Happiness (film)

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Happiness

DVD cover for Happiness
Directed by Todd Solondz
Produced by David Linde,
James Schamus
Written by Todd Solondz
Starring Jane Adams
Philip Seymour Hoffman
Jon Lovitz
Dylan Baker
Lara Flynn Boyle
Justin Elvin
Cynthia Stevenson
Lila Glantzman-Leib
Gerry Becker
Rufus Read
Louise Lasser
Ben Gazzara
Camryn Manheim
Arthur J. Nascarella
Molly Shannon
Ann Harada
Douglas McGrath
Distributed by Good Machine
Release date(s) October 16, 1998
Running time 134 min.
Language English
Budget $3,000,000 (estimated)
IMDb profile

Happiness is a 1998 black comedy motion picture, written and directed by Todd Solondz, that shows the lives of three sisters and their families. It is also the title of a 1924 comedy feature film.

It stars Jane Adams, Elizabeth Adams, Dylan Baker, Lara Flynn Boyle, Ben Gazzara, Jared Harris, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Louise Lasser, Jon Lovitz, Camryn Manheim, Rufus Read and Cynthia Stevenson. The film was awarded the FIPRESCI Prize at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival for "its bold tracking of controversial contemporary themes, richly-layered subtext, and remarkable fluidity of visual style," and the cast received the National Board of Review award for best ensemble performance.

Contents

[edit] Plot overview

Happiness is an episodic movie, like Robert Altman's film Short Cuts. The episodes show parts of the lives of three New Jersey sisters as well as their parents. It is a movie which breaks with "normal" Hollywood conventions at every opportunity.

This becomes first apparent in the opening sequence, where one of the sisters tells a suitor (Jon Lovitz), who was just about to propose to her, that she does not wish to be with him. The suitor tells her that she insulted him throughout their relationship. The suitor's date starts to lose her happiness.

The rest of the movie is no more squeamish when it comes to showing where and how interpersonal relationships fail, how people get further and further away from happiness in their lives. There are some short glimpses of it, for example when one of the sisters sleeps with a Russian from her language class, who woos her with guitar playing and soppy words — only to steal her happiness in the next scene by robbing her.

Helen (Lara Flynn Boyle), the eldest sister, is a successful publicist who is adored and envied by everyone she knows, and can have any man she wants. Her charmed life leaves her ultimately unfulfilled; she despairs that no one wants her for herself, and that the praise regularly heaped upon her is undeserved. She is fascinated by a neighbor (Philip Seymour Hoffman) who makes obscene phone calls to her apartment and tries to seek out a relationship with him. Meanwhile, the neighbor, Allen sinks deeper into depression as Helen's sudden interest in him ruins his fantasies, and realizes that a woman who truly cares for him (Camryn Manheim) has been right under his nose right along.

Trish (Cynthia Stevenson), the middle sister, is happily married to psychiatrist Bill Maplewood (Dylan Baker) and has three children. Unbeknownst to Trish, however, Bill is a pedophile. He develops an obsession for his 11-year-old son Billy's classmate Johnny Grasso. When Johnny comes for a sleepover, Maplewood drugs Johnny as well as all his own family and then sodomises Johnny while he is unconscious. He also learns that another boy is home alone and goes to his house too.

After Johnny is taken to the hospital and found to have been abused, Bill is arrested. Out on bail, he admits to his son that he is a child molester, that he raped two of Billy's friends; that he would do it again; and that he would masturbate rather than abuse his own son.

Finally, the sisters' parents, Mona (Louise Lasser) and Joe (Ben Gazzara) are separating after 40 years of marriage. Joe is bored with his marriage, but does not want to start another relationship; he simply "wants to be alone." As Mona copes with being single during her twilight years, Joe tries to rekindle his enthusiasm for life by having an affair with a neighbor. It is no use, however, as Joe eventually finds that he has lost the capability for virtually any emotion.

[edit] Themes

Tragic and disturbing scenes are often tempered with dark humor, such as a scene in which one character confesses to committing murder while ordering dessert.

The grim outlook on adult life stops only for the last scene, which shows the only truly happy person in the movie — 12-year-old Billy has just ejaculated for the first time and comes inside to tell his family, who are naturally shocked.

[edit] Controversy

The film was highly controversial upon its released and was given an NC-17 rating by the MPAA. Particularly controversial was its portrayal of Bill, a pedophile and child rapist, as a three-dimensional human being with redeeming qualities. While the way in which the role was written was criticized, however, Baker was lauded for his performance.

[edit] See also

[edit] Trivia

The actor Molly Shannon's character can't seem to remember when discussing Andy's death is Edward James Olmos.

The poster art was done by comic book creator Daniel Clowes.

[edit] External link

In other languages