The Hotel New Hampshire with Jodie Foster: DVD Cover

    The Hotel New Hampshire Director: Tony Richardson Cast: Jodie Foster, Beau Bridges, Robert A.A. Lowe, Nastassja Kinski

    DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 / Mono / Stereo Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 07/10/2001
    • Original Release: 1984
    • Rating: Rated R
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    Original theatrical trailer; English: Stereo Surround; French: mono; French & Spanish subtitles

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    0. Scene Selections
    1. Logos/Freud's Bear [6:57]
    2. Family Feuding [9:18]
    3. Grand Opening [5:02]
    4. Sex Education [4:12]
    5. Horrible Halloween [8:13]
    6. "Merry Christmas" [6:17]
    7. "Happy New Year" [8:53]
    8. Life Isn't So Serious [5:36]
    9. Unbearable Vienna [9:19]
    10. Radical Thoughts [7:09]
    11. "Trying to Grow" [4:37]
    12. The First & Last Time [4:52]
    13. Terrorism & Heroism [5:47]
    14. Acting Out Revenge [4:36]
    15. Fulfilling a Dream [5:32]
    16. "Home Free"/Credits [11:59]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    This macabre, whimsical, erotic, dark, seriocomic film is a complex tale about an eccentric family and the psychological and emotional maelstroms that follow them around from New England to New York to Vienna, where the Hotel New Hampshire is located. Writer-director Tony Richardson worked from the convoluted novel by John Irving that covers most universally saleable topics -- homosexuality, death, incest, abandonment, Nazis, masochism, terrorists, rape, mental instability, and anarchists. The children in the family are the main focus: John (Rob Lowe) is a womanizing high-school student with a deep-rooted desire for his own sister; Franny (Jodie Foster) is the eldest daughter, a victim of a gang rape, now morbidly fascinated by one of the rapists, and equally attracted to her brother with incestuous desire; Frank (Paul McCrane) is the younger gay brother; and Lilly (Jennifer Dundas) is the little sister who blossoms into a famous author. Associated with the family is Suzie the Bear (Nastassja Kinski) who is not secure enough to come out of her bear suit. One friend of the family, Freud (Wallace Shawn), has been blinded by the Nazis and is running the Hotel New Hampshire in Vienna when he asks everyone to come and help him out. By this time, the plot has run out of room, and the climactic endings to several unresolved relationships happen in quick succession. Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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