Life During Wartime reviews

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Mister Tee
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Hollywood Reporter, equally pleased. Todd is back!

Life During Wartime -- Film Review
By Deborah Young, September 03, 2009 08:44 ET
Bottom Line: Todd Solondz's irresistible return to Miami in a comedy about forgiving.
Venice Film Festival -- Competition

VENICE -- Glancing backward at the 1998 "Happiness," his postmodern look at a dysfunctional family, Todd Solondz liberally updates the characters and their stories in "Life During Wartime," a heady mix of deadpan humor that boldly uses such topics as pedophilia, race and terrorism to plead the need for forgiveness at a personal and national level.

The setting again is Miami's Jewish community, with its mar mitzvahs, neuroses and fixation on Israel, which becomes an instant microcosm for all America. Profound in its funny hipness, it shows Solondz as the true heir to Woody Allen, albeit on a far kinkier and politically/socially engaged level. This could be the film that enlarges Solondz's list of loyal fans, who at the moment are clustered around film festivals.

The film's mysterious early scenes set the tone of surreal outrageousness and get the viewer to work connecting the narrative dots. In the first scene, crack, robbery and infidelity undermine the marriage of the childlike Joy (waiflike British actress Shirley Henderson) and Allen (Michael Kenneth Williams of "The Wire" fame), her imperfectly reformed con husband. Their teary breakup in a New Jersey restaurant is paralleled to an intense dinner in Miami during which Joy's sister, Trish (Allison Janney), falls in love with the older Harvey (Michael Lerner) after discovering that he, too, loves Israel.

The two scenes connect when Joy flees to the overprotective arms of her family in Miami, followed by the ghost of her aggressive ex, Andy (Paul Reubens aka Pee-wee Herman), who committed suicide but still is after her. Sleepwalking that night through a deserted shopping center, Joy is accompanied by the film's funny-thoughtful theme song about a country living through a war.

Another major character is Timmy (Dylan Riley Snyder), Trish's freckled 12-year-old, who is busy writing about "what it means to be a man" and coming to terms with the traumatic discovery that his father, William (Ciaran Hinds), is serving time in jail for child molestation. Solondz has a unique ability to illuminate serious themes like this through absurd dialogue, for instance, in Timmy's interrogation of his future stepfather Harvey to find out whether he, too, likes little boys.

Timmy also has pressing questions about what it means to forgive and whether it's possible to forgive terrorists if they had a reason for what they did. All he receives, of course, are shocked, pat answers.

Meanwhile, William has been released from prison and is looking for his former family. Hinds is a magnetic actor, and when he is picked up in a bar by a rich, unhappy woman (Charlotte Rampling), sparks fly. His final confrontation with his older son, Billy (Chris Marquette) -- one of the few scenes played straight in the film -- is highly moving in its exploring the limits of forgiveness.

Miami kitsch is tastefully spoofed in Roshelle Berliner's pastel sets, an apt backdrop for Ed Lachman's balanced camerawork. Not to be forgotten among the impeccable cast is Ally Sheedy as Joy and Trish's wildly successful and self-centered sister and Rich Pecci as Harvey's intelligent but socially unavailable son.
Mister Tee
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Post by Mister Tee »

I don't know if this merits a thread of its own, but this review is certainly enthusiastic. And, just as Trainspotting made me hold out hope for Danny Boyle all those years, Happiness has kept me in Todd Solondz' corner.

Life During Wartime
By TODD MCCARTHY

A Werc Werk Works production. (International sales: Fortissimo Films, Amsterdam.) Produced by Christine Kunewa Walker, Derrick Tseng. Executive producers, Elizabeth Redleaf, Mike S. Ryan. Co-producers, Ken Bailey, Andrew Peterson. Directed, written by Todd Solondz.

Joy Jordan - Shirley Henderson
Bill Maplewood - Ciaran Hinds
Trish Maplewood - Allison Janney
Harvey Weiner - Michael Lerner
Billy Maplewood - Chris Marquette
Mark Weiner - Rich Pecci
Jacqueline - Charlotte Rampling
Andy - Paul Reubens
Helen Jordan - Ally Sheedy
Timmy Maplewood - Dylan Riley Snyder
Mona Jordan - Renee Taylor
Allen - Michael Kenneth Williams
Wanda - Gaby Hoffman

In revisiting his 1998 ensembler "Happiness," Todd Solondz may have made his best film with "Life During Wartime." The distinctive, boundary-pushing writer-director has had the eccentric inspiration to resurrect the same central characters a decade later, but using entirely different actors. Winning result, which reels off one riveting scene after another, stands as both a unique sort-of sequel and a film that requires no prior reference points; it's entirely satisfying either way, though even richer if you recall the antecedent. The resolutely niche filmmaker has never had a real breakout success and the confrontational nature of his latest won't change that fact, but his loyal following will be buoyed by this strong effort.

