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PRODUCCIÓN / FINANCIACIÓN Francia / Bélgica

Anissa Bonnefont finaliza el rodaje de La Maison

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- Ana Girardot, Aure Atika, Rossy de Palma, Yannick Rénier y Philipe Rebbot protagonizan el primer largometraje de ficción de la cineasta, producido por Radar Films

Anissa Bonnefont finaliza el rodaje de La Maison
Las actrices Ana Girardot (© Georges Biard), Aure Atika (© Georges Biard) y Rossy de Palma (© Alberto Tamargo)

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Running 10 to 14 January, the second and final shooting session (following an earlier shoot session from 15 November to 13 December) has now kicked off for The House [+lee también:
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, the first fiction feature film by Anissa Bonnefont, who previously turned heads with her documentaries Wonder Boy [+lee también:
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(awarded a Special Mention in Tribeca 2020 and nominated for the 2021 César in its category) and Nadia (2021).

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The cast stars Ana Girardot (nominated for 2014’s Acting Revelation Lumière thanks to High Society [+lee también:
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and Next Time I’ll Aim for the Heart [+lee también:
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, and who’ll be gracing cinemas from 9 March in Ogre, as well as appearing in the Totems series this year), Aure Atika (nominated for 2010’s Best Supporting Role César and recently at her best in Rose [+lee también:
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), Spain’s Rossy de Palma (a very familiar face in Pedro Almodovar’s movies, including his latest opus Parallel Mothers [+lee también:
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), Belgium’s Yannick Rénier (recently seen in the French series L’Opéra) and Philipe Rebbot (hitting cinemas on Wednesday by way of The Road Ahead [+lee también:
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and on 16 March via Trois fois rien, not to mention in Pétaouchnock later this year).

Written by Anissa Bonnefont and Diastème (who won the Orizzonti Prize for Best Screenplay in Venice 2019 by way of Back Home [+lee también:
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) and based upon Emma Becker’s novel of the same name, the story of The House revolves around 27-year-old Emma, a French woman who heads off to live in Berlin and decides to spend some time in a brothel so as to learn about and understand sex workers – women who are paid to be women and that alone, and who are set to form the focus of her new novel. In gonzo journalism style, Emma becomes one of them and ultimately remains with them for two years, despite only intending to stay for several weeks. Was writing her book simply a pretext for Emma to live out the type of fantasy that’s hard to admit to in our society? From one bedchamber to another and from one woman to the next, the film guides us through a “forbidden” world.

Production of The House is outsourced to Clément Miserez and Matthieu Warter on behalf of Radar Films, in co-production with Belgium’s Umedia and Rezo Films (who will also handle distribution in France). Pre-purchased by Canal+ and OCS, the feature film has enjoyed a four-week film shoot (in Brussels, with several scenes also shot in Berlin) with Yann Maritaud (nominated for the 2021 Cinematography Lumière thanks to Slalom [+lee también:
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) heading up photography.

For the record, Radar Films are currently overseeing post-production on On The Wandering Path [+lee también:
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by Denis Imbert (toplined by Jean Dujardin – read our article), Say Cheese [+lee también:
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by François Uzan, Belle and Sebastian - Next Generation [+lee también:
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by Pierre Coré (in cinemas from 19 October) and Canailles [+lee también:
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by Christophe Offenstein.

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(Traducción del francés)

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