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House of Tolerance

Original title: L'Apollonide (Souvenirs de la maison close)
  • 2011
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
House of Tolerance (2011)
Costume DramaPeriod DramaPsychological DramaDrama

At an elegant Parisian bordello at the dawn of the 20th century exists a cloistered world of pleasure, pain, hope, rivalries--and, most of all, slavery.At an elegant Parisian bordello at the dawn of the 20th century exists a cloistered world of pleasure, pain, hope, rivalries--and, most of all, slavery.At an elegant Parisian bordello at the dawn of the 20th century exists a cloistered world of pleasure, pain, hope, rivalries--and, most of all, slavery.

  • Director
    • Bertrand Bonello
  • Writer
    • Bertrand Bonello
  • Stars
    • Noémie Lvovsky
    • Hafsia Herzi
    • Céline Sallette
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    8.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bertrand Bonello
    • Writer
      • Bertrand Bonello
    • Stars
      • Noémie Lvovsky
      • Hafsia Herzi
      • Céline Sallette
    • 35User reviews
    • 107Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 15 nominations total

    Photos184

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    Top cast50

    Edit
    Noémie Lvovsky
    Noémie Lvovsky
    • Marie-France
    • (as Noemie Lvovsky)
    Hafsia Herzi
    Hafsia Herzi
    • Samira
    Céline Sallette
    Céline Sallette
    • Clotilde
    • (as Celine Sallette)
    Jasmine Trinca
    Jasmine Trinca
    • Julie
    Adèle Haenel
    Adèle Haenel
    • Léa
    • (as Adele Haenel)
    Alice Barnole
    Alice Barnole
    • Madeleine
    Iliana Zabeth
    Iliana Zabeth
    • Pauline
    Judith Lou Lévy
    Judith Lou Lévy
    • Une prostituée
    • (as Judith Lou Levy)
    Pauline Jacquard
    Pauline Jacquard
    • Une prostituée
    Anaïs Thomas
    Anaïs Thomas
    • Une prostituée
    Maia Sandoz
    Maia Sandoz
    • Une prostituée
    • (as Maïa Sandoz)
    Joanna Grudzinska
    Joanna Grudzinska
    • Une prostituée
    Esther Garrel
    Esther Garrel
    • Une prostituée
    Xavier Beauvois
    Xavier Beauvois
    • Jacques - un client
    Louis-Do de Lencquesaing
    Louis-Do de Lencquesaing
    • Michaux - un client
    Jacques Nolot
    Jacques Nolot
    • Maurice - un client
    Laurent Lacotte
    Laurent Lacotte
    • Le client sadique
    Pierre Léon
    Pierre Léon
    • Un client
    • (as Pierre Leon)
    • Director
      • Bertrand Bonello
    • Writer
      • Bertrand Bonello
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.78.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8derek-duerden

    Plus ca Change...

    Nicely acted and photographed, this could however easily be very depressing - not only in the unvarnished depiction of life in a Paris brothel 100 years ago but in the clear message that things aren't too different today.

    Debt, disease and the possibility of shocking violence are ever-present, although conversations among the women about jobs that they have done beforehand (e.g. The "industrial injury" side of being a launderess) suggest that being a prostitute wasn't necessarily the *worst* option available.

    Sobering stuff, but the camaraderie looks real and softens the tone somewhat. Recommended.
    6VickiHopkins

    Historically Accurate Portrayal of Legalized Prostitution

    This movie is a graphically shocking film about prostitution in France in a mansion of tolerance. It's French ("L'Apollonide") with English sub-titles.

    Having researched heavily on this subject for one of my own works, I found it to be an eye-opening film. It's an intimate look behind the closed doors of a house of pleasure focusing on the lives of its mistress, prostitutes, and patrons.

    It covers such aspects as registering as prostitutes with the Bureau of Morales, being indebted to mistresses and unable to leave their employ because of it, champagne baths with customers, selection parlors, global fashions worn by prostitutes, opulent client bedrooms, and the regulated visits by the physician examining the workers every 15 days for sign of sexually transmitted disease.

    The movie contains naked women, sexually explicit scenes, and is not for the prudish or faint of heart. There are scenes of abuse of one of the girls, which may be disturbing to viewers. It delves honestly into the reality of life as a French prostitute, focusing on the sad and hopeless plight of women in brothels. The particular establishment depicted in this movie catered to aristocrats and rich businessmen, much like the Chabanais, which was one of the well-known brothels of its day.

    The movie is two hours, slow moving, and not the best flick you'll ever see. Most of the sexual scenes show the men enjoying their paid visits, while the women merely go through the motions void of emotion. As troubling as the scenes were, I found myself transported into the world I researched and came away shocked at seeing the reality portrayed on screen.

    Let's face it, being a prostitute wasn't glamorous. It was a profession that many poor and unskilled women chose in order to survive. It was a dangerous job where women died of syphilis, lived lives with no hope, and sold their bodies in order to eat and have housing. It portrayed a society that found pleasure in sex, living a way of life where brothels were an acceptable form of male entertainment until they were abolished in the early 20th century.

