House of Fools (film)

House of Fools (Russian: Дом дураков, Dom durakov) is a 2002 Russian film by Andrei Konchalovsky about psychiatric patients and combatants during the First Chechen War. It stars Julia Vysotskaya and Sultan Islamov and features a number of cameo appearances by Bryan Adams, with the music composed by Eduard Artemyev.

House of Fools
Directed byAndrei Konchalovsky
Produced byFelix Kleiman
Andrei Konchalovsky
Written byAndrei Konchalovsky
StarringJulia Visotskaya
Sultan Islamov
Yevgeni Mironov
Music byEduard Artemyev
CinematographySergei Kozlov
Distributed byParamount Vantage
Release date
  • 2002 (2002)
Running time
104 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian, Chechen

Distinctly anti-war, unbiased and controversial in Russia, House of Fools is a bizarre blend of black comedy, touching drama, horrific warfare and subtly disturbing psychological content.

Plot

The film tells the story of a psychiatric hospital in the Russian republic of Ingushetia on the border with war-torn republic of Chechnya in 1996. With the medical staff vanishing to apparently find help, the patients are left to their own endeavors. Zhanna (Yuliya Vysotskaya), a young woman, lives in the belief that the pop star Bryan Adams is her fiancé, that he is off on tour and will, at some point in the future, come to take her away with him. Zhanna is sort of the ad hoc keeper of peace, happiness and control of the others; she attempts to help curb some of the other patients exuberant impulses. Blissfully unaware of the terror of the war, the patients stick it out in the hospital. Their guests include a group of Chechen rebels, one of whom, Ahmed (Sultan Islamov), gives Zhanna the idea that he will marry her. At this point Zhanna falls in love with Ahmed. She goes back to the "House" where, with the help of her fellow residents, she prepares for her marriage to Ahmed. From this point on Zhanna prepares for and expects to be swept away by Ahmed. Her hopes do not come to fruition and Ahmed and Zhanna part ways. Zhanna returns to the "House" in order to resume her life there.

The story was partially inspired by the real-life tragedy of the psychiatric hospital in Shali, Chechnya, which was abandoned by the personnel during the Russian bombing campaign and in which many patients subsequently died from attacks and neglect.[1]

The story also mirrors the plot of Philippe de Broca's 1967 French cult classic film King of Hearts (Le Roi de coeur, starring Alan Bates) about the inmates of an asylum abandoned by the staff during World War I who take over the neighboring town. The two films even share similarities in their conclusion, with a soldier taking refuge from the insanity of war in the asylum when it returns to normal.[2] Although there are some similar aspects to King Of Hearts, the difference in the two films is that the inmates/patients in King of Hearts take on the various personalities of the town folk; mayor, baker, prostitute, etc.

Selected cast

The film also features several genuine mental patients alongside actors.

Reception

Awards

Awards:

Nominations:

  • Venice Film Festival - Golden Lion
  • Academy Award - Best Foreign Language Film (representing Russia)
  • Nika Awards - Best Music

Ratings

House of Fools received a rating of 52/100 at Metacritic[3] and 40% "fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes.[4] Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars, saying that House of Fools is "A film that succeeds not by arguing that the world is crazier than the asylum, but by arriving at the melancholy possibility that both are equally insane."[5]

gollark: All hail Sensible Functional Languages, in which `[1] == [1]` is actually true for once and `1 == "1.0"` is a type error.
gollark: It's probably just that that ridiculous JS `==` only does *one* weird conversion, per call.
gollark: (Not)
gollark: Ah, the joys of weak typing.
gollark: 5.72!

References

  1. Bryan Adams rocks way into Kremlin with film role’n’ roll Archived 2006-03-09 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Le Roi de coeur (King Of Hearts)". 19 June 1967. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  3. "House of Fools". Metacritic. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  4. "House of Fools". 25 April 2003. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  5. Roger Ebert (16 May 2003). "House Of Fools". Retrieved 6 January 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.