Tras pasar la noche en un remoto hotel, el Sr. K se ve atrapado en una pesadilla claustrofóbica cuando descubre que no puede salir del edificio.Tras pasar la noche en un remoto hotel, el Sr. K se ve atrapado en una pesadilla claustrofóbica cuando descubre que no puede salir del edificio.Tras pasar la noche en un remoto hotel, el Sr. K se ve atrapado en una pesadilla claustrofóbica cuando descubre que no puede salir del edificio.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 2 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Having a hard time to make a comment here but the film sort of requires a response. Is it worth watching and if so will you actually not be forced to fast forward it every so often because it is both fascinating and totally irritating all at once. If I have to make a recommendation then it is to watch this on a computer so you can ado the fast forward because if you are trapped in a cinema it will really piss you off. OK. The overall quality of film making is actually quite good. The set is a hit for sure and the premise of the cage hotel is also OK. Where the film fails is in the tempo and in the lack of editing to make it flow better but that was most likely a challenge that the director was battling with himself. The acting and the choreography of the people movements in various parts of the film is very good. There a good number of moments when the viewer is seriously challenged as to what the hell is going on and what or how one should be interpreting the film which makes for a fairly exhausting experience which I actually liked as it is not often that a film these days reaches the level of cerebral impact. Does the film have a resolution and does it make sense and does it serve the rest of the film well? These questions are for you to answer. I do not wish to spoil anything that you may experience or feel.
First of all the way this movie is filmed is good. The acting of the main lead is good and of te side characters aswell.
Aside from that. This movie left me with an nasty feeling. The feels like the writer of this movie high on all kinds of drugs. The start was promising but the storyline after the first 5 minutes kept getting worse. The movie sums up in just weird and ridiculous situations that just make no sense. And when you think the plot will be explained later on in the movie, it won't. After all my friend and I thought this was wasted time of our very short life. This the first movie review from me because it was that bad. Sorry not sorry.
Aside from that. This movie left me with an nasty feeling. The feels like the writer of this movie high on all kinds of drugs. The start was promising but the storyline after the first 5 minutes kept getting worse. The movie sums up in just weird and ridiculous situations that just make no sense. And when you think the plot will be explained later on in the movie, it won't. After all my friend and I thought this was wasted time of our very short life. This the first movie review from me because it was that bad. Sorry not sorry.
Mr. K offers a compelling setup with well-crafted visuals and an eerie atmosphere. You spend much of the film trying to decode what the hotel represents - is it a metaphor for life, death, mental imprisonment? Unfortunately, the film offers little clarity, and its abstract nature feels more hollow than profound.
The guests seem resigned to their fate, contrasting with Mr. K's restlessness. One character asks, "Why isn't my truth the right one?" - a question never truly explored. Despite its short runtime, the film drags due to a lack of rising urgency and thematic consistency. The hotel supposedly shrinks, but its dimensions seem to shift arbitrarily.
In the end, Mr. K frees a mysterious being - and perhaps himself. But is he truly free, or has he accepted his fate? The final scene, swimming toward a light, raises more questions than it answers. I wanted to like this film more, but it left me unmoved.
The guests seem resigned to their fate, contrasting with Mr. K's restlessness. One character asks, "Why isn't my truth the right one?" - a question never truly explored. Despite its short runtime, the film drags due to a lack of rising urgency and thematic consistency. The hotel supposedly shrinks, but its dimensions seem to shift arbitrarily.
In the end, Mr. K frees a mysterious being - and perhaps himself. But is he truly free, or has he accepted his fate? The final scene, swimming toward a light, raises more questions than it answers. I wanted to like this film more, but it left me unmoved.
This movie is what happens when everyone behind the camera get full freedom to make the best movie they can make.
Everything is wonderfully made, from small details in the background, light and sound and special effect department.
In the end, you have a mix of Terry Gilliam/Lovecraft and Kafka. The people asking for financial support to this movie deserve a payraise - they seem to have called and knocked on every door and institution in Europe, and i am glad they did.
I am happy they included the first 30 seconds of the movie, and the last 30 seconds as it confirmed my theory on what it allaccomplish were about. I might be wrong, but don´t think i am. There are other movies on the same theme - but i think this is the best one i have seen so far.
This movie makes me think of the value of work, partner and friendship i have in life, something few movies can brag about.
Naturally, Crispin Glover is perfect in this role. Someone that can play a really weak character, like he did in Back to the future, and also the bad guy like he did in American Gods - fits my description of a really good actor.
If someone ever doubt movies as an expression of meaningful art - show them this movie.
Everything is wonderfully made, from small details in the background, light and sound and special effect department.
