The Keys to the House explained

The Keys to the House
(Le chiavi di casa)
Director:Gianni Amelio
Starring:Kim Rossi Stuart
Charlotte Rampling
Andrea Rossi
Alla Faerovich
Pierfrancesco Favino
Editing:Simona Paggi
Producer:Elda Ferri
Enzo Porcelli
Distributor:Lions Gate Entertainment
Runtime:105 minutes
Music:Franco Piersanti
Country:Italy
Language:Italian

The Keys to the House (Italian: '''Le chiavi di casa''') is a 2004 Italian drama film based on the story Born Twice (Italian title: Nati due volte) telling the story of a young father meeting his handicapped son for the first time and attempts to forge a relationship with the teenager. The film was directed by Gianni Amelio. Although selected as the Italian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 77th Academy Awards, it was not nominated.

Plot

Gianni (Kim Rossi Stuart) has left his handicapped son Paolo (Andrea Rossi) in the care of others since his birth. He has not been able to cope with Paolo’s mother’s death in childbirth or that Paolo has not developed like other children because of his handicap. Paolo is now fifteen and is about to meet his father for the first time. Gianni has been asked by his son's caretakers to bring him to a Berlin hospital for yearly tests and check-ups. According to their doctor, the "shock" of meeting his father could help Paolo in his treatment. When Gianni boards the night train on which Paolo is already travelling, it is Gianni who is in for a shock. Paolo does not seem particularly impressed nor disturbed by this first meeting with his biological father. He seems more interested in his Game Boy instead. Gianni and Nicole (Charlotte Rampling) meet accidentally in the Berlin hospital and, even though he feels awkward and almost ashamed at being seen as having fathered "such a child", they connect. Nicole has spent her life caring for her daughter and could teach Gianni something if only he were willing to listen. Through a series of chance encounters aided by a book left behind by Nicole (Born Twice Italian title: Nati due volte, incidentally the book on which the film is based), they meet several times and get talking.

Reception

Critical response

The Keys to the House has an approval rating of 77% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 26 reviews, and an average rating of 6.8/10. The website's critical consensus states: "Favoring subtlety over cheap sentimentality, The Keys to the House is emotionally honest, compassionate, and a genuine tear-jerker".[1] Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 74 out of 100, based on 13 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[2]

Awards and nominations

The film has won nine awards and fourteen nominations.

2004

In the same year of its release (2004) it won four awards and one nomination in the Venice Film Festival:

AwardCategory/Recipient
'CinemAvvenire' Award
Pasinetti Award
Pasinetti AwardBest Film Gianni Amelio
Sergio Trasatti AwardGianni Amelio

2005

In the second year (2005) it won:

One award and six nominations in the David di Donatello Awards:

NominationCategory/Recipient(s)
David
David
David
DavidBest Film (Miglior Film)Enzo Porcelli

Gianni Amelio (director)

David
DavidBest Screenplay (Migliore Sceneggiatura)Gianni Amelio

Sandro Petraglia

Three awards and five nominations in the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists:
AwardCategory/Recipient(s)
Silver Ribbon
Silver Ribbon
Silver Ribbon
NominationCategory/Recipient(s)
Silver Ribbon
Silver Ribbon
Silver Ribbon
Silver RibbonBest Screenplay (Miglior Sceneggiatura)Gianni Amelio

Sandro Petraglia

Stefano Rulli

Silver Ribbon
and two nominations in the Young Artist Awards:
NominationCategory/Recipient(s)
Young Artist Awards Best International Feature Film
Young Artist Awards

2006

In the third year (2006) it won:

One award in the Turia Awards:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: September 9, 2004 . The Keys to the House . Rotten Tomatoes.
  2. Web site: The Keys to the House . Metacritic.