Their connection drives some amazing emotional fireworks and their physical connection adds to it as well. The two women fancy each other, and Natasha makes it clear that she has never felt strongly for a woman before.
Room in Rome does have a large amount of nudity and its share of lesbian sex sequences, but the movie is really about what else is shared in the hour and forty-seven minutes. The two clearly have personal lives they would rather escape, at least every now and again, and as they share their lives with each other the stories change and evolve. But as if fate was playing a hand, Natasha ends up returning for her phone and the two begin to talk deep into the night. Nervous, Natasha only gives Alba so much of what she wants before she leaves rather quickly to spend her last night in Rome alone. The connection nearly falls apart at the beginning. Nothing about who they really are actually matters, but who they play to be for one night, their last night in Rome, is the most important thing. The other, nick-named Alba (Elena Anaya) is hiding some secrets and changing her story as the night goes on. Maybe one is named Natasha (Natasha Yarovenko) and maybe she has a planned out life for her in Russia she’s not too excited about. They never really know for sure who the other is. Room in Rome is not filth, it’s not pornography, it’s actually a well rounded story with a tale of how two people are escaping reality and they do so for one night with each other’s help. The real catch with Julio Medem’s Room in Rome, is it tells the story of two women, breaking a new barrier. Two people who don’t know each other meet in a bar and go back to one’s hotel room for a passionate evening that allows the two to connect in ways they have probably never connected with another.
Habitación en Roma, better known in English as Room in Rome, is one of those movies. Many of these movies should get attention though for their incredibly deep stories, tales of realistic romance, and artistic style. Most of them get the majority of their attention due to the somewhat scandalous content that’s laced throughout. Terms of use: No data or images may be copied or used without express written consent from iCollect Everything, LLC.There’s more than a handful of great movies that center around two strangers meeting and spending an evening together, connecting on more than just a physical level. But seconds after parting, Dasha calls out to Alba and runs after her.Īctors: Enrico Lo Verso, Elena Anaya, Natasha YarovenkoĪll data created by iCollect Everything, LLC and Copyright © 2021 iCollect Everything, LLC. They leave the hotel room together and say good-bye in front of the hotel. They discuss abandoning their partners and living together in Rome, but both seem to realize that this is not possible. Dasha and Alba have breakfast together at dawn. Alba also initially tells a false story about herself, but later confides that she is a mechanical engineer/inventor and lives with a woman in Spain.
Later Dasha confides that she is a professional tennis player and is to be married the following week in Russia. At first, Dasha assumes the identity of Natasha, her twin sister who is a movie star. The two women spend the night together making love and getting to know each other.
Dasha returns to retrieve the phone and Alba pulls her into the room. Dasha soon realizes she has left her cell phone in AlbaâÃÂÃÂs room. Dasha quietly slips out, wondering what might have been had she gone through with it. They softly touch for a short time before Alba falls asleep. In the room, the women undress and get into bed. When they reach AlbaâÃÂÃÂs hotel, Alba invites Dasha to her room. They leave the bar and begin walking back to their respective hotels together. Dasha and Alba happen to meet as they are drinking. It is each womanâÃÂÃÂs last night in Rome. Alba (Elena Anaya), a young Spanish woman on a business trip in Rome, also goes for a drink by herself. Plot Summary: Dasha (Natasha Yarovenko), a young Russian woman on vacation in Rome, goes for a drink by herself.