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Grand Hotel Poster

Grand Hotel

Thank the stars for a great entertainment!
1932 | 112m | English

(22374 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 1 (history)

Director: Edmund Goulding
Writer: Vicki Baum
Staring:
Details

Guests at a posh Berlin hotel struggle through worry, scandal, and heartache.
Release Date: May 25, 1932
Director: Edmund Goulding
Writer: Vicki Baum
Genres: Romance, Drama
Keywords hotel, card game, burglar, industrialist, stolen money, baron, dying man, murder, based on play or musical, tragic love, black and white, conscience, jewel thief, pre-code, merger, public humiliation, revolving door, dachshund, stenographer, flirtation, prima ballerina, bookkeeper
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Box Office Revenue: $2,594,000
Budget: $700,000
Updates Updated: Feb 04, 2026
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers

Extras

No extras available.

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Greta Garbo Grusinskaya
John Barrymore Baron Felix von Gaigern
Joan Crawford Flämmchen
Wallace Beery General Director Preysing
Lionel Barrymore Otto Kringelein
Lewis Stone Doctor Otternschlag
Jean Hersholt Senf
Robert McWade Meierheim
Purnell Pratt Zinnowitz
Ferdinand Gottschalk Pimenov
Rafaela Ottiano Suzette
Morgan Wallace Chauffeur
Tully Marshall Gerstenkorn
Frank Conroy Rohna
Murray Kinnell Schweimann
Edwin Maxwell Dr. Waitz
Mary Carlisle Young Honeymooner Mrs. Hoffman (uncredited)
John Davidson Hotel Manager (uncredited)
Allen Jenkins Hotel Meat Packer (uncredited)
Eric Mayne Gambler (uncredited)
Philo McCullough Hotel Guest / Gambler (uncredited)
Greta Meyer Housekeeper in Room 174 (uncredited)
Bert Moorhouse Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Sarah Padden Chambermaid in Room 174 (uncredited)
Bodil Rosing Nurse Helping Old Lady Into Elevator (uncredited)
Leo White Hotel Porter (uncredited)
Joan Barclay Young Girl in Lobby (uncredited)
Max Barwyn Hotel Guest / Gambler (uncredited)
Edward Biby Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Mary Carlisle Mrs. Hoffman - Young Honeymooner (uncredited)
Oliver Cross Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Wally Dean Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Bess Flowers Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Name Job
Edmund Goulding Director
Vicki Baum Screenplay
Douglas Shearer Sound Director
William H. Daniels Director of Photography
Milton Brown Still Photographer
Blanche Sewell Editor
Benjamin Thau Casting
A. Lindsley Lane Second Assistant Camera
Charles Dorian Assistant Director
Charles Maxwell Music
William A. Drake Theatre Play
Albert Scheving Assistant Camera
Cedric Gibbons Art Direction
Adrian Costume Design
Cecil Holland Makeup Department Head
Name Title
Irving Thalberg Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Director Edmund Goulding Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 35 73 18
2024 5 84 122 72
2024 6 50 91 28
2024 7 26 40 14
2024 8 18 40 8
2024 9 11 16 8
2024 10 14 31 9
2024 11 13 23 8
2024 12 13 31 8
2025 1 14 25 10
2025 2 9 17 3
2025 3 5 14 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 1 5 1
2025 8 1 2 1
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 3 5 2
2025 11 1 4 1
2025 12 1 5 1
2026 1 1 2 1
2026 2 1 1 1

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

This starts with a rather downbeat description of life in the Grand Hotel where “…nothing ever happens”. Well maybe it is supposed to look like that, like the swan gliding effortlessly whilst it’s legs paddle like hell, but in reality it is a potpourri of the actually wealthy, the pretend wealthy, t ... he aspirational, the petulant and one thoroughly decent old gent called “Kringelein”. He (Lionel Barrymore) has been given a terminal diagnosis by his doctor and so has decided to push the boat out and spend his remaining time, and money, enjoying caviar and champagne amongst those whom he hopes are a better class of individual. What he gets, though, is his erstwhile employer “Preysing” (Wallace Beery) who is up to no good with his investors; the charming “Baron” (John Barrymore) who hasn’t two pfennigs to rub together so has designs initially just on the pearls of dancer “Grusinskaya” (Greya Garbo) before falling hook line and sinker. Also, on the loved up front, is under appreciated secretary “Flaemmchen” (the charming Joan Crawford) who has taken a bit of a shine to the otherwise occupied “Baron” and then, just to top off this glittering array of profligacy and betrayal, we have the permanently sozzled “Dr. Otterschneig” (Lewis Stone). With the maître d’ expecting a baby; the cleaning staff unsure which rooms to clean or to avoid and card games proving make or break, it’s a maelstrom of activity and emotions that makes you realise exactly why Miss Garbo just wants to be alone! Director Edmund Goulding juggles the plates well here as his stars gel convincingly for almost two hours of gently simmering melodrama. In the end, will anyone get any fulfilment from their stay in this opulent Berlin facility? Aside from the engaging rapport between the two Barrymore brothers, Garbo hams up marvellously and as Stone stands beside that revolving door at the end, I wondered if it could all be about to happen again, only with different players. Which half dozen could equal these, though? Classy and stylish throughout, it’s a cleverly interwoven story that exposes humanity none too favourably sometimes, and is well worth two hours.

Sep 04, 2025