Corinne Clery — Kleinhoff Hotel He is driven and every step brings the plot of existence to a dead end. There's no way out. The room at the Kleinhof Hotel is a whole universe where a person who is subversive is forced to hide. Who he is doesn't matter. Extremist or ardent revolutionary, savior of the world – here the creators will not give an unambiguous answer, meekly hinting at the activities of the Red Brigades in Berlin. Importantly, another thing is that being permanently at risk, the sexual feelings of our hero are greatly aggravated. A random hotel roommate witnesses one of the scenes.
Trying to get closer and track down, she is absorbed into this strange and mysterious world, full of encryption and nervous exhaustion. Will she find her happiness here? This is perhaps the most interesting question. It is to him that director Carlo Lizzani pays the most attention. It exacerbates the unspoken ideological conflict not by confrontation with the authorities. Nope. The object of the collision is the “Planet of consumption” in the face of a spectacular young girl, so outwardly passionate and sincere.
Abstracting from the inner heat, the viewer is offered a chamber erotic exercise filled with the claustrophobic hotel room and the bright youth of Corinne Cleary. The candid scenes here were not so much refined as they sought frankness. In fact, this was not the most successful attempt to “hook” the discourse of “Last Tango in Paris” and “Night Porter”.
6 out of 10