GamerTab
That was an excellent one.
Usamah Harvey
The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.
Lidia Draper
Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.
Bob
This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
stee zo
this is by far the most disappointing movie i have seen in a while. watched it yesterday in a sneak preview, and the first thing that came to my mind was: what an idea, to transfer japan horror (including similar strange behavior between the actors, symbolism etc.) to a German (no, austrian)hotel setting. the big problem with this movie is, it tries to create suspense and never relieves it. this may be for stylistic reasons, but it leads to just one thing: boredom. after watching the absolutely non-charismatic (maybe also for stylistic reasons, or to make it more understandable that she is being mobbed) leading actress walk down dark hallways for the fifteenth time, you just want to scream out: now give us something (even the scary child horror cliché would have helped)! the ending is maybe the worst i have ever seen. the reaction in the audience after the movie was quite significant: laughter...
icegue
I saw this "movie" last year and I'm sorry to say that it was the worst movie I ever saw. There is no acting, no story, no suspense, no music, ... There is NOTHING lasting the whole film long. The "highlight" of the "movie" is that a door is shut when the main character returns (of course you don't see how it's shut since the "movie" doesn't contain any action).I wouldn't call this piece even a "movie" since it is such an unbounded cheek. If i was possible to vote not from 1 to 10 but from -10 to 10 I would have chosen -10 without hesitating!How can 80 minutes of boredom win a prize?
stensson
I usually don't comment what fellow critics on IMDb write, but giving this little masterpiece only an average of 4,2 is bad taste indeed. In short; it's been a while since one saw a movie there so much happens, even if you don't see all of it on the screen. Franziska Weiss is really great, with a face which tells you a lot, with just a small correction of the glimpse in her eyes.This is creepy, but in a way you might be rather familiar with from your own life. That life is here, by very small means, a nightmare. Maybe the end doesn't really fulfill what is promised, not really. Maybe the camera spotlights in the forest surrounding the hotel are too sharp.But still this is supposed to give you much worse dreams than for example "The Grudge", which is made by amateurs.
JohnnyLarocque
HOTEL is about a young girl who is hired as a receptionist in an isolated, apparently inaccessible hotel in the Austrian Alps. Her co- workers are not responsive to her arrival, and to make matters worse, the girl she replaced was said to have disappeared. This description reminded me of the only film to truly scared me, Stanley Kubrick's The Shining. Second time director Jessica Hausner however, is no Kubrick.The characters in this film are very one dimensional. Even the main character Irene, who finds herself in some situations that might scare a normal person, does not react at all. As a direct result, neither does the audience. The environment was also very bland. You would think the director would scout a location with some atmosphere for a psychodrama, but instead we're shown a very boring well kept hotel. This film is shot without any style whatsoever. The director must have thought a few of the scenes were terrifying (walking down a hallway, or looking into the woods), as she showed them over and over again. The conclusion was uninspired and predictable.Note to amateur filmmakers everywhere ... If I can't put myself in the place of one of the films characters, and the situation isn't unusual or intense, and the environment does not seem unwelcoming, THERE IS NOTHING TO BE AFRAID OF. Your psychodrama will not work. Geez, I thought that would be obvious. (3/10)