Four Rooms Reviews
Filme fraco, o roteiro é fraco, as cenas são fracas, o elenco é fraco, e ninguém ajuda a melhorar o filme, a história é fraca, mas o filme deveria ter cenas bem melhores e mais relevantes, para fazer o filme ser bom.
There are some great scenes in this quirky short film made by four directors each shooting one quarter of the film. Notable for Bruce Willis’ uncredited appearance. Watched on DVD.
I love this movie!! I am always intrigued and curious about hotels and what is going on in each of the rooms. This movie is witty and strange and that’s why I love it!
Funniest story in the film is “The Misbehaviors”. Tim Roth was incredibly unfunny though, in fact I would describe it as cringe inducing. Most the time the other actors (especially the kids in that specific story) carried the whole plot. The witch one wasn’t all that funny, Quentin’s was just whatever. That second one with Siegfried was hilarious at times. I really don’t know why, but Robert Rodriguez’s segment blew me away. It shows me how great this film could have been. Hell, the idea and structure is there but the execution isn’t. I’d love to see a remake of this film, but instead of the main character being a stooge he would just be a regular guy. Still a pretty decent little flick. 3/5 stars.
I watched it on PluTo 온라인카지노추천 for free and found it entertainment. Very interesting. The last room with the children is the best. Good stuff.
The worst ever Tarantino involvement.
one of the best movies i watched in my life. especially must to rewatch on new year
Overall, it's terrific to see actor Tim Roth bring so much energy and wackiness to this film. It's near impossible not to chuckle at various moments. While the film is divided into four chapters, I found the first two extremely painful and challenging to watch. I wouldn't be surprised if many viewers just gave up on the first watch, mainly because there are moments to begin with that are highly uninteresting, slow, and lacking any form of fun or value. Thankfully, with Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino behind the camera for parts three and four, viewers are given a far greater experience. Ultimately, it's a beautiful concept that struggles to get going. As the credits appeared, I was left wishing the entire film was far greater than what it was.
Non-Stop entertainment, clever, hilarious, with a sick twist. Definitely a must see movie!
Possibly one of the worst movies ever made. So many talented people wasted. It's almost as if they thought they didn't need to hire writers or rehearse. On the up side, if all these "talented" people made this, anyone can succeed in hollywood.
It's not the best film I have ever seen but it's good, it's funny!
Four Rooms is a film I recently discovered, and watched it with my dad. I had never even heard of this before. And I will say the concept intrigued me as soon as it began. Especially when you have an anthology movie where Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino directed 2 of the stories. There are moments of unbelievability that will turn some off; you just have to give yourself over to the concept at that point. I like the idea that you follow our main character, Ted the bellhop, (played brilliantly by Tim Roth) the entire movie through each story which takes place in 4 separate rooms. Tim Roth steals the show here! He is better than I have ever seen him. The character he plays is so electric in a way I wasn’t expecting. When he first appears I was kinda thinking he might be too much, but he really worked for the quirkiness of the movie. He is hilarious in everything he does, both physically and mentally. The facial expressions he makes are icing on the comedic cake. Its entertaining to see him be forced to navigate the series of problems throughout the New Years Eve night. I did like how the stories connected in a sort of non direct way. It wasn’t too overpowering, to where the stories wouldn’t have stood well on there own. There was some brief times where certain stories started to lag a bit. Particularly Tarantino’s story. There’s a while I was just wondering where exactly it was headed. The ending was enjoyable enough, and fit the wild, wacky vibe of the entire night. I don’t know if I’ll ever revisit it on my own, but it was a good one time watch. Especially since I loved the double feature that Rodriguez and Tarantino directed in 2007, “Grindhouse”. Which I still prefer over Four Rooms. One last nice thing was seeing all the famous cameos from Madonna, Antonio Banderas, Marisa Tomei, etc. I feel like they were all employed pretty well. Overall this is a fairly entertaining subversion from one of Tarantino’s best runs he went on in directing.
Though Four Rooms doesn't totally fulfill it's ambitions, the ambitious nature itself is most of the fun. Though the first two stories are it's weaker points, the whole film feels like a never ending and unpredictable adventure, due to it's ever changing stylistic collage of stories. Unique, funny, and well acted...give Four Rooms a try.
Tarantino cavalca l'onda del successo cercando di aiutare quelli che furono suoi compagni durante gli studi; dandogli la ghiotta possibilità di dirigere 3 differenti episodi con lui. Purtroppo i registi non si rivelano all'altezza; specialmente i primi due capitoli sono a dir poco terribili e c'è bisogno di un notevole sforzo per passare oltre senza troppi pregiudizi. Nel finale ci si riscatta parzialmente, anche se è solo l'ultima "stanza" a regalare qualche emozione ed un finale ad effetto. Esperimento fallito, si salva solo colui che ne è stato l'artefice, Tarantino.
I'm a "make it weirder, yes, more weird, always" kind of guy but I think this one could maybe benefit from being slightly less bonkers. Like I would drop the kids entirely. That said, I've been thinking about it all afternoon so I might change my rating if it still lives with me in a week.
The idea of taking four independent directors (Allison Anders, Alexandre Rockwell, Robert Rodriguez, Quentin Tarantino) and having each of them make a short film based on a Roald Dahl is intriguing. The first two segments, by Anders and Rockwell, can only be described as annoying and immature. Rodriguez' contribution, while wildly over the top, has some merit but is ultimately forgettable. The final segment by Tarantino is not up to Tarantino standards, but at least has some sort of narrative arch and an interesting story and is by far the best of the four films. The thread that links the four stories is Ted the Bellhop, played by a twitchy, Chaplin-like Tim Roth in an embarrassing and irritating performance. In light of the fact that only one of the stories is really worth watching, this has got to be considered a disaster of significant proportions.
Very funny, the ending is superb! Acting is great only thing i'd like was for Ted to play a little bit less flamboyantly otherwise it's a gem!
interesting premise that doesnt land all the skits. however Tim Roth and the last skit alone makes four rooms worth watching.