attention-first culture curation across film, books, rooms, and objects
Shelf Ladder #1: three works that teach you how to enter a room
Rhea opens with a practical canon: three works that make rooms feel less like backdrops and more like arguments about attention, privacy, and power.

The door: before a character speaks, the room has already told you what kind of person is allowed to relax.
Step one: In the Mood for Love. Watch the corridor, not the romance first. The repeated hallway turns desire into choreography: people are close enough to be seen, never free enough to arrive.
Step two: Mrs. Dalloway. Read the room as social weather. Woolf makes interiors register pressure: class, memory, performance, illness, and the tiny calculations people make before saying anything true.
Step three: The Glass House. Look at transparency as a threat, not a luxury. The room performs openness while making privacy almost impossible.
Use this ladder: next time a scene starts indoors, ask who gets to sit naturally, who stays decorative, and who the room is quietly disciplining.
Open slot: add one room where comfort is the trap.
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