In the end, you have a mix of Terry Gilliam/Lovecraft and Kafka. The people asking for financial support to this movie deserve a payraise - they seem to have called and knocked on every door and institution in Europe, and i am glad they did.
I am happy they included the first 30 seconds of the movie, and the last 30 seconds as it confirmed my theory on what it allaccomplish were about. I might be wrong, but don´t think i am. There are other movies on the same theme - but i think this is the best one i have seen so far.
This movie makes me think of the value of work, partner and friendship i have in life, something few movies can brag about.
Naturally, Crispin Glover is perfect in this role. Someone that can play a really weak character, like he did in Back to the future, and also the bad guy like he did in American Gods - fits my description of a really good actor.
If someone ever doubt movies as an expression of meaningful art - show them this movie.
10BahigE-5
1. The Hotel as the Womb
The central setting, a remote and enclosed hotel, symbolizes the female womb. Mr. K enters it unknowingly-just as a sperm cell enters the egg-and finds himself unable to escape. This reflects the biological reality of conception, where once fertilization occurs, the sperm becomes part of a new process that cannot be reversed.
The phrase "The hotel is shrinking" represents the growing fetus within a finite space, gradually feeling more confined as it grows larger, mirroring the tightening womb.
---
2. Mr. K as the Sperm Cell
Mr. K is not just a man trapped in a surreal situation-he's a metaphor for a sperm cell at the start of life. His isolation, confusion, and helplessness evoke the moment of transformation when a sperm becomes something else entirely, part of a new being forming in the womb.
His psychological distress mirrors cellular-level confusion or unconscious awareness of transformation.
---
3. The Chefs as the Digestive System
The hotel is filled with chefs, all working tirelessly in kitchens. These chefs symbolize the digestive system, particularly the stomach, which plays a central role in nurturing life.
The act of cooking, preparing, and transforming raw ingredients into sustenance parallels the metabolic and nutritive processes inside the womb.
---
4. The Twin Women as the Kidneys
The presence of twin women represents the kidneys, which are paired organs essential for filtering and balance in the human body.
Twins naturally symbolize symmetry and duality, making them an ideal metaphor for the kidneys.
Their role in the narrative (if calm, observant, or regulatory) would echo the kidneys' function of maintaining the body's internal balance.
---
5. The Inescapability as a Symbol of Gestation
The fundamental fact that Mr. K cannot leave the hotel mirrors how a fetus cannot exit the womb until birth. He is trapped not by walls, but by a natural process that must complete its course.
The film, in this reading, becomes a metaphor for gestation: a surreal, dreamlike passage through bodily systems that sustain, process, and eventually prepare for rebirth.
The central setting, a remote and enclosed hotel, symbolizes the female womb. Mr. K enters it unknowingly-just as a sperm cell enters the egg-and finds himself unable to escape. This reflects the biological reality of conception, where once fertilization occurs, the sperm becomes part of a new process that cannot be reversed.
The phrase "The hotel is shrinking" represents the growing fetus within a finite space, gradually feeling more confined as it grows larger, mirroring the tightening womb.
---
2. Mr. K as the Sperm Cell
Mr. K is not just a man trapped in a surreal situation-he's a metaphor for a sperm cell at the start of life. His isolation, confusion, and helplessness evoke the moment of transformation when a sperm becomes something else entirely, part of a new being forming in the womb.
His psychological distress mirrors cellular-level confusion or unconscious awareness of transformation.
---
3. The Chefs as the Digestive System
The hotel is filled with chefs, all working tirelessly in kitchens. These chefs symbolize the digestive system, particularly the stomach, which plays a central role in nurturing life.
The act of cooking, preparing, and transforming raw ingredients into sustenance parallels the metabolic and nutritive processes inside the womb.
---
4. The Twin Women as the Kidneys
The presence of twin women represents the kidneys, which are paired organs essential for filtering and balance in the human body.
Twins naturally symbolize symmetry and duality, making them an ideal metaphor for the kidneys.
Their role in the narrative (if calm, observant, or regulatory) would echo the kidneys' function of maintaining the body's internal balance.
---
5. The Inescapability as a Symbol of Gestation
The fundamental fact that Mr. K cannot leave the hotel mirrors how a fetus cannot exit the womb until birth. He is trapped not by walls, but by a natural process that must complete its course.
The film, in this reading, becomes a metaphor for gestation: a surreal, dreamlike passage through bodily systems that sustain, process, and eventually prepare for rebirth.
¿Sabías que…?
- ConexionesReferences El proceso (1962)
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
- How long is Mr. K?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 25,553
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 34 minutos
- Color
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
Principales brechas de datos
What is the Canadian French language plot outline for Mr. K (2024)?
Responda