Skip to main content

Chambre 212 - Room 212 -liselle Bailey- Marc Do... Jun 2026

The title itself— Chambre 212 or Room 212 —is evocative. In the Dorcel lexicon, titles often emphasize the setting. Whether it is a specific villa, a yacht, or a hotel suite, the location sets the mood.

Chambre 212 is not a ghost story. It is a philosophical comedy about marriage as a hall of mirrors. Liselle Bailey is the anti-heroine: intelligent, selfish, vulnerable, and ultimately redeemable because she chooses to see her husband again. Marc (Benjamin Biolay’s performance is a masterclass in wounded dignity) represents the quiet heroism of staying. Chambre 212 - Room 212 -Liselle Bailey- Marc Do...

Liselle is stunned. This Marc is everything her real Marc is not: refined, wealthy, emotionally detached. He is also the man Liselle’s mother (who appears later as a ghostly, judgmental presence) always wanted her daughter to marry. The title itself— Chambre 212 or Room 212 —is evocative

As soon as Liselle locks the door, reality warps. Room 212 is not just a memory capsule; it is a liminal space where the past and present collide. The hotel’s supernatural rule is simple: the people you conjure from your memories can see you, touch you, and argue with you. Chambre 212 is not a ghost story

Even years after its release, remains a top search result for Marc Dorcel’s catalog. For Liselle Bailey , it cemented her status as a Dorcel Icon. She is frequently ranked in fan polls as one of the top five Dorcel actresses of all time, largely due to this single room number.

Directed by British filmmaker , the film is noted for blending high-end adult entertainment with a more atmospheric, "mainstream-adjacent" aesthetic. Plot and Atmosphere