| Happiness (dir. Todd Solondz) |
| Written by Suresh S | |
| Thursday, 09 October 2008 | |
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1998’s Happiness is an ironic bittersweet comedy, depending on your point of view, like a slightly more burlesque Mike Leigh film or a slightly more sober Simpsons episode. Its unique sense of humor is exposed from the opening restaurant scene, which (without giving you spoilers) opens as an almost stereotype re-lay-shun-ship sequence, where a couple is breaking up with teary-eyed dignity, then veers into total farce in which one of them gets humiliated and owned in an outright hilarious manner. The scene also defines your equation with the film’s characters: that you can (and will often) laugh at their foibles and failings, and yet sympathize because they are real enough for you to care. The episodic plot is built around an ensemble cast; the connecting factor comes from 3 sisters and their interactions with the other characters. Interestingly, Solondz’s script does not center the triptych on the sisters themselves; only one (the youngest, Joy, who we see in the brilliant opening scene) can be described as a major character. Apart from Joy who shifts jobs and lovers in search of the elusive commitment, we meet Allen (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a masturbating loner slob nursing wet dreams of his neighbor – Joy’s eldest sister Helen, a hawt and successful novelist. Unable to strike up a normal conversation, Allen can only make anonymous phone calls (with sometimes hilarious results). The other main character is Dr. Bill Applewood (Dylan Baker, brilliantly played). Married to Joy’s middle sister Trish, Bill is a psychiatrist and caring family man. Bill is also a pedophile craving to exercise his fetishes on his son’s friends. Aside from these threads there is one (less important, in my view) of the sisters’ parents separating after 40 years of marriage because their father just wants “to be alone”. All of the above must sound wholly depressing, and sure enough, Happiness’ major players are a textbook of neurotic behavior. But Solondz is able to extract the laughs from his material without, in my view, ever cheapening it (the Filthy Critic disagrees ). His characters are consistent and superbly etched, his dialog is smart and funny. Check out this exchange between Helen and Joy: “Don’t think I’m laughing AT you, I’m laughing WITH you” “But I’m not laughing.” This is but a tiny sliver of the brilliant humor that pervades the script. One also appreciates that, apart from the odd contrived moment (an episode between a certain fat woman and a janitor has a bunged-in-for-gag-value feel), the story is unforced and fleshed out without ever getting tiresome through its running length, and thankfully does not pander to the common tendency to engineer neatly-tied-up-smiley-happy endings for its cast. Frequently hilarious, occasionally shocking, and tender without being sappy, Happiness is in sum a masterful and entertaining portrait of a modern dysfunctional society, one that richly deserves all the appreciation it has got ...including the rare 5-Stars of Kvlt approval.
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Happiness (dir. Todd Solondz)
Oct 09 2008 16:20:41 This thread discusses the Content article: Happiness (dir. Todd Solondz)
Cool. One character does find happiness in the movie. The kid looking at bikini clad women and getting his first boner. |
#7102 |
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Re:Happiness (dir. Todd Solondz)
Oct 09 2008 17:05:10 Good job! I remember reading Filthy's review of this a while back and having my interest piqued. Of course, he was a little less generous with his verdict, but that's expected, and no big matter.
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#7103 |
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Re:Happiness (dir. Todd Solondz)
Oct 09 2008 18:08:26 I love this movie. I remember that one scene very vividly, where Hoffman's character calls up the skinny woman and asks her what she's wearing and then proceeds to jerks off onto his apartment wall.
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#7106 |
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Re:Happiness (dir. Todd Solondz)
Oct 09 2008 18:09:23 The movie has a few nits, but I felt it deserved a 5 because on the whole the way it turned out, avoiding the major sort of pat potholing these films go into after a while, just made me...happy [:D]
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#7107 |
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Re:Happiness (dir. Todd Solondz)
Oct 10 2008 12:03:15 i liked this film tremendously. Words like 'edgy' are bandied about very carelessly and a whole bunch of simon and garfunkel loving assholes (this is not as random a reference as you'd think it is. Do some research if you don't believe me), apply it to films like American Beauty and As Good As It Gets. American Beauty in particular was a deeply conservative film masquerading poorly as one that was a unforgiving commentary on contemporary america playing to old stereotypes and cliches like slutty girls are actually virgins and homophobes are all repressed ass-bandits. It was entertaining but compared to this film's near psychotic edginess all those films totally wilt. Todd could very well look at those directors and given them the "Well you are wrong cause I am champagne and you are shit" line with great conviction.
It's also got some of the most wracking, uncomfortable scenes ever - particularly the one where the pedo doctor answers his son's queries in this hopeless matter of fact way. Great review. |
#7131 |
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