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L'hôtel New Hampshire

Original title: The Hotel New Hampshire
  • 1984
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
9.6K
YOUR RATING
Jodie Foster, Nastassja Kinski, Rob Lowe, and Paul McCrane in L'hôtel New Hampshire (1984)
Watch Trailer [EN]
Play trailer1:18
1 Video
75 Photos
Dark ComedyFarceComedyDrama

A New Englander and his odd family run a hotel in Vienna, as unexpected events change their lives forever.A New Englander and his odd family run a hotel in Vienna, as unexpected events change their lives forever.A New Englander and his odd family run a hotel in Vienna, as unexpected events change their lives forever.

  • Director
    • Tony Richardson
  • Writers
    • John Irving
    • Tony Richardson
  • Stars
    • Rob Lowe
    • Jodie Foster
    • Paul McCrane
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    9.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tony Richardson
    • Writers
      • John Irving
      • Tony Richardson
    • Stars
      • Rob Lowe
      • Jodie Foster
      • Paul McCrane
    • 85User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
    • 36Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Trailer [EN]
    Trailer 1:18
    Trailer [EN]

    Photos75

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    Top cast59

    Edit
    Rob Lowe
    Rob Lowe
    • John
    Jodie Foster
    Jodie Foster
    • Franny
    Paul McCrane
    Paul McCrane
    • Frank
    Beau Bridges
    Beau Bridges
    • Father
    Lisa Banes
    Lisa Banes
    • Mother
    Jennifer Dundas
    Jennifer Dundas
    • Lilly
    • (as Jennie Dundas)
    Seth Green
    Seth Green
    • Egg
    Wally Aspell
    • Hotel Manager
    Joely Richardson
    Joely Richardson
    • Waitress
    Wallace Shawn
    Wallace Shawn
    • Freud
    Jobst Oriwol
    • German Man
    • (as Jobst Oriwal)
    Linda Clark
    • German Woman
    Nicholas Podbrey
    • Boy with Rifle
    Norris Domingue
    • High School Band Conductor
    Matthew Modine
    Matthew Modine
    • Chip Dove…
    Wilford Brimley
    Wilford Brimley
    • Iowa Bob
    Cali Timmins
    Cali Timmins
    • Bitty Tuck
    Dorsey Wright
    Dorsey Wright
    • Junior Jones
    • Director
      • Tony Richardson
    • Writers
      • John Irving
      • Tony Richardson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews85

    5.99.5K
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    Featured reviews

    melissey

    best irving adaptation

    As far as book/movie adaptations go, this one is by far better than Cider House and Garp. It follows the book wonderfully, with exception to minor details. I'm not saying it's a better MOVIE than Garp or cider house, but it is much truer to the book, and that's always been important to me. I'm one of those people who says "WHAT? THAT'S NOT HOW IT HAPPENED IN THE BOOK!" I once read a post where a girl said everyone involved in this movie should be ashamed of it. She obviously missed the point. The ending, which is so powerful in the book, is equally powerful in the movie. The one improvement, I thought, was the Susie the Bear character. I didn't care for her much after I read the book, but when I saw the movie I was like "yeah!". Incest, plane crashes, blind men named Frued, a bomb at the opera - and a woman in a bear costume. What more could you ask for?
    5jordondave-28085

    Although faithful too bizarre to watch on screen

    (1984) The Hotel Of New Hampshire DRAMA/ COMEDY

    Co-written and directed by Tony Richardson which is supposed to be a faithful adaption of the John Irving novel, centering on a eccentric family or the oddest family standing by their fathers ambitions involving running a hotel calling it "The Hotel New Hampshire". Some of the oddest situations also include, the bear who rides bikes, incest, girl (Natassia Kinski) wearing a bear suit, the girl who never grows but has ambitions to become a famous writer and more.... all interwoven into this movie with the only thing they have in common is that it centers on them.

    Plenty of very bizarre situations similar to Monty Python comedy sketches as well as films, but goes to many directions I'm incapable to understand. Actor John (Rob Lowe) does the narration and Jodie Foster plays his sister, Franny and the father is played being played by Beau Bridges.
    8DomiMMHS

    Characters who are allowed to be mad

    Slowly I realize what Homer Simpson meant when he said: "I wanna be John Irving!" No, seriously, that was just supposed to be a joke. The ONLY movie I know "The Hotel New Hampshire" can be compared to is "The World According to Garp" - as this one based on a novel by John Irving.

    Sometimes this movie makes you think that it's a mediocre and senseless one. That it's gross and abnormal. But that is John Irving! Like in "Garp", sex plays a central role in "New Hampshire" - and it's turned upside down. In "Garp", Glenn Close *raped* a dying man. In this movie, Jodie Foster is raped, she and her brother (Rob Lowe) want to make love and know that they will eventually - and they tell each other. They also tell each other everything about their sexual relationships, they talk about whom they fancy and how they should make love with them. Sex is always present in the development of the characters, but at another level as normally, i.e. as the most normal thing of the world, basically.

    The main reason why that strange movie works is that the characters are very interesting. They are grotesque, alright, but something makes them real. The point is, that the characters in this movie are allowed to dream and even to be really mad. However, there are frontiers to their freedom, it's just not the same frontiers as we know. They make the frontiers themselves. Their frontiers allow the siblings to make love - on ONE single looong afternoon. And that scene is not as disturbing as it is kind of beautiful and touching, because THESE characters CAN do this! It's the *radicals* in Vienna who bring us back to the real world - still in a grotesque way. Well, and there are sooo many important characters in this movie - that makes it!

