The House (2017)
The House is a 2017 American comedy film of a couple who set up a Illegal casino in their friends house to recover from their daughters scholarship.
11 November 1974, Northridge, Los Angeles, California, USA
7 January 1971, Modesto, California, USA
1 October 1957, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
29 October 1982, Los Angeles, California, USA
20 March 1973, Burnsville, Minnesota, USA
20 February 1973, Santa Monica, California, USA
29 July 1965, Secaucus, New Jersey, USA
2 October 1971, Patterson, New Jersey, USA
July 06, 2017
Will Ferrell will turn 50 in a week or so. How sad for him-and his fans-that Cohen's birthday gift is the biggest flop of the comedy legend's career.
July 06, 2017
Instead of catching fire, The House just sits there collecting dust and mold.
July 05, 2017
The House is a solid, if unremarkable, big studio comedy with fleeting moments of humor peppered throughout its runtime.
July 06, 2017
The movie takes an idea with a slender thread of promise and does absolutely nothing with it, dissolving instead into unrelieved stupidity.
June 30, 2017
There's more character development (and more believable plot turns) in a typical "Saturday Night Live" sketch.
July 06, 2017
The House is a dark enterprise, and often unsettling, which is not what you usually want from a Will Ferrell flick.
June 30, 2017
The pace is hectic, but the jokes just aren't there.
June 30, 2017
It's all meant to be wild and crazy, but somehow it seems simultaneously nasty and dull.
July 06, 2017
The House is one of the worst, unfunniest movies of the year.
June 30, 2017
Instead of writing actual characters, they've hired a gaggle of beloved comedians to do bits based on stereotype and persona, and have concocted a cockamamie suburban crime story that manages to be both bizarre and incredibly thin.
June 30, 2017
Broad comedies are always something of a roll of the dice. And while The House isn't an absolute disaster, it's undeniable that this is one that's crapped out.
July 01, 2017
A dark, startlingly bloody journey into the bitter, empty, broken heart of the American middle class, a blend of farce and satire built on a foundation of social despair.

