Jueves 12 | 21:00 | Cineteca
Tickets
Foco Bertrand Bonello 2025

Casa de tolerancia (L’APOLLONIDE)

Bertrand Bonello | 2011 | 125′

SYNOPSIS

At the beginning of the 20th century, L’Apollonide—a brothel—is nearing its end. Within this enclosed space, where certain clients become infatuated while others reveal their cruelty, the women confide in one another, exchanging their hopes, anxieties, happiness, and sorrows.

Program Information

Day: Thursday 12th
Hora: 21:00
Sede: Cineteca

Multimedia

Critical text

When Bertrand Bonello released L'Apollonide (Souvenirs de la maison close) in 2011, he was already one of the most renowned filmmakers in French cinema. Films such as Le pornographe (2001), Tiresia (2003) and De la guerre (2008) have elevated him to the national pantheon of great auteurs, alongside contemporaries such as Claire Denis, Bruno Dumont and Arnaud Desplechin. With his fifth feature film, a story about a luxury brothel in fin-de-siècle Paris, with a phenomenal cast of actresses including Alice Barnole, Hafsia Herzi, Jasmine Trinca, Adèle Haenel and Céline Sallette, Bonello achieved his first great cult movie.
Taking up a good part of his obsessions (the nooks and crannies of sex and desire, patriarchal violence, the thin border between reverie and reality, reflection on ‘the great theatre of the world’), but placing them in a new and fertile narrative terrain, Bonello weaves a fascinating tapestry around the lives of a dozen prostitutes, their longings, fears and, above all, their tragic existences. A choral work, overflowing with affection (and lust) for its characters, L'Apollonide is also a strangely faithful portrait of the end of an era, even if Bonello has no problem introducing abundant anachronisms (and a flash-forward that makes the film's discourse timeless), which ultimately certify his voracious voracity for reference as a creator. Sequences such as the collective excursion to the countryside (one of the few moments in which the story leaves the decadent house of tolerance of the title), the heartbreaking dance of the protagonists to the sound of The Moody Blues or the overwhelming final resolution during the New Year's Eve of 1900, in which references to Auguste Renoir and classic film noir pulsate, are just some of the many pearls of this film, whose passionate images are already part, in their own right, of the memory of the world's cinephilia. GABRIEL DOMÉNECH GONZÁLEZ

BIOGRAPHY

Bertrand Bonello

Bertrand Bonello, born in Nice, France, in 1968, made his directorial debut with Quelque chose d'organique (1998), which was featured in the Panorama section of the Berlin Film Festival. His film Le pornographe (2001) was included in the Cannes Critics’ Week, where it received the FIPRESCI Award. Tiresia (2003) competed in the Official Selection at Cannes, as did De la guerre (2008), screened at the Directors' Fortnight. He returned to competition with L'Apollonide (House of Tolerance, 2011) and Saint Laurent (2014). In 2016, he competed for the Golden Shell at San Sebastián with Nocturama and presented Sarah Winchester, opéra Fantôme at Zabaltegi-Tabakalera. His film Zombi Child was shown at the Directors' Fortnight at the latest Cannes Festival.

FICHA TÉCNICA

Director: Bertrand Bonello

Guion: Bertrand Bonello

Dirección de fotografía: Josée Deshaies

Montaje: Fabrice Rouaud

Diseño de producción: Alain Guffroy

Diseño de vestuario: Anaïs Romand

Música original: Bertrand Bonello

Sonido: Jean-Pierre Laforce

Productores: Bertrand Bonello, Kristina Larsen

Compañías productoras: Les Films du Lendemain, My New Picture, ARTE France Cinéma

Distribuidora en Francia: Haut et Court

Distribuidora internacional: Films Distribution

Looking for films
from other years?

Explore the archive through the link

with the assistance of:

Europa Creativa media
11th Edition
10 – 15 JUNIO 2025

Martes 10 de Junio

Miércoles 11 de Junio

Jueves 12 de Junio

Viernes 13 de Junio

Sábado 14 de Junio

Domingo 14 de Junio

Logo Filmadrid

XI Edición /10 - 15 Junio

Pasajes filmadrid

Coming soon