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Four Rooms (1995)
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Overview
Note des utilisateurs:
Writers (WGA):
Allison Anders (written by) (segment)Alexandre Rockwell (written by) (segment)
suite
Release Date:
25 décembre 1995 (USA) suiteAccroche:
Twelve outrageous guests. Four scandalous requests. And one lone bellhop, in his first day on the job, who's in for the wildest New year's Eve of his life.Plot:
Four interlocking tales that take place in a fading hotel on New Year's Eve. full summary | full synopsisAwards:
1 win & 1 nomination suiteAvis des utilisateurs:
Amazing: starts awful, ends brilliant suiteEnsemble
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Sammi Davis | ... | Jezebel (segment "The Missing Ingredient") | |
| Amanda De Cadenet | ... | Diana (segment "The Missing Ingredient") (as Amanda deCadenet) | |
| Valeria Golino | ... | Athena (segment "The Missing Ingredient") | |
| Madonna | ... | Elspeth (segment "The Missing Ingredient") | |
| Ione Skye | ... | Eva (segment "The Missing Ingredient") | |
| Lili Taylor | ... | Raven (segment "The Missing Ingredient") | |
| Alicia Witt | ... | Kiva (segment "The Missing Ingredient") | |
| Jennifer Beals | ... | Angela (segments "The Wrong Man", "The Man from Hollywood") | |
| David Proval | ... | Sigfried (segment "The Wrong Man") | |
| Antonio Banderas | ... | Man (segment "The Misbehavers") | |
| Lana McKissack | ... | Sarah (segment "The Misbehavers") | |
| Patricia Vonne | ... | Corpse (segment "The Misbehavers") (as Patricia Vonne Rodriguez) | |
| Tamlyn Tomita | ... | Wife (segment "The Misbehavers") | |
| Danny Verduzco | ... | Juancho (segment "The Misbehavers") | |
| Salma Hayek | ... | TV Dancing Girl (segment "The Misbehavers") |
Additional Details
Autre(s) titre(s):
Four Rooms and a Hotel (USA) (working title)Groom service (France) (video title) [fr]
suite
MPAA:
Rated R for pervasive strong language, sexuality and some drug use.Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsDurée:
98 minPays:
USALangue:
AnglaisCouleur:
CouleurAspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 suiteSon:
DolbyClassification:
Singapore:M18 (re-rating) | Philippines:R-18 | Australia:MA | Denmark:16 | Finland:K-14 | Germany:16 | Iceland:12 | Portugal:M/12 | Singapore:R(A) | Spain:13 | Sweden:11 | UK:18 | USA:R (No. 33973) | South Korea:18 | Canada:14AEmplacements De Pelliculage:
Chateau Marmont - 8221 Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA suiteCuriosités
Anecdotes:
Before "The Misbehavers" turn to the "porno" channel, they are watching the short film Bedhead (1991), also written and directed by Robert Rodriguez. suiteGoofs:
Continuity: The position of the injection piston in "The Misbehavers" changes its position when the girl pulls it out of the picture suiteGuillemet:
Ted the Bellhop: Your dad says he doesn't trust babysitters. Well, can't say I blame him. I had a babysitter myself once... suiteSoundtrack:
Carnival Of Souls suitefoire aux questions
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It's impossible to analyze this film without breaking it down into its four segments for separate comment. It would also be improper, since it was not intended to be anything less than an anthology from four notable independent filmmakers: Alexandre Rockwell, Alison Anders, Robert Rodriguez, and Quentin Tarantino.
The first episode is exactly the sort of thing that someone in a high school drama production would want to do, but can't get away with in a high school drama production. It's juvenile, unfunny, and lifeless, but it has the (pointless) nudity and lines of dialogue like:
Witch #1: "I am your mother."
Witch #2: "Then why are we sleeping together?"
that sound like the screenwriter is giggling and thinking, "I can't believe I'm getting away with this! I'm so clever!"
Nothing is at stake in the first episode; it's generally expected that a story must have conflict in order to BE a story. This has none. Just some half-baked jokes and a pair of topless women (If I wanted that, I'd skip renting a movie and go out instead.)
Second episode is a hair better, but you'll find yourself crying "Why doesn't Ted the Bellboy do [insert plot resolution here] and get the bloody hell out of there!" When it finally does end, you're disheartened to find that it had no reason to exist. Two snips with a pair of scissors, a bit of tape, and we wouldn't know the difference. Roll opening credits, go straight to the Rodriguez segment.
Third episode has some structural support to keep it from caving in on itself. The surprise in the middle (I won't give it away, don't worry) is horrifying enough to give the segment some heft. Rodriguez and his d.p., Guillermo Navarro, move it along dexterously and (as usual) have a good handle on visual comedy.
The last segment is the best. I think it's safe to say that Quentin Tarantino has, officially, never disappointed me as a director or screenwriter. My heart leapt as soon as I heard his trademark dialogue coming from the lips of Marisa Tomei as "Four Rooms" segued from "The Misbehavers" to "The Man From Hollywood." I wasn't sure if his take on Ted the Bellhop's misadventures was going to be any good, but I knew that if he wrote it and helmed it, it wasn't going to be all bad.
What a pleasant surprise (still just talking about the fourth segment here). This part of the movie, with its ridiculous premise (lifted form an old Hitchcock episode, which it acknowledges out loud), moves along speedily, and the actors take to it as naturally as any other movies by Q.T. Basically playing himself, Tarantino is hilarious. If anything, he knows A) how people really act when they're drunk (i.e. not like Dudley Moore caricatures) B) why people think he's so obnoxious, like a real-life, fast-talking Jar Jar Binks and C) how to put some bang in his visual storytelling. It's low-rent Tarantino, don't get me wrong, but it's also the best part of "Four Rooms."
All in all, the first film I've ever seen that starts out with a loathsome, horrifying badness, gets incrementally better with each passing fifteen minutes, and ends as good as one would like. Just don't make me watch it again.