New York

Todd Solondz’s legacy of losers

Jordan Gelber and Donna Murphy star in "Dark Horse."

No one has satirized the middle class, Jewish suburbia of New Jersey quite like director Todd Solondz. From his first film, “Welcome to the Dollhouse” in 1995, to 2009′s film “Life During Wartime,” (which features a family who has fled New Jersey for the sunny beaches of Florida), Solondz has a knack for capturing those unremarkable, discontented lives —  skewering them and then sympathizing with them from one moment to the next.

Mr. Solondz’s most recent film is no different. In “Dark Horse,” Abe (Jordan Gelber) is chubby man in his mid-30s, living with his parents and working for his father’s real estate company. When Abe  meets a similarly stunted, heavily narcotized woman (Selma Blair) at a wedding and consequently proposes to her, his world begins to unravel. We sat down with Mr. Solondz to discuss the film, Dawn Weiner and man-children.

Metro: Many describe your filmmaking as exploring the darker side of suburbia. What do you think of that description? Do you agree with that?
Solondz: I don’t know. I suppose if that’s to mean that I have addressed “controversial” subject matter, then if it’s to be defined in that way I suppose one would have to say yes. I don’t really think in terms of ‘oh this is dark,’ or ‘light,’ I just think about characters and stories that compel me and that excite me and move me, and see what comes of it. It’s not quite as calculated as you might think.

When do you know you’ve just observed something that you want to put into a script?
I don’t know, it’s a mystery to me. I don’t mean to be evasive — it really is. I’ve been writing since I’m reading so it’s not a new process for me. Things enter one’s head in unpredictable ways, but writing is about sitting down, taking a pen, and putting it to paper. Or if you work on a laptop, you know, to just start doing it and pursuing it with a certain kind of rigor. So there are all sorts of interesting or tantalizing details that one observes in one’s life every time you take a walk in here or get on the subway, all sorts of things occur to one. But it’s really not until one starts trying to suss out the shape of a story that one begins to understand what is it that one is trying to do here.

Abe seems in line with this favorite character of the moment – the
man-child, which is seen in all the Judd Apatow films. What got you
interested in that?

Well, I didn’t really think going into it that
I was going to do a “man-child” it just worked out that way. I mean in
some sense, I’ve had children in all my films and so in sense this is
just an embodiment of another child. So, it just worked out. I set out
to do a boy meets girl movie and something very simple and low budget
and that’s what happened.

Some of the humor in “Dark Horse” is derived from Abe’s love of sicky-sweet pop music. Can you talk about including that?
It was very much inspired by the sensibility of “American Idol,” the sense [that], this is a character who’s in his thirties and yet still clings to his adolescence. And that music is emblematic of adolescence — the kind of high hopes and cheerful enthusiasm and optimism as well as the kinds of heartbreak that is well-known to teens. It seemed to be a nice counterpoint and at the same time a kind of embodiment of his own pathology.

You had offered Heather Matarazzo a role to reprise her role as Dawn Weiner [from "Welcome to the Dollhouse"] but she turned it down. Why?
I had offered her a couple times in a couple different movies had thought of reprising Dawn Weiner with Heather Matarazzo but she emphatically did not want to ever play that character again, so what can you do?

Out of all the characters you’ve created, are there any that you think you would actually enjoy being around?
Who I would enjoy having dinner with? I would certainly have a lovely dinner with Abe’s parents. And also Selma Blair’s character. I’m sure we would have a very nice evening out together. But I don’t know, I haven’t run through this. I don’t know that Abe and I would have a lot to connect with.


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
National

INTERVIEW: Protester Medea Benjamin explains what it's like…

Long-time activist Medea Benjamin was at the center of attention Thursday after she repeatedly interrupted President Obama as he spoke about the U.S. drone policy and Guantanamo Bay.

Local

Suspects still at large in Queens kidnapping of…

Police rescued on Monday an Ecuadorean businessman missing for 32 days. At least two suspects are still at large.

National

President Obama heckled about Guantanamo Bay by protester…

A very loud woman stole the show several times as President Obama addressed a crowd of journalists during a press conference this afternoon. The apparent protester interrupted Obama several times,…

Local

Bloomberg, Cuomo offer mixed reactions to Weiner's campaign

Following the launch of Anthony Weiner's campaign, a cagey Mayor Michael Bloomberg and a scornful Governor Andrew Cuomo separately offered their thoughts about the former…

Entertainment

'Star Trek Into Darkness' more like 'Into Dumbness'

“Star Trek Into Darkness” is as glum and mechanical as its predecessor was buoyant.

Entertainment

Graphic sex in applauded lesbian love story gets…

Lesbian love story makes a splash at Cannes.

Entertainment

Baroness after the bus crash: 'Starting with a…

"This tour is in gratitude to our fans who continued to pay attention to us," says Baroness singer John Baizley of the band's post-bus crash dates.

Entertainment

Film review: 'Fast & Furious 6' has a…

The sixth in the shape-shifting "Fast & Furious" series is almost as transcendently ridiculous as the glorious fifth. That's partly because it has a tank.

Sports

Red Bulls' Tim Cahill relishing life in the…

Tim Cahill had been through a scoring drought before. He also knows there are more important things in soccer than just scoring goals.

NHL

Rangers Notebook: Brad Richards healthy scratch for Game…

Brad Richards will not play in Game 4 and he may never again play as a member of the Rangers.

NFL

Giants' Hynoski suffers torn MCL, needs surgery

Starting fullback Henry Hynoski underwent an MRI on Thursday, which discovered he'd torn his left MCL.

NHL

Rangers face uphill battle starting with Game 4

The Rangers have trailed 0-3 in a best-of-seven series nine times in their history. Six times they have been swept.

Food

Gail Simmons' Chocolate Mint Profiteroles

Gail Simmons, “Top Chef” judge and Pepperidge Farm spokesperson, created this delicious recipe for chocolate mint profiteroles.

Style

Street style: Milan

Oxana Ong, in a graphic neon skirt suit with high slit, stand out from the crowd.

Lifestyle

Sidescroller: Apps that make your thumbs do the…

In this week's Sidescroller, we look at Endless Runners, the highly addictive, side-scroller running games popular on the iPhone and iPad.

Lifestyle

Dating: How to get laid and get paid

How to get laid and get paid and be happy.