Hotel Chevalier Apr 2026
As the film reaches its climax (both emotional and literal), Peter Sarstedt’s “Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)?” swells on the soundtrack. It’s a song about a girl who escaped the poverty of Naples for the high life of the French Riviera—a perfect, aching metaphor for the character Portman plays. She’s a dream that walked into his sterile hotel room.
Have you seen Hotel Chevalier? Do you prefer it before or after watching Darjeeling? Let me know in the comments.
You don’t need to have seen The Darjeeling Limited to feel this short. In fact, watching Hotel Chevalier first actually improves the feature film. When you later see Jack on a train in India, you understand exactly why he’s bandaged, bruised, and refusing to look at his phone.
Here’s the magic trick of Hotel Chevalier : It takes every Wes Anderson trope—the symmetry, the curated color palette (that specific, aching shade of yellow), the deadpan delivery—and strips away the ensemble cast. There is no Gene Hackman, no Bill Murray. Just two people in a room. Hotel Chevalier
It’s currently available on YouTube and often included as an extra on The Darjeeling Limited DVD. Clear 13 minutes from your evening. Put on headphones (the sound design is exquisite). And prepare to feel a very specific kind of longing—the kind that checks into a beautiful room, orders one last drink, and knows the minibar can’t fix anything.
The answer arrives in a silk bathrobe.
Just don’t answer the door if you hear a knock in a pink suit. As the film reaches its climax (both emotional
She is sunshine wrapped in jet lag. He is anxiety wrapped in a Louis XV robe.
Jack is alone in a mustard-yellow hotel suite, ordering room service, avoiding the phone, and meticulously pressing his suits. He is trying to disappear. But then, a knock at the door. Enter "The Girlfriend" (Natalie Portman) in a vibrant pink suit.
There are short films, and then there are cinematic gut punches that last exactly 13 minutes. Wes Anderson’s Hotel Chevalier (2007) is the latter. Have you seen Hotel Chevalier
And because of that, the stylization doesn’t feel like a gimmick. It feels like armor. The precise framing and controlled colors are Jack’s attempt to control the chaos of his own feelings. Portman’s character, by contrast, is a whirlwind of messiness—she hangs up his freshly pressed pants, she lights a cigarette indoors, she refuses to play by his symmetrical rules.
★★★★★ (Five broken hearts / Five)
When the needle drops, the camera finally, mercifully breaks its own rules. It moves. It zooms. It breathes. And for 60 seconds, you forget you’re watching a Wes Anderson film. You’re just watching two people who love and hate each other trying to remember why.