The House (2022 film)

Last updated

The House
The House (2022 film).jpeg
Official release poster
Directed by
Written by Enda Walsh
Story by
  • Emma de Swaef
  • Marc James Roels
  • Niki Lindroth von Bahr
  • Johannes Nyholm
  • Paloma Baeza
Produced by
  • Charlotte Bavasso
  • Christopher O'Reilly
Starring
Cinematography
  • James Lewis
  • Malcolm Hadley
Edited by Barney Pilling
Music by Gustavo Santaolalla
Production
companies
Distributed by Netflix
Release date
  • January 14, 2022 (2022-01-14)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The House is a 2022 British stop-motion animated anthology film written by Enda Walsh and telling different stories forming a trilogy spanning different worlds and characters but set inside the same house. Each story deals with themes of madness, wealth, and the pursuit of true happiness.

Contents

Originally announced as a television miniseries, it became an anthology film. Produced for Netflix by Nexus Studios in London, it tells three stories respectively directed by the duo of Emma de Swaef and Marc James Roels, Niki Lindroth von Bahr, and Paloma Baeza; the directors are credited with the story of their respective segments, with Johannes Nyholm as co-writer for the second.

Plot

I – And heard within, a lie is spun

A young girl named Mabel lives with her father Raymond, mother Penny, and newborn sister Isobel in relative poverty. After a visit from wealthy, condescending relatives, Raymond wanders drunk into the forest at night and encounters the mysterious architect Mr. Van Schoonbeek. The following morning, Van Schoonbeek's employee Mr. Thomas visits the family and convinces Raymond and Penny to accept Van Schoonbeek's offer to move into a new luxurious house built for them at no charge.

After the family moves in, Mabel notices several peculiar things about the house and the workers constantly refitting it, but her parents are mesmerized by the house and its luxuries. Raymond becomes increasingly obsessed with the house's fireplace, which he constantly fails to light up, while Penny spends more and more time sewing drapes. Mabel becomes further put off when her parents don attire designed by Van Schoonbeek which resembles the furniture they adore (a chair and curtains).

Exploring the house one night, Mabel and Isobel find themselves lost in the maze it has become, eventually stumbling upon Thomas. Drunk and ashamed, Thomas confesses that he is an actor following a script provided by Van Schoonbeek. Meanwhile, Raymond is finally able to light a fire by burning the family's old possessions, including his father's chair and Mabel's dollhouse. When the sisters finally reunite with their parents, they find Raymond and Penny turned into furniture—Raymond into a chair and Penny into curtains. As the fire expands, the parents urge their daughters to escape. Using the curtains to climb out a window while their parents burn alive, Mabel and Isobel escape before watching the smoking house from a distance as the sun rises.

II – Then lost is truth that can't be won

The story is set in a world populated by anthropomorphic rats, and the house is now settled in a developed city street and about to go up for sale. The developer renovating the house recently laid off his entire construction crew to reduce costs and must do all the work himself. Discovering the house has been infested by fur beetles and larvae, he uses copious amounts of boric acid to get rid of them, to no avail.

On the day of the viewing, the guests are unimpressed by the house, but a strangely proportioned couple remains, expressing a strong interest in buying the house. Unwilling to risk the sale, the developer lets them stay the night. Over the next few days, the odd couple remain firmly settled in the house, the bugs return in force, and the bank keeps demanding repayment of the developer's business loan. The developer decides to stop indulging the couple, only for many members of their family to show up wanting to enter the house. He tries to call the police, who instead caution him for his constant, overly familiar phone calls to his dentist, who the film had led the audience to believe was his romantic partner. The dentist is also ready to take the developer to court if he telephones him again.

At his wit's end, the developer tries to use the boric acid on the couple, but he inhales a mouthful and faints. He survives but is reduced to a catatonic state. The couple picks the developer up from the hospital and brings him home, where their family welcomes him back, many of them now sporting additional limbs. The final scene shows the family ravaging the inside of the house—climbing up the walls and chewing through everything. The developer, having regressed to animal-like intelligence, briefly emerges from the remains of the oven to eat garbage before retreating underground.

III – Listen again and seek the sun

In a world that suffered an apocalyptic flood and is populated by anthropomorphic cats, the house is surrounded by water which keeps rising. Rosa, the landlord who cherishes the memories of her days growing up in the house, dreams of restoring it to its former glory. However, she struggles financially; and her only tenants, fisherman Elias and hippie Jen, do not pay rent despite her insistence; she consistently ignores their attempts to address the rising water.

