Happiness Movie Review
Happiness Review

"Happiness" Overview

Rating: NR
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Todd SolondzProducer : Ted Hope,Christine Vachon
Screenwiter : Todd Solondz
Starring Jane Adams, Elizabeth Ashley, Dylan Baker, Lara Flynn Boyle, Ben Gazzara, Jared Harris, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Louise Lasser, Camryn Manheim, Cynthia Stevenson
Holy smokes.
Happiness has been mired in controversy for the entire year, and not without
good reason. Put simply, Happiness is one of the most shocking films I’ve ever
seen – this from a man who adores A Clockwork Orange.
Not that it’s particularly graphic or lewd. Rather, Happiness is truly
eye-opening for its theme: that everyone in this world is pretty much a pig of
some sort. Those that aren’t are doomed to be victims.
Watching the film, you get the idea that director Solondz (Welcome to the
Dollhouse) may not be too far off the mark. A disturbing investigation into
the underbelly of suburban New Jersey, the film tracks a few days in the life
of one highly dysfunctional family and the people with whom their lives
intersect. Namely, an obscene phone caller, a murderous neighbor, a pedophilic
serial rapist/family dad, a suicidal loser... and that’s not even including the
three sisters themselves. There’s no one redeemable in this movie.
And that fits it to a “T”. Unlike Your Friends and Neighbors, which showed a
bunch of pitiful losers interacting with one another to no ultimate end,
Happiness shows how a bunch of losers can watch their lives get even more
pitiful — and downright disturbing – when the seams in society start to crack.
Happiness is not for everyone. In fact, it may not be for many of you, unless
you have a strong stomach and a taste for the bizarre. And Happiness may not
be perfect, either. It’s too long, it rambles from time to time, and there’s
probably one too many characters to follow. But the film’s boundary pushing,
gripping storytelling, and truer-than-life moments make up for it all.
Happiness... is a warm gun. (Dylan, with casualties in background)
Reviewer: Christopher Null



