Eve, une jeune femme de chambre, travaille dans un luxueux hôtel de la ville de Mexico. Pour trouver la force et le courage nécessaires d'affronter sa monotonie quotidienne, elle s'évade à d... Tout lireEve, une jeune femme de chambre, travaille dans un luxueux hôtel de la ville de Mexico. Pour trouver la force et le courage nécessaires d'affronter sa monotonie quotidienne, elle s'évade à diverses fantaisies à travers les objets personnels laissés par les invités de l'hôtel.Eve, une jeune femme de chambre, travaille dans un luxueux hôtel de la ville de Mexico. Pour trouver la force et le courage nécessaires d'affronter sa monotonie quotidienne, elle s'évade à diverses fantaisies à travers les objets personnels laissés par les invités de l'hôtel.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 13 victoires et 36 nominations au total
- Maestro
- (as Alan Uribe Villarreal)
Avis à la une
A film about routines, uncertainties, dreams and banalities, which won me over since the beginning.
The action takes place all within the hotel walls, which highlights the feeling of lack of freedom and the bonds that a low class person deals daily in order to survive.
We don't see any members of her family or friends in any scene, we just know the relationships that Eve has through phone calls, conveying the feeling of absence and lack of support from the people around her, even though it is evident that she loves them.
As the main character loses his inhibition and learns to let go, very interesting moments emerge, all of which are essential for the whole narrative. A scene in one of the hotel's rooms, next to a window made me think "wow, I wasn't expecting this!".
I see this film as a form of homage to the invisible people who pass through our lives every day, without being given credit and respect.
This is a well made, engrossing film about what happens behind the scenes and when you are not in your hotel room. The main character named Eve is a 24 year old single mother who wants to get her GED and get a better paying job in the hotel. There are several interesting shots of her looking very small among the mounds of linen as she cleans rooms, there is an astounding shot of her on the roof as well. She has some interesting and bizarre encounters with guests and co workers. This is no Hollywood fairy tale like Jennifer Lopez in "Maid In Manhattan". This is a realistic view into a snapshot of life not many get to see. Although it is a fictional scripted movie it reminded me of the great documentaries by Frederick Wiseman. I always felt that seeing normal everyday people going about their day are fascinating, and it held my interest the whole time. I hope more people will seek this out, especially if you like your films real and quietly effective that avoids all Hollywood cliches.
If you read the rest of the reviews around here you will get a sense of the style it's shot: the camera, using beautiful cinematography, is a passive witness to a hotel chambermaid's daily routine. There is no spectacularity, not an earthquake to shatter the main character, she's never accused of stealing stuff... There's no dramatic trigger to turn this story into a powerhouse drama. Instead, Avilés chooses, wisely, to dwell on her star's nuanced but effective performance. Gabriela Cartol's Evelina (the maid in the title) is a shy, dreamy and sometimes annoying woman. A real person instead of a stereotype. We're not here to lament her poverty, but to join her daily conversations, her momentary daydreaming, her spirit breaking apart or becoming stronger.
Avilés is not interested on bringing disaster into her characters' lives. She doesn't want them to unravel, instead we're drawn into this colossal universe of a big city hotel and breaks into its small spaces and corners, revealing beauty in routine.
An overall enjoyable experience for audiences who relish subtlety, La Camarista manages to feel as a refreshing take on a cliché subject.
Aviles's camera moves very little as it lets Cartol's expressive face tell us about the highs and lows of a blue-collar mom working for her baby and her own social elevation. Not only is she likeable, but she is admirable for the way she does her very best at housekeeping and improving her lot in life with evening school.
Each fold of a sheet or electroshock titillation from co-worker Minitoy (Teresa Sanchez) lets us in to her yearnings and her escapes. When we watch her perform an erotic act for a window washer admirer, we see a 24-year old woman with passions that go beyond her staid working life. Her emergence into an extrovert in her evening class is, like her, slow but sure as she grows into independence and extroversion.
What matters here is that an unexemplary life has yearnings and romance that are hidden to everyone but the camera, revealing a woman of many layers and good intentions, buffeted by fate and her own kindnesses from her desires and ambitions. As in Alfonse Cuaron's Roma, the servant has the insight, but unlike Roma, The Chambermaid is bereft of nostalgia and dominated by the quotidian forces that define modern life, rich or poor.
Here is a winning effort from a first-time filmmaker and a memorable slice of life sure to inform how we see housekeeping in whatever hotel we visit, be it Mexico City, London, or any other great city that hides the lives of the working poor.
Anyone that has worked a menial or underappreciated job will appreciate the frustrating workplace dynamics where schmoozers who blow their own horn sometimes get ahead of quiet hardworking people.
In addition the film maker's symbolism of red and white shown in parallel construction was also striking.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film premiered at TIFF in Toronto in September 2018.
- ConnexionsReferences Cars : Quatre Roues (2006)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Chambermaid?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 86 422 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 5 490 $US
- 30 juin 2019
- Montant brut mondial
- 166 203 $US
- Durée
- 1h 42min(102 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1