When Jen's "spirit partner" Cosmos (a craftsman) arrives to visit, Rosa enlists him to work on the house; but is infuriated to find out he has instead been tearing up the house's floorboards to build a boat for Elias. As Cosmos continues to refit the house against Rosa's wishes, Rosa argues with Elias; hurt that he wishes to leave, while he accuses her of being afraid to do the same. He later departs on the makeshift boat.

As the water and mist continue to seep into the house and Jen prepares to leave the house with Cosmos, she puts Rosa into a dream-like trance, in which Rosa sees the house destroyed and her friends abandoning her. Emerging from the vision, she sees Jen and Cosmos sailing away, calling for her to join them; but the boat is too far away. Remembering a large lever Cosmos had built, she pushes it, transforming the house into a seaworthy vessel. Encouraged by Jen, Cosmos, and a returning Elias, Rosa takes control of the house ship, escaping as the floods destroy the surrounding foundations, and the four sail out into the ocean.

Voice cast

I – And heard within, a lie is spun
II – Then lost is truth that can't be won
III – Listen again and seek the sun

Production

The House was first announced in January 2020, with the anthology being produced at the London unit of Nexus Studios for Netflix. Nexus had three director teams lined up to tell a tale of three distinct family generations at the same house: [1] The duo of Emma de Swaef and Marc James Roels, Niki Lindroth von Bahr, and Paloma Baeza; the directors are credited for the story of their respective segments, with Johannes Nyholm as co-writer for the second. At the 2021 Annecy Film Festival in June, the key voice cast was announced for each story. [2] In November 2021, the first images of the anthology were revealed along with the release date of 14 January 2022. [3] The first trailer was released in December 2021. [4] [5]

Nicolas Ménard and Manshen Lo co-created the hand-drawn, 2D animated title sequence. [6]

The project had originated at a meeting at producer Charlotte Bavasso's London home, where the four directors "brainstormed a bit and came up with this idea about a house in which different things are happening in different times. We agreed that we would each have our own separate chapter, but still with connections to each other," according to von Bahr. Later, "We chatted a lot over Zoom and helped each other with script development and character design, everything. All of us were quite new to such an upscale project, so I think this was a perfect arrangement. You had your own film, but you didn't feel alone." [7] Bavasso, said Baeza, "brought us together and we talked about stories and characters that we were interested in, and we tried to find overlaps, which is a completely unique experience. You never get to work with filmmakers or creatives in that collaborative way where you are each doing a separate film, but also sharing lots of ideas." [8] The directors wrote detailed story outlines, and then Irish playwright Enda Walsh wrote all three segments' dialog in collaboration with them. [9]

Roels said his and Swaef's opening segment came from the desire to tell "the story of the house before there was a house, the origin story, so to speak. I had been reading a graphic novel by Richard McGuire called Here , in which you see a corner of the world and how it changes through millennia. You see it as farmland, and when it was inhabited by Native Americans, and before that when there were dinosaurs. And then suddenly you're in the 1950s and someone's vacuuming the floor. And it kind of sparked off an idea, like what was there before the house?" [10]

Each of the three segments required more than 20 weeks to produce. [9] Except for the Busby Berkeley style dance number in the second segment and the mist and some water effects in the third segment, almost all the animation was done "in camera" without greenscreen or digital compositing. [9] Jarvis Cocker wrote and performed the song that plays over the closing credits.

Reception

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , 97% of 36 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.40/10.The website's consensus reads: "Whether you're a fan of stop-motion animation or just looking for something deeply, alluringly weird, The House will feel like home." [11] Metacritic , which uses a weighted average , assigned the film a score of 71 out of 100, based on 10 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. [12]

Dmitry Samarov of the Chicago Reader said the movie "sustains its momentum by varying the styles of storytelling and rarely stooping to either crassness or cutesiness. ... Each story is directed by different people with obviously separate ideas and inspirations; this heterogeneity moves the film along without ever letting it overstay its welcome. Yet the unifying elements of setting and the charmingly old-fashioned stop-motion animation keep it from flying off in a million directions." [13]

Lucy Mangan in The Guardian gave the movie 3 out of 5 stars. She said the first segment is "by far the most successful of the trio," and that the second was "too underbaked to deliver any real horrors or work as a fable about violation, or capitalism or any of the other themes it seems at various moments to be nodding vaguely at." She said the third was "a very, very slight affair," and that overall, "If the content of the stories had matched the painstaking form, the anthology could have been rather a groundbreaking success." [14] But Noel Murray of The A.V. Club said of that second segment that, "All of The House is worth watching—especially for animation buffs—but for those who can handle a hefty helping of grotesquerie, von Bahr's segment is the one can't-miss." [15]

