The House of Blue Leaves, John Guare's absurdist black comedy first staged in 1966, is back in a an uneasy, star-filled Broadway revival. Ben Stiller plays Arty Shaughnessy, a wannabe songwriter with a schizophrenic wife named Bananas, a doting girlfriend named Bunny, a bomb-throwing son headed to Vietnam and a houseful of nuns watching the Pope's visit to New York City on TV. Stiller seems both too young and too shrewd for the role, but it's Edie Falco's intense, glassy-eyed (and Tony-nominated) performance as the nutty wife that throws the production off. Still, Guare's play doesn't compromise on its dark vision of American values turned upside down it's an unsettling evening, and director David Cromer resists the urge to temper it with easy laughs.