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House of Fools, 2002

House of Fools

Chechen, Russian

Russia, France

Rating:7.0
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Profile of House of Fools

House of Fools can be described as offbeat and humorous. The plot revolves around mental illness, a love affair, and falling in love. Its comic aspect comes from dark humor and satire. House of Fools's main genres are drama, foreign, and comedy. In approach, it is realistic. The storytelling is slow paced. House of Fools is set, at least in part, in a mental institution and in a hospital. It takes place in contemporary times. It is originally a true story.

Summary of House of Fools

The residents of a Russian mental institution become unwittingly involved in the Chechen War in this darkly romantic film by Andrei Konchalovsky (TANGO AND CASH). Janna (Julia Vysotsky) is a romantically delusional inmate who thinks she's engaged to pop star Bryan Adams. When the war comes, the medical staff flees the hospital, leaving her more or less in charge. Chechen soldiers soon invade the grounds and one of them proposes to her as a joke. She thinks he's sincere though, and finds her affections torn between the soldier and her fantasies of Adams. Through this odd love story, Konchalovsky effectively explores the parallels between the insanity of war and the insanity of the inmates, and he does so without being obvious or didactic. Also effective is the film's grainy, bleached-out look, which, combined with the realistic lunacy on display, recalls the work of Dogme '95 directors like Lars Von Trier. What sets HOUSE OF FOOLS apart from that pack, however, is the kindness and warmth of its characters, particularly Janna, who soothes the nerves of soldiers and patients alike with her compassion and accordion playing. Vysotksky gives a remarkable performance in the role, couching her character's raw vulnerability in a protective bed of delusion. As the object of her fantasies, Adams gamely appears as himself, strolling through the bomb-blasted corridors as he lip-syncs "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman." HOUSE OF FOOLS was filmed largely at an actual Russian mental institution, with many of the inmates appearing as themselves.

Details

Language: Chechen, Russian
Country: Russia, France
Release date: 17 January 2003
Runtime: 104 min

Cast and Crew

Bryan Adams as Himself in House of Fools
Bryan Adams

as Himself

Julia Vysotsky

A. Kalyagin

Clips

House of Fools
House of Fools: Official Trailer

Critics Reviews

The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Fables should be succinct, and Konchalovsky lets his run on too long.
Salon.com
The thing is, it works. Or at least it works for me. I left the theater convinced that House of Fools is Konchalovsky's best work in almost 20 years (which it is) and that it might be something close to a masterpiece.

Users Reviews

The movie is robustly done and actors did a good job; some characters were actually pretty good. However the I couldn't help a feeling like "I saw this already" in almost every scene. The flow is predictable to the level of triviality. Looks like...
House of Fools
I really liked the whole concept of this movie but the only thing threw me for a loop was the cheesy Brian Adams scene.
Likely to see
Not for me

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