    The actors are fabulous. Jodie Foster can never be bad, Rob Lowe is believeable and Amanda Plummer is as good as always. A real stand-out is young Jennie Dundas. About twelve or how old she was then, she looks so adult in terms. She does not have to hide opposite stars of Jodie Foster's kind here, she is really great. What she does is make a quite unreal character come to life - quietly but impressive and likeable. Well, it's no normal movie and there should not be many more of its kind. But, though confusing and gross, there are so many things that you must see. The characters, the actors, the freedom to be mad. Almost as good as "Garp"; there may be worse movies that I rated 8 out of 10.
    jimg-9

    Read the Book

    This is a perfect example of why good, literary novels shouldn't be made into films. I read this book (along with his other best-sellers "World According to Garp" and "Cider House Rules") back in the 80's when they were published, and I thought they were great, serious works of fiction full of colorful, off-the wall characters fleshed out in engaging prose. Unfortunately, all of this is lost in this film adaptation.

    I don't know who Tony Richardson is, and if he directed any other movies, but if they are as poorly-lit, badly-recorded, ineptly edited, and haphazardly narrated as this one is, I'll pass.

    Although the movie sticks pretty closely to the original, it just doesn't work on the screen. The first third of the book, dealing with the first Hotel New Hampshire, is truncated into a five minute, voiced-over series of vignettes under the opening credits. This is all of the movie you need to see, because the director uses his entire bag of tricks here.

    We seem to enter in the middle of a story, one everyone (except you) seems to already be familiar with. Random characters and situations are thrown at you, with no apparent continuity, sense, or narrative flow. When the story gets dark or uncomfortable, the director resorts to cheap gimmicks like fast-action photography. It may have been funny when the Keystone Kops did it, but it is most definitely UNfunny here.

    Wallace Shawn, sporting a bad wig, motorcycle jacket and towing a performing bear, shows up and just as suddenly, disappears. (We do encounter him later in the film, but now he's bald and blind, and although he's back in his native Vienna, his German accent seems to come and go mysteriously. It's also 10 or 15 years later, apparently but somehow he's the only one who is any older.) Rob Lowe looks pretty and vapid. Jodie Foster looks sexy, talks dirty, and acts tough. Beau Bridges just looks befuddled most of the time. And the actress (whoever she is ) who plays the mother has such a tiny part that she barely registers.

    Incest, rape, murder, accidental death, suicide, radical German nihilists with bombs, pornography, and a lesbian in a bear suit are all in this movie, and it's all BORING.

    All I can recommend is that you read the book. Everything that is confusing, depressing, and just plain weird in this movie makes great, if quirky, sense in the book.
    8cartman_1337

    Excellent movie

    I just purchased this film on a Norwegian home video, and the cover bragged about the ratings it had gotten in Norwegian newspapers (5 out of 6 in the major papers). I thought this had to be a good movie, so I checked it out on this site, and was surprised to see how bad the reviews were here.

    Now I've seen the film and I must say that I agree much more with the Norwegian reviewers than the users of this site (except those who gave it a good review). This movie is brilliant. Almost as good as The World According To Garp, which happens to be one of my favourite movies of all time.

    The excellence of these films is that they're so focused on the main characters in the movie, that you really start to know them, and care about them. This is something you don't see in many movies. Here you follow the whole family from they're young 'till they're old, and you start understanding how they've become the way they are, and why they act the way they do.

    As Garp, this movie is also very much focused on sex and love, and in the most bizarre ways possible. But so what? In the world there are many types of persons, why should a book or a movie just focus on the "normal" ones? The fact that the persons in these films are not "normal" makes them more acceptable and believable to the average viewer. "Normal" in movies normally means perfect, and very few persons are perfect... In Garp and New Hampshire the characters are not perfect, and that's what makes the films perfect...

    The cast also does an excellent work with their characters, everybody is believable. And the director has done an excellent job pacing the film in a way that it doesn't move too fast, and it never bores you by going to slow.

    All in all: an excellent movie that I'd recommend to anyone who hasn't yet been completely brainwashed by Hollywood's image of perfectionism. Almost as good as Garp. If you liked Garp, you'll love this one too. And vice versa. I give this film an 8 (almost 9) out of 10.

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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jodie Foster later said that with this movie began the lowest point of her career, as she turned down worthy roles in Splash (1984), Terminator (1984) and Breakfast Club (1985). Her career wouldn't recover until Kim Basinger turned down the role of Sarah Tobias in Les Accusés (1988) and finally the part once assigned to Basinger was won by Foster, for which she won her first Academy Award.
    • Goofs
      In the award ceremony scene, numerous Austrian flags are show, but all are the civil/merchant version. As an official government function, the flags would have been the state flag (the government flag.) Unlike the United States, Austria and many other nations have multiple national flags for different purposes (government, civilian/merchant, military, on shore versus afloat, etc.) Austria's state flag bears the national coat of arms in the centre, overlapping into both of the red bars. The vertical version of the state flag has the coat of arms turned 90 degrees and placed within a shield. None of the flags in the scene bore the coat of arms.
    • Quotes

      Father: Human beings are remarkable - at what we can learn to live with. If we can't - get strong from what we lose, what we miss, what we want and can't have - then we could never get strong enough, could we? What else makes us strong?

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits misspell the word "association" as "associatiation".
    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: The Hotel New Hampshire (1984)
    • Soundtracks
      Good Golly Miss Molly
      By Robert 'Bumps' Blackwell & John Marascalco

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 5, 1984 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Canada
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Hotel New Hampshire
    • Filming locations
      • Hudson, Québec, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Filmline Productions
      • Producers Circle
      • Woodfall Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $7,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $5,142,858
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,075,800
      • Mar 11, 1984
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,142,858
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 49m(109 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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