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Bleak Houses
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Todd Solondz, the skinny guy
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with the thick glasses and oddly passionate drone, had an art-house smash in
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1996 with Welcome to the Dollhouse , which reinforced the perception that
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art-house smashes are pictures that take one bleak, uncommercial idea and
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pummel you into a stupor with it. Telling the story of a myopic adolescent girl
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who's persecuted by her peers and slighted by her suburban family (which
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reveres her pretty little sister, a goody-two-shoes in a tutu), Solondz
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prolonged his heroine's humiliations until I wanted to scream, "I GET IT
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ALREADY!" He was a maestro, all right, but of the sadistic kind, and the
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movie's laughs didn't leaven its punishingly untranscendent misery--they
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condensed it. This was the world as seen through glasses so thick they barely
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let in light.
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Solondz's
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new foray into misery, Happiness , lays it on even thicker. This time,
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however, he spreads the pain around, and he brings in sundry instruments to
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share in the playing of his lone theme. The upshot defies categorization.
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Happiness is an aching roundelay, a triumphantly benumbed ensemble farce
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that mingles condescension and compassion in a manner that's disarmingly--and
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often upsettingly--original.
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Before I go any further: You should know that I have
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collaborated with the co-producer of Happiness , Christine Vachon, on a
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new book called Shooting to Kill , which may be ordered by clicking here.
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(Just kidding. Wait a minute, I'm not kidding. Click here before you do anything else.) I was around for
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pre-production and made a few casting suggestions (politely ignored), went on a
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stupefyingly dull "tech scout" with the director and key crew, watched some
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scenes being shot, and got steady gossip from Christine that I can't share with
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you although I might if you e-mail me proof that you've bought the book. I
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thought about recusing myself, but I have no direct financial ties to the
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picture and think it's one of the most interesting of the year. Why should I
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deprive myself?
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Happiness revolves around three sisters who live some distance from a
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large metropolis, but the relationship to Chekhov ends there. The place is
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suburban New Jersey. Sweet, tremulous Joy Jordan (Jane Adams), the youngest,
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has turned 30 and still lives in the house of her parents, Mona (Louise Lasser)
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and Lenny (Ben Gazzara), who have a condo in Florida and are in the throes of a
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vexingly tentative separation. Middle sister Helen (Lara Flynn Boyle) is the
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author of arty, titillating short stories and a magnet for studs and weight
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lifters; she resides in a dim high-rise down the corridor from two unrelated
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fatties, Kristina (Camryn Manheim) and Allen (Philip Seymour Hoffman). The
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latter, a compulsive obscene phone caller who longs for his sleek, chic
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neighbor, is the psychiatric patient of Bill Maplewood (Dylan Baker), who
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happens to be the husband of Helen's older sister, chipper Trish (Cynthia
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Stevenson)--and also a pedophile who, in the course of the film, drugs little
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boys and has (off camera) sex with them.
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Pedophilia, rape, murder, suicide,
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dismemberment, obscene talk: Happiness is about the sense of
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incompleteness that these seemingly disparate people carry inside them--and,
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more important, the ways in which their prodigious longings manifest themselves
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in their sexual predilections. And yet these kindred spirits almost never
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acknowledge a connection. Their similarities don't mitigate their aloneness,
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and talking about their problems doesn't help much, either. It's no accident
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that Solondz's pedophile protagonist is a shrink and that the characters who
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get things off their chests go ahead and act on them anyway. There's no such
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thing as catharsis: Come once, you'll want to come again and again and
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again.
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The
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pre-title sequence sets the drolly excruciating tone. Joy has just told Andy
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(Jon Lovitz) that she thinks they should stop seeing each other. Solondz goes
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so tight on Lovitz's ample flesh that he could sweat off the screen and onto
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your lap. But as his strangled monosyllables give way to lavish verbal abuse
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the shots go wider, so that we take in the romantic restaurant awash in fake
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plants and frippery--a setting that mocks this unhappy couple the way the
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movie's very title hangs over it like a mushroom cloud. Solondz keeps
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Happiness right on the border between irony and empathy. The gags are
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often easy, but the characters are in an authentic hell. And there isn't a
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trace of irony in the skinny, frazzled Adams, who's as raw as a newly birthed
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gazelle. Some directors know how to exploit their actors' vulnerabilities, and
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Solondz seems to have scraped off layers of his leading lady's skin--it's so
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translucent you can almost read her organs.