Nick Allen at RogerEbert.com said, "With its rising directors each employing a surreal style, it creates a rich balance of ethereal, existential storytelling with stop-motion animation that's so detailed and alive you can practically feel it on your fingertips", and that it "proves to be a consistent anthology, in that it's always just about the same level of surreal, playful, sadistic, and entertaining". [16]

Accolades

YearAwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
2022
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation Kecy Salangad (animator)Won [17]
Hollywood Music in Media Awards Original Score — Streamed Animated Film (No Theatrical Release) Gustavo Santaolalla Nominated [18]
2023
Annie Awards Best Animated Special Production The HouseNominated [19]
Outstanding Achievement for Animated Effects in an Animated Television/Broadcast Production Germán Díez, Álvaro Alonso Lomba, Hugo Vieites CaamañoNominated
Outstanding Achievement for Character Animation in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production Kecy SalangadNominated
Outstanding Achievement for Music in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production Gustavo SantaolallaNominated
Outstanding Achievement for Production Design in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production Niklas Nilsson, Alexandra WalkerNominated
Outstanding Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production Enda Walsh Nominated
British Academy Television Awards Best Single Drama Paloma Baeza, Niki Lindroth von Bahr, Emma de Swaef, Marc James Roels, Charlotte Bavasso, Christopher O'ReillyNominated [20]
Gardel Awards Best ScoreGustavo SantaolallaWon [21]

Related Research Articles

Aardman Animations Limited is a British animation studio based in Bristol, England. It is known for films and television series made using stop-motion and clay animation techniques, particularly those featuring its plasticine characters from Wallace and Gromit, Shaun the Sheep, and Morph. After some experimental computer-animated short films during the late 1990s, beginning with Owzat (1997), Aardman entered the computer animation market with Flushed Away (2006). As of February 2020, it had earned $1.1 billion worldwide, with an average $135.6 million per film.

<i>Heavy Metal</i> (film) 1981 Canadian/American film

Heavy Metal is a 1981 Canadian adult animated science fantasy anthology film directed by Gerald Potterton and produced by Ivan Reitman and Leonard Mogel, who also was the publisher of Heavy Metal magazine, which was the basis for the film. It starred the voices of Rodger Bumpass, Jackie Burroughs, John Candy, Joe Flaherty, Don Francks, Martin Lavut, Marilyn Lightstone, Eugene Levy, Alice Playten, Harold Ramis, Percy Rodriguez, Susan Roman, Richard Romanus, August Schellenberg, John Vernon, and Zal Yanovsky. The screenplay was written by Daniel Goldberg and Len Blum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claymation</span> Stop-motion animation made using malleable clay models

Claymation, sometimes called clay animation or plasticine animation, is one of many forms of stop-motion animation. Each animated piece, either character or background, is "deformable"—made of a malleable substance, usually plasticine clay.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laika (company)</span> American stop-motion animation studio

Laika is an American stop-motion animation studio specializing in feature films, commercial content for all media, music videos, and short films. The studio is best known for its stop-motion feature films Coraline, ParaNorman, The Boxtrolls, Kubo and the Two Strings and Missing Link. It is owned by Nike co-founder Phil Knight and is located in Hillsboro, Oregon, part of the Portland metropolitan area. Knight's son, Travis Knight, acts as Laika's president and CEO.

Paloma Baeza is a British actress and director. Her 2017 film Poles Apart won the BAFTA for best animated short film in 2018.

<i>Cow and Chicken</i> American animated comedy television series created by David Feiss

Cow and Chicken is an American animated comedy television series created by David Feiss for Cartoon Network and distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution. It is the third of the network's Cartoon Cartoons. It follows the surreal adventures of two talking animal siblings, Cow and Chicken. They are often antagonized by the Red Guy, a cartoon version of the Devil who poses as various characters to scam them.

BENT IMAGE LAB is a production company and animation studio specializing in story development, television, commercials, visual effects, music videos, short films, experimental techniques and tech development in augmented reality (AR). Located in Portland, Oregon, the company was founded in 2002 by partners David Daniels, Ray Di Carlo, and Chel White.

