Room in Rome
Room in Rome
| 07 May 2010 (USA)
Room in Rome Trailers

A hotel room in the center of Rome serves as the setting for Alba and Natasha, two sexy and recently acquainted women, to have a physical adventure that touches their very souls.

Reviews
Borserie

it is finally so absorbing because it plays like a lyrical road odyssey that’s also a detective story.

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AnhartLinkin

This story has more twists and turns than a second-rate soap opera.

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Zandra

The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.

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Marva

It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,

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hugocaldeiravinagre

First of all, this is not soft porn, this is not even an erotic movie as many are calling it. It's just Medem's worst, by far, movie. I loved all his previous movies, but this one is just unbearable. The acting is terrible and the dialogues are also terrible and makes no sense. And the way it deals with sexuality is just awful. "when did you turned a lesbian? " what kind of question is that ? The movie makes people believe that sexuality is something it can be changed or chosen through life. I find it to be quite offensive to lesbian women. Everything is wrong with this one. I can't believe Medem made it. Just Avoid it.

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sam-519

I arrived at this film expecting little but a fleshed-out - pun intended - simple-minded lesbian drama. How wrong, I am pleased to say, I was. Room in Rome is not only the story of two girls who meet one evening and then stay together for one night only, never to see each other again, but it is the story of what each one of us truly wants in our love and sex lives. Something new, fresh, exciting and personal. Room in Rome presents the story of two girls who share their life stories and physical intimacies one night before realising, against their fantasies, that the cruel fate of reality means they must go back to their partners and real lives the next day. But what makes the film so special, so tangible, is the sense of honesty it awakens in each of us. Those in long-term relationships know all too well that the more time goes on, the less there is to discover. This film is all about discovery: discovery of each other, discovery of sensuality, discovery of oneself. In long-term relationships, discovery is the ultimate fantasy, and one which is so often lacking. In Room in Rome, the two girls discover an attraction for one another which is based on the longings and lackings in their own lives. The film is split into two physical and psychological areas - the bedroom and the bathroom - and the balcony which acts as a transition area between the two rooms and the two mental states. The bedroom is where the magic happens. It is close, low-lit and sensual. It is where both girls open up to each other personally and sexually. It is all about them, no room for anyone else, as exemplified by the close-up shots, their consistent closeness and nakedness. When the good-looking (objectively) room servicer Max asks for a threesome, he gets refused. There is literally no room for him. This is all about them. When the morning light hits, the two breakfast outside before moving into the white clinical area of the bathroom, which cleanses the fantasy from their bodies and minds. Indeed, when either enter this area, it's as if they come to their senses and the fantasy is left elsewhere. In the morning, they realise they must go to their respective lives. They hold each other in the bath longingly against the sterile white of the tiles as the camera indulges in long shots, few of which we see in the bedroom, emphasising the foreshadowing of emotional and physical distance. Natasha talks of dressing in white, like the dressing gown she often dons, and white becomes a signifier for wiping clean her experiences, but also denying herself. She spends the entire film in denial whereas Alba spends it mostly being true to herself, but mostly wanting.Room in Rome is not so much of a sexual film - or an erotic film - but a sensual one. It explores the depth of the senses in a physical and emotional way, and emphasises the necessities of listening to one's emotions in spite of the routines that one finds oneself in and the pits of long-term relationships that solidify our lives. It is up to us to make the latter more like the former and the former less like the latter. For those of us who HAVE spent nights in hotels like those in Room in Rome, we know how special they were. But did they endure - and did those relationships endure? Most of them didn't. What Room in Rome shows us, or reminds us, is what we really want in our sex/sense lives: newness, discovery, excitement, intimacy. But we still want stability - and therein lies the challenge of our relationships, to balance the two. And maybe if we can balance these, then we can have something which endures - unlike that which these two girls unfortunately, and so commonly, left behind.

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blueneptune1

I really liked this movie because I accepted it for what it is: an erotic comedy with a hint of drama. I'm a straight male so I could not take my eyes off of this movie, partly because of the beautiful cinematography and partly because of how beautiful the 2 protagonists are. The negative comments relate to how the storyline was confusing or there were lies on top of lies, but come on...2 strangers meet for a 1-night-stand and they tell the truth about their lives? Give me a break. I also bet half of the bad reviews are from women who don't come close to looking like these 2.The storyline was a bit corny and trite yet kept you wanting to know more. Some of the banter is witty and some didn't make much sense. There is romance, art, humor, culture, heartbreak, and triumph all rolled in one movie. Natasha's acting was inferior to Albas, but I was interested in how it would end, and I liked it because it kept you guessing. This movie falls short of Sex and Lucia, which I loved and t's from the same director. Would the movie be as alluring if 2 obese and unattractive women were in it? I doubt it, but that's for the viewer to decide.

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Argemaluco

I think Habitación en Roma can provoke a divisive effect on the audience: some people will take it as a delicate and sensual tale about intimacy, personal reflection and sexual identity; and other ones will take it as a pretentious erotic drama whose only purpose is exploiting the morbidity under the disguise of "art". Personally, I incline to the former, because even though I wouldn't consider Habitación en Roma a great film, I liked it pretty much mainly because of its deep screenplay and extraordinary performances.On some way, Habitación en Roma belongs to the same type of films such as My Dinner with Andre, Tape and Before Sunrise, which were all dedicated to a long conversation which gets us hooked on its twists and surprises while we unravel the characters' enigma. In fact, I took the runaway sexuality and the constant nudity from the main actresses in Habitación en Roma as an analogy of the emotional "discovery" which impulses the screenplay, in which the physical intimacy is just a preamble of the emotional intimacy the main characters end up sharing at the end of the film.And then we have the brilliant performances from Elena Anaya and Natasha Yarovenko, who both bring a devastating energy and sincerity to their characters. The main reason why it was very easy for me to accept the premise from this film is because Anaya and Yarovenko took such a possession of their characters that they totally become them.And I would also like to mention the perfect manufacture from Habitación en Roma; the cinematography is fantastic, the production design possesses such a warmth and detail that it brings the almost amniotic setting of the room to life; and the music complements and underlines the characters' emotional evolution. On the negative side, there are a few moments which feel kinda forced, and I think some aspects could have been a bit deepened. Nevertheless, Habitación en Roma is a very good film because of its generally solid screenplay, great performances and emotional resonance. I recommend it, but with the warning that you have to make an effort in order to see beyond the "softcore" and find the many interesting subjects explored by this film. But even those ones who simply want to see two attractive actresses naked during most of the movie, yes...they will also be left satisfied. But maybe not as much as the other ones.

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