
Hotel Monterey and Two Early Shorts
Sunday, March 29, 2026
6:30pm
The Cinematheque
Genres
Arts & Creative
Tickets0 interested
Event Description
“Shot silently and brilliantly by Babette Mangolte … [Hotel Monterey] reveals perhaps more than any other Akerman film how central an influence Edward Hopper has had on her work.”Jonathan Rosenbaum,Chicago ReaderChantal Akerman’s formative stint in New York (1971–73) culminated in the structuralist masterpieceHotel Monterey, her first long-form experiment in duration and visual strategy. Shot over 15 hours with cinematographer Babette Mangolte, who introduced Akerman to the work of Michael Snow, an acknowledged influence, the film travels from lobby to rooftop, from night into day, in a succession of silent, immaculately framed shots that linger in the common areas, crowded elevators, dim corridors, and mostly vacant rooms of a run-down SRO hotel in the Upper West Side. The work builds upon Akerman and Mangolte’s first collaborationLa chambre, another study in spatial choreography (also made under the spell of Snow), in which a slow 360-degree pan captures the inventory of a Soho apartment and the desultory figure reposed within it (Akerman herself). Preceded bySaute ma ville, Akerman’s 1968 debut, an apocalyptic sendup of a woman’s“place in the kitchen,” made when the artist was 18.Saute ma villeBelgium 1968Chantal Akerman13 min. DCPNo dialogueLa chambreUSA/Belgium 1972Chantal Akerman11 min. DCPSilentHotel MontereyUSA/Belgium 1972Chantal Akerman62 min. DCPSilent

Hotel Monterey and Two Early Shorts
Genres
Arts & Creative
Event Description
“Shot silently and brilliantly by Babette Mangolte … [Hotel Monterey] reveals perhaps more than any other Akerman film how central an influence Edward Hopper has had on her work.”Jonathan Rosenbaum,Chicago ReaderChantal Akerman’s formative stint in New York (1971–73) culminated in the structuralist masterpieceHotel Monterey, her first long-form experiment in duration and visual strategy. Shot over 15 hours with cinematographer Babette Mangolte, who introduced Akerman to the work of Michael Snow, an acknowledged influence, the film travels from lobby to rooftop, from night into day, in a succession of silent, immaculately framed shots that linger in the common areas, crowded elevators, dim corridors, and mostly vacant rooms of a run-down SRO hotel in the Upper West Side. The work builds upon Akerman and Mangolte’s first collaborationLa chambre, another study in spatial choreography (also made under the spell of Snow), in which a slow 360-degree pan captures the inventory of a Soho apartment and the desultory figure reposed within it (Akerman herself). Preceded bySaute ma ville, Akerman’s 1968 debut, an apocalyptic sendup of a woman’s“place in the kitchen,” made when the artist was 18.Saute ma villeBelgium 1968Chantal Akerman13 min. DCPNo dialogueLa chambreUSA/Belgium 1972Chantal Akerman11 min. DCPSilentHotel MontereyUSA/Belgium 1972Chantal Akerman62 min. DCPSilent
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