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At the other extreme, Hoffman, as one of the two fat
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neighbors, is encased in his flab like a tortured prisoner of war. His doleful
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low tones and operatic mouth-breathing give even his vilest lines a dopey
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sweetness. In fact, Solondz compels us to collude with even his most unsavory
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characters. Baker's pedophile is so furtive that he's almost immobile, but we
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register the darting eyes under the bland, Mr. Rodgers-like façade, and as he
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waits for a little boy to eat a drugged tuna sandwich, we hold our breaths the
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way we did in Psycho when Norman Bates watched the car with the body of
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Marian Crane almost not sink into the swamp. The only character whose pain we
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don't feel is also the only "normal" one, Stevenson's Trish--a sugary,
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passive-aggressive gargoyle who embodies everything that made some of us flee
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the suburbs for the urban jungle.
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Not all of
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Happiness is as consistently inspired. The scenes of Joy at work
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(wanting to do good, she crosses a picket line to take a job teaching English
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as a second language) are coarsely conceived, and the parents, Mona and Lenny,
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don't exist on the same level as the other characters. Boyle's Helen is a thin
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dirty joke rescued only by a good punch line (and Boyle, who drops her voice to
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a husky whisper, looks wildly out of place in this clearly Jewish family). But
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some of the one-joke roles turn out to have more under the surface than is at
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first apparent. In one scene, fat Kristina tells Allen about a horrible deed
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she has committed and, while her listener attempts to process it, appalled,
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tucks into an ice cream sundae. That might have been the cheapest kind of fat
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gag, but because of the way it's shot and acted, our responses don't end with a
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snicker. We can see that Kristina is living a life of nightmarish deprivation,
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and getting the only kind of pleasure that she knows.
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John Waters once said that he would like to
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make a film that received an X or NC-17 rating with no foul language or
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genitalia--"it would just be so offensive to people's values." Happiness
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certainly has foul language, as well as a (brief) shot of Joy's uncovered
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breasts, but what's truly shocking is its unblinking gaze--hard and clinical
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but also nonjudgmental. Scenes in which Maplewood's son (Rufus Read) asks his
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dad about masturbation come close to being healthy . But the context is
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too spooky, and the conversations creep into the red zone when the father
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offers to demonstrate his technique.
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Solondz's writing doesn't
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cut very deep, but it does swing wide, smashing taboos on all sides--the film
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is the dark side of There's Something About Mary . And in some ways, it
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couldn't have had a more fitting launch. At the same time that the picture was
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winning an international critics' prize at the Cannes Film Festival (where it
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was shown outside the main competition), Universal, the studio that financed it
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(through its recently acquired "indie" wing, October), unloaded it in a
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panic--largely because its new owners, the Bronfmans of Seagram, feared being
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associated with a movie that featured a pedophile. That the booze-peddling
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Bronfmans wanted nothing to do with a film that functions as the opposite of an
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intoxicant is the kind of irony with which Happiness teems.
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October did choose to
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release The Celebration , a Danish dysfunctional family drama that treats
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matters of incest and perversion with a tad more taste. Children, siblings,
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nieces, and nephews all gather at a prosperous estate to celebrate the
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60 th birthday of its formidable patriarch (Henning Moritzen), who
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turns out to have had monstrous designs on two of his own children. You've seen
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this sort of picture before: People get drunk and drag skeletons out of
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closets, and the tension between the formal dinner party rituals and the truths
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that simmer beneath the surface give way to a Walpurgisnacht . The
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anti-patriarchal content is fairly routine, but you should see the movie anyway
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because the director, Thomas Vinterberg, is a great, hypersensitive filmmaker
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whose edgy, grainy, caught-on-the-fly camerawork seems to make the very
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celluloid shiver with rage.
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