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New Rose Hotel (1998)

New Rose Hotel (1998)
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Abel Ferrara directed this erotic thriller adapted by Ferrara and Christ Zois from a short story by science fiction author William Gibson (in his Burning Chrome collection). Global corporations rule the world, and corporate raider Fox (Christopher Walken) and his deputy X (Willem Dafoe) could pocket $100 million if they can get top scientist Hiroshi (Yoshitaka Amano) to defect from one corporation to another. Fox offers singer Sandii (Asia Argento) $1 million to seduce Hiroshi away from his wife, family, and employer. An affair develops between Sandii and X, while she studies facts about Hiroshi's life. She departs on her assignment, but betrayals ensue, with Fox and X soon becoming targets themselves. With opening credits in three languages (English, German, Japanese), the soundtrack features the score-composition debut of hip-hopper Schoolly D, music which plays over a blank screen at the wrap-up (since the film has no closing credits). This Gibson short story was a property once in development by director Kathryn Bigelow. The title story of Gibson's Burning Chrome collection was planned as the second Heavy Metal movie, intended for live-action and scripted but never filmed. Shown in competition at the 1998 Venice Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi

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Starring:
Christopher WalkenWillem Dafoe, (more)
Director(s):
Abel Ferrara
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
R
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of New Rose Hotel

Abel Ferrara directed this erotic thriller adapted by Ferrara and Christ Zois from a short story by science fiction author William Gibson (in his Burning Chrome collection). Global corporations rule the world, and corporate raider Fox (Christopher Walken) and his deputy X (Willem Dafoe) could pocket $100 million if they can get top scientist Hiroshi (Yoshitaka Amano) to defect from one corporation to another. Fox offers singer Sandii (Asia Argento) $1 million to seduce Hiroshi away from his wife, family, and employer. An affair develops between Sandii and X, while she studies facts about Hiroshi's life. She departs on her assignment, but betrayals ensue, with Fox and X soon becoming targets themselves. With opening credits in three languages (English, German, Japanese), the soundtrack features the score-composition debut of hip-hopper Schoolly D, music which plays over a blank screen at the wrap-up (since the film has no closing credits). This Gibson short story was a property once in development by director Kathryn Bigelow. The title story of Gibson's Burning Chrome collection was planned as the second Heavy Metal movie, intended for live-action and scripted but never filmed. Shown in competition at the 1998 Venice Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
93 mins

Complete Cast of New Rose Hotel


Director(s):
Abel Ferrara
Writer(s):
Christ ZoisAbel Ferrara
Producer(s):
Edward R. Pressman
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
R(Violence, Adult Language, Strong Sexual Content, Not For Children, Nudity)
Categories:
Mystery & Suspense
Warning:  This product is intended for mature audiences only. It may contain violence, sexual content, drug abuse and/or strong language. You must be 17 or older to purchase it. By ordering this item you are certifying that you are at least 17 years of age.

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    Member Reviews
     
    Domenick R.

    I believe the other reviewers watched this as a regular movie, rather than as a translation of Gibson's world. I am a HUGE Gibson fan, have been for nearly two decades. I believe this movie to be the most accurate depiction of his world made available so far. Is is exactly as I imagined the Sprawl? No, of course not. But the image of his world, specifically a world very much like our own a decade or so down the road (remember, this was made over ten years ago...Don't fault the writers/directors for not being psychic), where the science fiction has less to do with technology and more to do with how we interact with society, culture, and the world, is RIGHT ON. I believe Mr. Gibson would approve. By the way...I was hooked at the opening seen...The music...the seedy, smoggy shot of a cityscape with Asian influences...I believe Mr. Gibson's main theme in his Cyberpunk writings was his dystopic vision of the future, and I believe that was extremely well translated.

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    J M.

    The only reason I rented this was for Walken & DeFoe who did a great job with a pretty lousy script. The girl was beautiful and liked to show off her jugs. That's it. A waste of time.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Jason P.

    William Gibson' short story is made into a indie film with mixed results. Gibson's story is told in flashback and is more suited to be told that way. This film seems rushed production wise which kills what could have been a great sci-fi film. Walken and DaFoe do what they can with the script which does take phrases from the short story however Gibson's deadpan matter of fact writing style doesn't translate well to film "Johnny Mnemonic" anyone? I would love to see Gibson's magnum opus the ultimate sci-fi novel "Neuromancer" made into a film but with two box office bombs on his resume that doesn't look good. Gibson's sci-fi world is more personal and sociological which the film does capture without a need for gadgets and ohhhhh technology. It's sad that Gibson's biggest contribution to mainstream culture is so far one great book and a catchphrase he invented "cyberspace" he still needs a great film..this is definitely not it. Watch if you're a fan of his or indie film.

    Yes   |   No

     
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