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Dreaming Walls: Inside the Chelsea Hotel

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Belgium, France, Netherlands · 2022
1h 20m
Director Amélie van Elmbt, Maya Duverdier
Starring
Genre Documentary

For generations, the Chelsea Hotel has been home to a host of iconic artists, from Mark Twain to Stanley Kubrick to Patti Smith. Dreaming Walls is an elegy to the Chelsea Hotel's bohemian origins and a tribute to its last long-term residents, who have weathered the ever-changing landscape of the hotel and New York City at large.

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What are critics saying?

70

The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg

The film avoids providing too much context, a choice that contributes to the spectral atmosphere. The directors aren’t after a news piece; they’re just listening to voices that continue to echo in the corridors.

91

The Playlist by Christian Gallichio

There’s simply too many stories to contain about the Chelsea, but “Dreaming Walls” does well to show how the ghosts of the residents past can, hopefully, inform the hotel’s future.

75

TheWrap by Katie Walsh

In remaining present, with the past and future swirling feverishly, the film is a deeply poignant and moving love letter to those that remain, who “rage, rage, against the dying of the light,” as Dylan Thomas once wrote. Someone’s got to make a stand for the last vestiges of the soul of New York City, and “Dreaming Walls” beautifully captures their fight and their dreams.

58

IndieWire by Kristen Lopez

The film presents a contemplative elegy for a hotel whose history is (still) being eroded, but by focusing on the literal walls (and how they, of course, can’t actually talk) only further removes the voices of the very people who live (and dream) inside of them

75

Original-Cin by Liam Lacey

Beauty and loss hold hands in Dreaming Walls: Inside the Chelsea Hotel, an intimate and impressionistic documentary about New York’s storied Chelsea Hotel from Belgian filmmakers, Amélie van Elmbt and Maya Duverdier.

63

RogerEbert.com by Marya E. Gates

It’s in exploring the iconography of the hotel that the documentary shines the brightest. Van Elmbt and Duverdier are clearly well-versed in the works that were created on the grounds, or by former residents, and do their best to imbue their film with the same timeless cool that pulses through them.

70

Los Angeles Times by Noel Murray

What results is an illuminating new way of seeing this old building — not just as an historic landmark where amazing things happened long ago, but as a place where people have actually lived full lives, finding shelter and inspiration in its haunted halls.

75

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

We’re invited to dream along with the filmmakers, without a lot of background, footnotes or interviews with experts or the celebrated folks who once lived there.

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