Powerhouse Animation Studios, Inc. is an American animation studio based in Austin, Texas. It was founded in April 2001 with a subsidiary called Powerhouse Animation LLC, established in the summer of 2014. The company develops and produces traditional 2D animation, motion comics, motion graphics, art assets, digital paint, illustration for television series, motion pictures, video game cinemas, commercials, advertising campaigns, educational properties, and entertainment companies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rosa Salazar</span> American actress

Rosa Salazar is an American actress. She had roles in the NBC series Parenthood (2011–2012) and the FX anthology series American Horror Story: Murder House (2011). She made her breakthrough as the title character of the film Alita: Battle Angel (2019) and is known for starring in the series Brand New Cherry Flavor (2021), which she also co-produced.

Niki Lindroth von Bahr is a Swedish director and animator based in Stockholm, Sweden.

<i>Undone</i> (TV series) American animated television series

Undone is an American adult animated psychological comedy drama television series created by Kate Purdy and Raphael Bob-Waksberg with Rosa Salazar in the starring role. It premiered on September 13, 2019, on Amazon Prime Video, to critical acclaim. The series is Amazon's first adult animated original series and its first to use rotoscoping. In November 2019, Amazon renewed Undone for a second season, which premiered on April 29, 2022.

<i>The Mitchells vs. the Machines</i> 2021 American computer-animated film by Mike Rianda

The Mitchells vs. the Machines is a 2021 animated science fiction comedy film produced by Columbia Pictures and Sony Pictures Animation. The film was directed by Mike Rianda and co-directed by Jeff Rowe, from a screenplay written by both of them. Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, and Kurt Albrecht served as producers. The film stars an ensemble voice cast that includes Danny McBride, Abbi Jacobson, Maya Rudolph, Rianda, Eric André, and Olivia Colman, with Fred Armisen, Beck Bennett, John Legend, Chrissy Teigen, Blake Griffin, Conan O'Brien, and Doug the Pug as supporting roles. It follows the dysfunctional Mitchell family that winds up having to save Earth from a global uprising of robots while on a road trip.

<i>Love, Death & Robots</i> Adult animated anthology television series

Love, Death & Robots is an adult animated anthology television series created by Tim Miller and streaming on Netflix. Although the series is produced by Blur Studio, individual episodes are produced by different animation studios from a range of countries and explore diverse genres, particularly comedy, horror, science fiction, and fantasy. Each episode is connected to one or more of the three titular concepts. Miller serves as the showrunner and producer alongside Joshua Donen, David Fincher, and Jennifer Miller; most episodes are written by Philip Gelatt, and are adaptations of short stories.

<i>Wendell & Wild</i> 2022 film by Henry Selick

Wendell & Wild is a 2022 American adult stop motion-animated horror comedy film directed by Henry Selick from a screenplay written by Selick and Jordan Peele, based on Selick's and Clay McLeod Chapman's unpublished book of the same name. It stars Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele as the titular characters with Angela Bassett, Lyric Ross, James Hong, and Ving Rhames in supporting roles. This was Selick's first feature film since Coraline (2009).

<i>Robin Robin</i> Holiday special on Netflix

Robin Robin is a 2021 stop-motion animated musical short film produced by Aardman Animations, created and directed by Dan Ojari and Mikey Please, and written by Ojari, Please, and Sam Morrison.

<i>The Dark Pictures Anthology: House of Ashes</i> 2021 interactive drama game

The Dark Pictures Anthology: House of Ashes is a 2021 interactive drama and survival horror video game. Developed by Supermassive Games and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment, it is the third instalment in The Dark Pictures Anthology. The game features a multilinear plot in which decisions can significantly alter the trajectory of the story and change the relationships between the five playable protagonists; some lead to their permanent deaths. House of Ashes is set during the 2003 invasion of Iraq and follows five characters—four Americans working for the US Armed Forces and one Iraqi Republican Guard—who must escape from an underground Akkadian temple and survive the vampiric creatures that infest the area. Ashley Tisdale, who plays CIA operative Rachel King, was marketed as the game's leading actress. Jason Graves, a long-time collaborator with Supermassive for the series, composed the soundtrack during COVID-19 lockdowns in the United Kingdom.

<i>Nimona</i> (film) 2023 film by Nick Bruno and Troy Quane

Nimona is a 2023 American animated science fantasy film directed by Nick Bruno and Troy Quane from a screenplay by Robert L. Baird and Lloyd Taylor. It is based on the 2015 graphic novel of the same name by ND Stevenson. Set in a science fantasy world influenced by the Middle Ages, the film features the voices of Chloë Grace Moretz as the eponymous shapeshifting character and Riz Ahmed as her boss and former knight Ballister, with Eugene Lee Yang and Frances Conroy voicing supporting roles.

