House Of Tolerance 2011 New | Nonton Film

I notice you're asking for a review of a film titled "House of Tolerance" (original French title: L'Apollonide: Souvenirs de la Maison Close), directed by Bertrand Bonello and released in 2011.

—is less like following a traditional movie plot and more like inhaling the heavy, opium-scented air of a dying era. nonton film house of tolerance 2011 new

It does not romanticize the "Pretty Woman" fantasy where a client saves the girl. Nor does it aggressively condemn the women. It simply presents their reality. It shows a world where the girls have a strange kind of freedom inside the house—they are not bound by the strict societal rules of marriage or domestic servitude of the era—yet they are ultimately prisoners of capitalism and patriarchy. I notice you're asking for a review of

Critical Reception and Legacy

Upon its release at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, House of Tolerance divided critics. Some called it “suffocatingly slow” and “voyeuristic.” Others, like The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw, hailed it as “a strange, hypnotic masterpiece.” Over time, the latter view has prevailed. Nor does it aggressively condemn the women

This response uses data provided by Google's Knowledge Graph House of Tolerance (2011) - IMDb