8/10
Captivating performance
27 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
It's a very small, intimate story - the "heroine" is Lynn, a grey mouse of a girl, mentally slightly challenged and shy as we learn very soon but competent in her job as chambermaid (possibly a bit helped by her compulsory cleaning habit), gets her kicks in an otherwise boring life (even sleeping with the manager seems more like a chore, for both of them) from spying on the hotel guests, trying on their clothes and even hiding under their beds. That way she learns about Chiara, a tough boyish call-girl whose services she enlists in the following weeks. And as she starts falling in love with this incongruous partner (hopeless, of course), her life starts to open up a bit, too. The movie ends on an unfirm note - Lynn's self-destructive traits are still there (she even had to steal from customers to afford Chiara's services) but she seems like a much more confident character by now, ready to face the future even without Chiara.

That's not much of a story, and the only thing keeping this from being a bore is Vicky Krieps' performance as Lynn - but that has to be witnessed. Her play is so immediate and natural I actually felt like spying on someone's real life in many scenes - creepy feeling, indeed! The sets are outstanding, too - nothing fancy but everything composed with a severe neatness that nicely complements the story. It's not a perfect film - many scenes are too long, some even a waste, especially the character setup at the start goes on for quite a bit longer than necessary - but with 10 of those minutes cut this would get even a 9/10 from me!
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