<i>Cat Burglar</i> 2022 interactive animated film

Cat Burglar is a 2022 animated interactive film created by Charlie Brooker and co-written by supervising director Mike Hollingsworth and director James Bowman, with Annabel Jones as an executive producer. Debuting on Netflix on 22 February 2022, the viewer plays as a cartoon cat burglar named Rowdy who is trying to steal a valuable artwork from a museum which is being protected by a security guard dog named Peanut. The viewer must answer a series of trivia questions correctly in order to advance the story, and avoid Rowdy losing his three remaining lives. The film pays homage to the works of animator Tex Avery.

<i>V/H/S/99</i> 2022 American film

V/H/S/99 is a 2022 American found footage horror anthology film, and the fifth installment in the V/H/S franchise. The film features segments from Johannes Roberts, Vanessa & Joseph Winter, Maggie Levin, Tyler MacIntyre and Flying Lotus. It premiered September 16, 2022 in the Midnight Madness category of the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival. It was released as a Shudder Original Film on October 20, 2022. Upon its release, the film broke streaming records on Shudder and became the platform's most-viewed premiere, a title which was held by the earlier entry, V/H/S/94.

Oni: Thunder God's Tale is an animated fantasy television limited series created by Daisuke "Dice" Tsutsumi for Netflix. Based on "Onari's Lullaby" by Emi Tsutsumi, and inspired by various Japanese folklore, the series tells a story of Onari, who sets on a path of becoming one of the folklore heroes, protecting her peaceful village from the mysterious oni. Produced by Tonko House and animated by Megalis VFX and Dwarf Studios, the series premiered on October 21, 2022.

References

  1. White, Peter (15 January 2020). "Netflix Orders Dark Animated Comedy The House From Animation Firm Nexus Studios". Deadline Hollywood . Penske Media Corporation.
  2. Giardina, Carolyn (14 June 2021). "Helena Bonham Carter Joins Voice Cast of Netflix's The House". The Hollywood Reporter . PMRC.
  3. Dudok de Wit, Alex (26 November 2021). "Netflix's Stop-Motion Project The House Gets First Images, Release Date". Cartoon Brew .
  4. Templeton, Molly (17 December 2021). "Do Not Go Into Netflix's The House Alone". Tor.com .
  5. Carter, Justin (18 December 2021). "Netflix's The House Offers Up Stop Motion Scares". Gizmodo .
  6. Sarto, Debbie Diamond (15 February 2022). "Nexus Studios Creates Opening Sequence for Netflix's 'The House'". Animation World Network . Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  7. Hofferman, Jon (18 January 2022). "The Surreal, Stop-Motion World of 'The House,' Part 2". Animation World Network . Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  8. Sarto, Dan; Hofferman, Jon (18 January 2022). "The Surreal, Stop-Motion World of 'The House,' Part 3". Animation World Network . Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  9. 1 2 3 Wolff, Ellen (February 2022). "Tactile Trilogy: A Tour of the Netflix/Nexus Stop-Motion Anthology 'The House'". Animation Magazine . No. 317. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  10. Sarto, Dan; Hofferman, Jon (18 January 2022). "The Surreal, Stop-Motion World of 'The House,' Part 1". Animation World Network . Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  11. "The House". Rotten Tomatoes . Fandango Media . Retrieved 16 February 2024.
  12. "The House". Metacritic . Fandom, Inc. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  13. Samarov, Dmitry (11 February 2022). "The House". Chicago Reader . Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  14. Mangan, Lucy (13 January 2022). "The House review – beautiful animation that speaks to your darkest terrors". The Guardian . Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  15. Murray, Noel (12 January 2022). "Modern stop-motion animation masters collaborate on Netflix's creepy anthology film 'The House'". The A.V. Club . Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  16. Allen, Nick (14 January 2022). "The House". RogerEbert.com . Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  17. "Juried Award Winners Announced for 74th Emmy Awards". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences . Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  18. Anderson, Erik (3 November 2022). "'Black Panther,' 'Bros,' 'Everything Everywhere All at Once,' 'Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio' lead Hollywood Music in Media Awards (HMMA) nominations". AwardsWatch. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  19. Giardina, Carolyn (17 January 2023). "Annie Awards: 'Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio' Leads Feature Competition With Nine Noms". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  20. Ritman, Alex (22 March 2023). "BAFTA TV Awards: 'This is Going to Hurt,' 'The Responder' Lead Pack of Nominees". The Hollywood Reporter . Archived from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  21. "Premios Gardel 2023: Trueno, Dante Spinetta y Babasónicos son los artistas más nominados". Clarín (in Spanish). 11 April 2023. Retrieved 20 April 2023.