The Room Next Door (1994) Poster

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5/10
Average, quickly forgotten.
Oliver_Lenhardt24 August 2002
THE BITTER CHAMBER is considered a remake of Pupi Avati's masterly HOUSE WITH WINDOWS THAT LAUGHED, however it bears only a superficial resemblance to the earlier film, and it doesn't begin to approach its creepy effectiveness.

"The Bitter Chamber" is an exercise in style with little behind it and few chills. It is well produced, with consistently dark, solemn atmospherics, but the screenplay's austerity and plodding familiarity (we've seen variations of this plot many times before) don't support the aesthetics, and fail to hold one's interest for very long.

The lead actor has few expressions beyond a doe-eyed, open-mouthed observational perplexity. His blandness soon makes him an enervating, not to mention slight, presence.

The film deserves some praise for its technical aptitude, but the memory of it is as evanescent and wispy as a fleeting encounter with someone unremarkable.
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6/10
The Room Next Door
BandSAboutMovies11 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Martin Yakobowsky (Mark Benninghoffen) is a Chicago lawyer assigned to resolve a case close to where he grew up in Iowa, a place that he though he had left behind after his testimony in a triple murder case led to a man going to the electric chair.

As for the case, it's between Polish farm workers - the same people Martin grew up with - and a state congressman. But while he's back home, Martin becomes obsessed with the case he testified in, the murder of a call girl and her friends. He can't remember what he saw years ago and he's started to hear strange noises out of the storage room next to his hotel room. Was the girl he died his girlfriend? Did she die in that noisy room?

The 1940s atmosphere and being set in the U. S. - and filmed in Iowa and Illinois - don't let on that this is an Italian giallo. Not only was it directed by Fabrizio Laurenti (who made Witchery and The Crawlers using the name Martin Newlin; Joe D'Amato may also have directed some of those movies), but it has a story by Fabio Clemente and Luigi Sardiello that was scripted by Pupi Avati.

Yes, that's right. Pupi Avati.

This feels a lot like The House with the Laughing Windows at least as much as it explores the memories that we have in our youth and how they aren't always true as we get older. This also has one of the most sensual razor kills ever, if that can be possible.

I have no idea why more people aren't talking about this, a film written by an Italian legend and filmed in America. I also can't believe it took me so long to discover it.
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8/10
Creepy and melancholy mystery
rundbauchdodo10 July 2002
This rarely seen mystery Giallo from Fabrizio Laurenti, better known as Martin Newlin of "La Casa 4" aka "Witchery" aka "Witchcraft" and "Contamination Point 7" aka "The Crawlers" (in)fame, is a very atmospheric film about a man on the search of his past.

The year is 1940: After 15 years, Martin returns from Chicago to his Iowa village where he grew up. He left the village after a triple murder had occurred and he had testified against the main suspect, which condemned the latter to the electric chair. Martin has problems remembering what he had exactly witnessed that long time ago. The facts that he hears strange noises from the room next door (which is used as a storage room) at the hotel where he is staying, and that almost everyone in the village is now convinced that the convicted was innocent, make Martin investigate to find out the buried truth.

Co-written by Laurenti and fellow director Pupi Avati, "La Stanza Accanto" has often been called as somewhat of an inofficial sequel to Avati's own brilliant "La Casa Dalle Finestre Che Ridono" (1976). There are, without a doubt, striking similarities, but Laurenti's film is still undeniably original and a movie with a thoroughly own spirit. Laurenti develops a constantly creepy atmosphere, in which also seemingly unimportant details can become threatening. The longer the film gets on, the more is the past catching up with its protagonist (another parallel to Avati's "La Casa..." and the also Avati scripted and highly recommended "Dove Comincia la Notte" by Maurizio Zaccaro), and melancholy starts to almost "consume" the main character.

Together with the two other above mentioned films, "La Stanza Accanto", certainly Laurenti's best film to date, makes a unique loose mystery Giallo trilogy that deserves broader recognition among moviegoers. Rating: 8 out of 10.
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8/10
Very dark mystery/drama.
HumanoidOfFlesh15 April 2003
"La Stanza Accanto"/"The Room Next Door" is a very dark drama written by Pupi Avati("House with the Windows That Laugh")and directed by Fabrizio Laurenti("Witchery","The Crawlers").It is filled with truly eerie and brooding atmosphere with lashings of grisly violence.The climax is truly horrifying and unnerving with some nasty scenes of razor carnage.The acting is surprisingly convincing and the camera work by Cesare Bastelli is uniquely brilliant.The film is pretty hard to find,but if you're a fan of Italian cult cinema give this one a look.My rating:8 out of 10.
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