, observe carefully, and allow yourself to be enchanted by the geometry and aesthetics of these genuinely remarkable European cities.

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