Eye For Film >> Movies >> Happiness (1998) Film Review
Happiness
Reviewed by: Angus Wolfe Murray
What have lust among the over-60s, masturbation, paedophilia, phone sex, addictive romanticism, a large lady and a little night porter got to do with America's obsession with happiness?
Todd Solondz's investigation into the suburban psyche is so disturbing, it's funny, although when humour slides into the realms of nightmare, laughs congeal in the throat.
The performances are sharp and clear. Solondz's script is bitingly honest. Secrets blister sensibility with the power of a blowtorch. Everyone is alone, it seems, even when they are together, and since sex has an ever greater hold on public consciousness, isolation twists it into grotesque shapes.
Those lucky enough to have seen Solondz's low budget debut, Welcome To The Dollhouse, know that he is neither a voyeur, nor a cheap sensationalist. He exposes the hypocrisy of lower-middle-class New Jersey family life by ducking under its defenses and discovering garbage in the basement. His second film is more ambitious, looking beyond the emptiness of existence and failure of hope into a rich vein of sexual abnormality. The way he presents it, there is no "ab" in "normal", only ordinary people drowning in the sewage of their private desires.
Reviewed on: 19 Jan 2001