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Toronto International Film Festival
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Films & Schedules
  • The House of Branching Love
    Haarautuvan rakkauden talo

  • Mika Kaurismäki

Country: Finland
Year:
2009
Language:
Finnish
Runtime:
102 minutes
Format:
Colour/35mm

PUBLIC SCREENINGS
Friday September 1108:00PM SCOTIABANK THEATRE 4 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now
Sunday September 1303:00PM AMC 3 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now
Saturday September 1909:30AM VARSITY 6 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now

Description

A sort of “Divorce Finnish Style,” Mika Kaurismäki's rambunctious new comedy, The House of Branching Love, recounts the breakup of a thirtysomething professional couple. Juhani is a family therapist, and his wife, Tuula, a successful business trainer. They're determined to keep things amicable until they sell their house, but when Juhani brings home a girl he picks up in a club, Tuula flips. The very next day, she brings home her own conquest in retaliation. Emotions long thought dead reappear, and the war escalates precipitously when Juhani begins searching for someone to make Tuula equally jealous.

Juhani calls up his half-brother, Wolffi, a put-upon pimp who wants to hide one of his prostitutes, Nina, from his employers and his wife. (A rather substantial sum of money has gone missing.) Over the course of the film, they all wind up at Juhani and Tuula's house, along with the couple's best friends, the permanently embittered Marjut and the womanizing imp Pekka (who's fond of floridly quoting Shakespearean comedies, an obvious influence on the film); two cops who are having their own marital problems; and, eventually, assorted gangsters.

Running underneath all the commotion is our tendency to pay lip service to social changes and our inability to truly internalize them. Liberal and understanding when he's counselling his clients, Juhani can't cope with his wife's success. (He blames his doughy physique on Tuula's “mannishness.”) Tuula considers Juhani sexually inadequate and remote, and isn't afraid to tell him and everyone else so. Then there are the characters' increasingly complicated and absurd pasts, hanging over their current relationships.

When night falls, all hell breaks loose: the couples exchange partners at a frantic pace and the gangsters finally arrive looking for Nina. Kaurismäki smartly uses this underworld subplot as a metaphor not only for how our past haunts us, but for what happens when people are suddenly presented with unaccustomed autonomy. Ultimately, Tuula and Juhani find out that freedom is much more dangerous than they thought.

A welcome follow-up to Kaurismäki's Three Wise Men, which premiered at last year's Festival, The House of Branching Love provides ample proof that there's nothing funnier, or scarier, than matters of the heart.

Steve Gravestock


Mika KaurismäkiMika Kaurismäki was born in Helsinki. He and his brother Aki were the subject of a spotlight programme at the Festival in 1988. His filmography includes The Liar (80), Amazon (90), Zombie and the Ghost Train (91), The Last Border (93), Tigrero – a Film That Was Never Made (94), Condition Red (95), L.A. Without a Map (98), Highway Society (99), Brasileirinho (05), Three Wise Men (08) and The House of Branching Love (09).

Cadillac People's Choice Award