The film opens on a crisp, silent European winter night, where a married American couple arrive in a remote alpine town in pursuit of a long‑desired goal: adopting a baby. DiCaprio plays the husband, a driven man whose hopes and fears swirl beneath a composed exterior. Lawrence plays his wife, battling an illness that casts a shadow over both the adoption process and their shared future. The quiet arrival in this strange locale immediately sets a tone of unease.
Inside the grand but dilapidated old hotel where they check in, the couple begins to sense that things are off. The lobby seems vast, empty, and filled with odd characters: a flamboyant singer, a mistrustful businessman, a mysterious faith‑healer among others. The hotel itself acts like a character – with long corridors, strange echoes, and snow pressing against the windows like a barrier from the outer world. The couple’s mission to adopt becomes enmeshed with the unsettling atmosphere of the place.![]()
As the wife’s illness progresses, the husband’s anxiety grows. He worries that their application to adopt will be rejected because of her condition and that the fragile foundation of their marriage may not endure the pressure. Meanwhile the hotel’s peculiar inhabitants begin to pull them into bizarre interactions and surreal experiences. One moment the couple are hopeful; the next, they are caught in distorted conversations or odd rituals that make them question where they are, what they are doing, and even who they are.
Gradually, the line between the couple’s outer goal (to adopt) and their inner turmoil (fear, guilt, identity) blurs. The hotel setting amplifies this: memories leak, voices echo, snow‑silence feels oppressive. The wife’s illness becomes metaphorical: not only a medical condition but a representation of loss of control. The husband’s confident façade begins to crack. Their relationship, once defined by love and shared ambition, starts to bend under the strain of the unknown.![]()
The central drama revolves not just around whether they will adopt the baby, but whether they can survive the psychological and supernatural pressures bearing down on them. At times the film hints at ghostly presence or haunting, yet it remains tethered to the emotional core of two people confronting fear, mortality, and possibility. The adoption, the illness, the hotel, the strangers – all weave together in a narrative that asks: what are we when hope and fear collide?
In the final third, the hotel’s mysteries deepen: closed doors open unexpectedly, characters vanish, echoes repeat. The wife’s strength wanes, the husband becomes a spectator to both her decline and the shifting reality around them. Their quest for the baby becomes symbolic: perhaps it is about renewal, or perhaps about surrender. In a climactic moment they must decide whether to fight, to flee, or to accept what the hotel has revealed about them.
Ultimately, the movie closes with ambiguity. The baby may or may not become theirs; the hotel might allow departure or become permanent. What remains is the couple: changed, haunted, alive in a different way than when they arrived. DiCaprio and Lawrence deliver performances that explore love under duress, identity under threat, and the ever‑slim line between control and chaos. The film lingers in the mind like snow in the corners of a room: cold, still, and quietly insistent.




