Director: Todd Solondz
Stars: Jane Adams, Jon Lovitz, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Dylan Baker
After his 1995 breakthrough, Welcome to the Dollhouse, director Todd
Solondz was courted by a number of studios to make a big-budget film
with top stars. Instead, he chose to make this aggressively dark
comedy-drama of perversions and twisted lives.
Andy Kornbluth (Jon
Lovitz) explodes with anger after rejection in a restaurant from Joy
Jordan (Jane Adams), one of a trio of middle-class New Jersey sisters.
Joy's sister Trish (Cynthia Stevenson), a housewife with three kids, is
married to
psychiatrist Bill (Dylan
Baker), who counsels the lonely, overweight Allen (Philip Seymour
Hoffman). Allen is obsessed with Joy's other sister, the successful poet
Helen (Lara Flynn Boyle), all the while ignoring the attentions of his
seemingly sweet yet overweight neighbor Kristina (Camryn Manheim). Bill
has fantasies of turning an assault rifle on families in a park,
masturbates to teen magazine photos, and develops an unhealthy interest
in a classmate of his 11-year-old son, Billy (Rufus Read). After a
telephone sales job, Joy moves on to substitute teach at an adult
education class, where she falls prey to the advances of an insensitive
cabdriver, Vlad (Jared Harris). Allen's series of obscene phone calls to
Helen come to an end when she challenges him to come next door and
carry out his sexual threats. Meanwhile, the sisters' parents, Lenny and
Mona Jordan (Ben Gazzara and Louise Lasser), find their marriage
collapsing after 40 years. Lenny has sparked the interest of divorcée
Diane Freed (Elizabeth Ashley), but he actually would prefer to be
alone. The path to happiness, it seems, is littered with dreams,
despair, and abnormalities. Winner of the International Critics' prize
at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival, Happiness met with much controversy
both in pre-production and upon its release, as chronicled in producer
Christine Vachon's book Shooting to Kill. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
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