Hotel Harabiti Review

Hotel Harabiti
A husband and wife find an abandoned bag filled with money at a train station. After an initial feeling of good luck, doubt and guilt soon sours the celebrations.

by David Parkinson |
Published on
Release Date:

07 Dec 2007

Running Time:

94 minutes

Certificate:

TBC

Original Title:

Hotel Harabiti

Raising countless questions, but providing few answers, Brice Cauvin’s feature debut is the latest entry in the Cinema of Unease that is currently so modish in France.

Echoes of Michael Haneke and Dominik Moll reverberate around the action, which sees architect Laurent Lucas and voice-over artist Hélène Fillières become increasingly detached from reality after they decide to keep a bag of money left at a railway station by a Middle Eastern-looking gentleman. But while Lucas’ obsession with terrorism and Fillières’ decision to barricade herself and the children in their apartment are initially intriguing, the eschewal of linearity and logic comes to feel like self-indulgence rather than ingenuity

Echoes of Michael Haneke reverberate around the action but an eschewal of logic makes this feel like self-indulgence rather than ingenuity.
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