    If historical films interest you on all levels, I can attest that this one hits the mark in every way. Being a French film, it adequately portrays the heyday of legalized prostitution.
    8pour_la-paix

    Serious and complex film

    This is a serious and complex film. It takes the audience out of their comfort zone. Not everyone will understand the film. The film is about women that may have no other choice but to sell their bodies, about freaks that buy their bodies, about these women's inability to pay off their so called "debt", about cruelty, about general stigma that surrounds these women. All of the women in the story's brothel are regular girls that have no one to turn to for help, but possibly each other. The reference to the pseudo "study" that one idiot sites in the film, the choice of music, the way the film ends - all help to make the audience think about the film and its story not as something from the past, but as issues that continue on and the reasons (society maybe) behind these issues.
    FrenchEddieFelson

    Darkness and sadness within Paris

    A dozen young prostitutes in a luxury brothel held by a madam, at the twilight of the nineteenth century. We may see women scarcely dressed, men from the Parisian bourgeoisie, champagne in abundance, a black panther, ... within felted lounges. Objects of fascination, fantasies or sometimes the tenderness of their customers, these young prostitutes circulate in a universe that will soon be a memory. One of them will be disfigured by a consumer as perverse as sadistic.

    Filmed with a breathtaking mastery of the frame. Moreover, the costumes and sets are top. It's an aesthetic shock. The actresses and actors are excellent, Céline Sallette especially.
    7moviexclusive

    An unusually thoughtful and sobering look at the lives of a group of women trapped in the trade of satisfying men's sexual desires

    No matter the titillating title, writer/director Bertrand Bonello's 'House of Pleasures' doesn't hope to pleasure its audience by pandering to their baser instincts through a flesh parade of its predominantly female cast. Instead, Bonello mounts a sombre look at the daily lives and routines of the prostitutes within the walls of the Appolonide, an upmarket Paris brothel for middle-class men at the turn of the 19th century. The pace is slow and languid- consider this fair warning for less patient viewers- but if you allow it, the movie will reel you in with its hypnotic charm and leave you wondering about the people behind the world's oldest profession.

    Filmed with a deliberate dispassion throughout, Bonello flits from one character to another, never making one the central figure in the movie. Among those we get to recognise are Clotilde (Celine Sallette), a twelve-year veteran of the trade at just 28 years old who has recently grown increasingly disillusioned and dependent on opium; Pauline (Iliana Zabeth), the youngest at just 16 who enters the trade in a misguided attempt at asserting her own independence; and the middle-aged Madam (Noémie Lvovsky) who runs the house faced with foreclosure due to rising rent prices.

    Yes, Appolonide is far from a cocoon for the girls, and Bonello places two stark characters as a sobering reminder of that- the first in the form of a cheerful girl Julie (Jasmine Trinca) who discovers one day during a routine medical examination that she has syphilis; and the second in Madeleine (Alice Barnole), who is permanently disfigured when a client (Laurent Lacotte) she dreams of having a future with ties her to the bed and slashes her from both corners of the mouth. Madeleine is the most blatant Bonello gets at eliciting his audience's empathy for these women- and certainly, it's hard not to be moved when she is nicknamed 'The Woman Who Laughs' and becomes no more than an object of fascination for others to gawk at.

    Notwithstanding Madeleine's misfortune, there is little to cheer about for any of the other girls trapped with little hope of escaping their circumstance. Though visited by regulars with sweet words and buoyant promises, there is little illusion that none of these men are serious about their affections for the ladies they frequent, using them as mere vessels to act out their fantasies- one girl is made to act like a mechanical doll; while another is dressed in a kimono and asked to speak Japanese even though she knows not the language. We know better than to believe their lies and empty promises, but who can blame some of the ladies for being optimistic- what else after all do they have to live for?

    Setting most of the film within the four walls of the Appolonide and emphasising the day in and day our rituals of the women within adds to the claustrophobic feel of the movie, which of course reinforces the cheerless nature of their situation- there is also a reference to the conventional wisdom of the day, which equates their status to that of criminals by virtue of the size of their heads. The rare scene where the girls have the most fun is a daytime excursion they take to the countryside, which unsurprisingly shows them at their most lively and vivacious.

    And indeed, there is very little to cheer or find pleasure in- despite the movie's title- once one has observed the lives of these women in the Appolonide. The film is also purposefully set at the twilight of the industry in that form, and from time to time, Bonello hints at the imminent passing of a Parisian cultural icon. His parting shot is that of modern-day Paris, where prostitutes are standing by the street waiting for some random guy in a car to pick them up. Has society progressed in the past century? As long as there remain women who are stuck in the circumstance as those in the Appolonide, the answer quite honestly is a sobering no.

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    Costume Drama
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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      There's a short epilogue at the end with a view of modern Paris streets, traffic and some streetwalkers, one of whom is a 'twin' to a brothel prostitute. Bertrand Bonello said that Thierry Frémaux, the artistic director of the Cannes Film Festival, asked him to cut it, though the film still made it into the main competition after Bonello refused. "A lot of people thought I was glorifying the brothels of the time, holding them up as an ideal against today's prostitution, but it was actually much simpler than that. I felt I couldn't end inside the brothel but needed a contrast. I wanted to burst this bubble I had created for two hours, to wake the viewer up, and that wake-up is the return to the present", Bonello said.
    • Goofs
      A character says he's been to the inauguration ceremony of the Paris Metro. After that there is a scene where we hear fireworks for Bastille Day (14 July). The opening of the Paris Metro (Line 1) was on 19 July 1900, five days after Bastille Day.
    • Crazy credits
      Dedication before end credits:  "For Charlotte"
    • Connections
      Featured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: Episode #2.23 (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Plaisir d'Amour
      Music by Jean-Paul-Égide Martini

      Lyrics by Jean-Pierre Claris de Florian

      Performed by Eloïse Decazes

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 25, 2011 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • House of Pleasures
    • Filming locations
      • Paris, France
    • Production companies
      • Les Films du Lendemain
      • My New Picture
      • Arte France Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €4,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $19,327
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,766
      • Nov 27, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,389,920
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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