A rare collection of sexual quagmires and perversions lay at the heart of "Happiness," and a most impressive aspect of the new film is how it so piercingly examines the residue and continuing ramifications of those dilemmas a decade later. Best remembered, no doubt, is the pedophile father, Dylan Baker's Bill Maplewood, a shrink and father of three kids who can't keep his mind or hands off young boys.

At the story's core, however, are the Jordan sisters, Joy, Trish and Helen. Intense opening scenes have Joy (Shirley Henderson, Moaning Myrtle in the "Harry Potter" films) dubiously listening as Allen (Michael Kenneth Williams, "The Wire") urgently insists he's overcome drugs and his overall waywardness ... well, almost. Trish (Allison Janney), now living in Florida, is amazed to find herself responding emotionally and sexually -- presumably for the first time since Bill was carted off -- to a portly, aging but irresistibly nice recent divorced gent, Harvey (Michael Lerner), a secondary character from Solondz's first film, "Welcome to the Dollhouse."

But remembrances of traumas past pose barriers to present happiness. Joy, not inclined to give Allen the benefit of the doubt -- "Once a perv, always a perv," she opines to her mother, Mona (Renee Taylor) -- receives visitations from the ghost of her former suitor, Andy (Paul Reubens), who committed suicide over her and tries to get her to reconsider her opinion of him.

But the most compelling character this time around is Timmy (Dylan Riley Snyder), Trish's second son, who's about to have his bar mitzvah and become, according to Jewish tradition, a man. In this light, he's horrified to learn that his father Bill is not dead, as his mother had told him, but has just been released from prison. Tormented by his schoolmates, he questions Trish tearfully about exactly what pederasts do to boys and whether the behavior is inherited. "I don't want to be a faggot!" he shrieks, while also unable to deal with his mother's deceit.

Quiet and alone, Bill (Ciaran Hinds) is irresistibly drawn to making some sort of contact with his sons, the other being college student Billy (Chris Marquette). At a hotel along the way, he has an extraordinary sexual encounter with a lonely, chillingly blunt woman (Charlotte Rampling), which alone is worth the price of admission; the writing here and the performances by both actors are spellbinding.

Joy's visit to Los Angeles to see her now ragingly successful if impossibly overwrought TV-writer sister Helen (Ally Sheedy) perhaps puts too fine a point on one of the central themes of both "Happiness" and "Life During Wartime," which concerns who people are vs. who they pretend to be. But the interlude is fully justified by a moment in which one character threatens to attack another with an Emmy statuette.

Solondz doesn't shrink from the implications of everything he sets up, as the climactic scenes fully carry through on the emotional provocations of the most intractable problems. Nearly all the resolutions are terribly sad, leaving scars that the filmmaker might care to re-examine in another 10 years' time with still another cast, and yet mostly preordained by the nature of the characters and the ways they've chosen to behave.

Formally, the film is deep-dish pleasure. Vet cinematographer Ed Lachman (using the Red camera system for the first time, and whose past work is saluted in a prominently visible poster for "I'm Not There") enables Solondz to raise his visual game to a new level; the richly colored compositions are as bold as the dialogue. The fact that the production was largely filmed in Puerto Rico will likely amaze even native Floridians, so seamless is the match. Music track selections are surprising and opportune.

The actors come off superbly. Always so good with sassy, somewhat jaundiced characters, Janney shines as a still-attractive middle-aged woman almost too eager to embrace a new beginning, while Lerner, a fine character actor not often given such dimensional roles, matches her with a wonderful performance. Henderson does neurotic very well indeed and flourishes in her across-the-mortal-divide exchanges with the fine Reubens.

But most heart-wrenching of all is young, freckle-faced Snyder, playing a still prepubescent kid forced to cope with the messiest of adult problems and faced with potential psychological issues he can't possibly digest.
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