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BACKWARDS AND FORWARDS
WITH TODD SOLONDZ
By Karin
Luisa Badt
“If you are the depressed type now, that is the way you are always
going to be.” This is Todd Solondz’ alter ego speaking in his new
film Palindromes, his new “fairytale” about an adolescent girl
going through many hard changes in life— including pregnancy, forced
abortion and a Huckleberry Finn escape down a river— all in a search
for unconditional love. The first word in this film is “Mom” and the
last word “Mom”: a mirror of palindromes that shows that nothing
ever changes. The story is simple: a girl wants the ideal love of a
mother, and to find it she decides to be a mother herself, and yet,
from beginning to end, she is unsatisfied in her quest. Her forced
abortion— and consequent hysterectomy-- is simply a metaphor for the
inability to evolve, and indeed the final scene is a flashback of
shots back to the opening frame.
Todd Solondz made his film a palindrome— at every
level— because as he puts it: “we are paradoxically always changing—
we grow and we change— and at the same time, it is also true that we
are not changing. Certain things, yes you can improve, however there
are certain things that we cannot, and we are better off if we can
accept the limitations of who we in fact are.” This lack of change,
failure of difference, is not just individual. Aviva, the adolescent
girl (Her name, need I say, is a palindrome?) is played by eight
different characters, each sharing with the other the basic essence
of adolescent vulnerability, although in every other way
different: fat, thin, black, white, male, female red-haired,
dark-haired, little, huge. Solondz’s point is that this character is,
in essence, universal, and that just as all eight characters are
vaguely the same, so are we: inherently unloved yet hopeful, a
universal flaw that we should accept. Asked how he cast his actors,
and why eight Avivas, Solondz responded: “For the Avivas, I was
looking for a quality of vulnerability, of innocence, that certain
young people can project, to provide something of the glue that
connects them, from one to the other, so that even as they change
sex and race and so forth throughout the course of the film, there
would be a certain kind of consistency that would make Aviva in fact
one character.”
That “one character” is the tortured adolescent that Solondz knows
well, from his first work, Welcome to the Dollhouse (1996) to his
more recent Storytelling (2001), all of which feature the loser
in a lonely aggressive hell, replete with New Jersey strip-malls and
over-anxious moms. One wonders what happened in Solondz’s own New
Jersey suburban past to have this issue of the unloved, suicidal,
pedophilia-prone adolescent so raw, the fodder of such forcefully
critical masterpieces of film such as Happiness (1998). One also
wonders how he perceives his native USA. Solondz’s films are as much
an examination of the adolescent as of his home country’s consumer
culture and its native patriotism. Flags waving in every scene,
America comes across as a cruel market of wannabee Beautiful People and
self-satisfied religious fanatics, where the only retort is a sort
of violence— be it through guns or storytelling.
Solondz, grey and balding, with a tendency to keep one hand in a
pocket, and his head lowered, is open to such questioning. He grins
widely from behind his big green-framed glasses, and, while
continuing to look askance, shifting his gaze down and to the left
when approached by questioners, he is more than ready to proffer
glib responses before his publicist slips him away, responses which
one feels are rather like his films themselves, made
tongue-and-cheek.
The biggest question in this film, as in other Solondz films, is the
choice to shock the audience with scenes of what most critics would
agree is “bad taste.” After Aviva’s mother forces her 12 year old to
have an abortion, Aviva runs away to seek for new mother-love, and
finds it in the blissful fairytale home of Mamma Sunshine, a
born-again Christian who bakes “Jesus-Tear” cookies, and has
assorted with her all the kinds of children who, in a perfect-obsessed
world, might have been aborted: the blind, the crippled, the
epileptic, the dumb (To quote Aviva’s own mother, a deformed child
isn’t a baby, “it’s a tumor.”). Aviva is welcomed into this ideal
gingerbread home, this parody of do-gooders where sunflowers bloom
on emerald-green grass, and where the frames are so overcrowded
with colors and cloths that even the spectator feels the
claustrophobia of cloying maternal warmth.
Here the jokes get cruel, much like Mamma Sunshine’s own iron that
is kept upright in one frame with its heated point facing us. “Last
year our special daughter ran away,” quips Mamma S in her sweety-pie
voice. “And she didn’t even have any legs.” Other risqué humor
includes the blind girl being complimented for her masterful job at
“watching the flame.” One of the most campy shots, hard to watch, is
all these disabled children— including Barbara, a botched abortion—
singing with microphones, in an imitation of the Jackson Five.
“What cruelty?” says Todd Solondz. “I love these characters. The
blind, the crippled.” He turns the question on the audience- if
they perceive something wrong with filming an obese black girl
(one of the Avivas, and the most powerfully played), that shows
something wrong with them. “Why shouldn’t these people be
actors in the movie? I glory in having a big black woman, but if she
is mocked because of this, or if the children with disabilities are
mocked, that is not where my head is. Why shouldn’t the disabled
sing?”
Solondz’s responses belie the fact that it is hard to take a
psycho-realistic approach— i.e. “love the characters”-- to a film
that is so post-modernly self-conscious. Each scene is set up as a
stage, its props as fake as could be, resulting in tableaux of
macabre jokes. There is, for example, a shot of Aviva and a bag of
garbage both leaning in the same way against a trailer, to highlight
their similarity as rejects. In another, a sexually violated doll is
found in a dumpster full of aborted fetuses. As for the misfits—
including one named Skippy after the peanut butter— these are spoofs
of people, hardly real characters that we can “love” by any stretch
of the imagination. Indeed, some of these characters are so crudely
drawn, they seem an adolescent’s cruel sketch of his enemies in the
lunch-room. So can Solondz be serious when he says: “The family
Aviva comes to is a sort of paradise. There is a poignancy when you
first see these kids at the breakfast table.” This is the very same
breakfast table where Mr. Sunshine asks: “Can you pass the freedom
toasts?”
Solondz may be purposefully careful in his responses, so as to let
the controversial film speak for itself. He prefers, he says, to
stand in the sidelines: “curious to see how this movie plays in
Ohio”--- if it ever, of course, gets that far into the heartland. The
film, he speculates, could be taken for a pro-life film (after all,
the climax is the mother’s dreadful decision to force her daughter
to abort), but it could also be taken as pro-choice film
(the Sunshines, avid pro-lifers, are behind a murder movement to
kill abortionists, which results in a bloody spree of dead
children). He wants to leave it open.
If
pressed, however, Solondz will admit that he is deliberately
playing with a whole host of American sacred cows, on all fronts,
from the abortion debate to commercialism (Aviva’s mom aborted one
son so as to be able to afford “N’Synch” tickets) and even—
beyond touché— the twin towers.
“The twin towers,” Solondz quips. “That’s the least of it. My movie
requires a certain open-mindedness. If you go in with a certain
liberal agenda, or a certain conservative one, you are going to look
at it in a very limited way.” He contends that what he is mostly
getting at is the American— and the universal— tendency towards
narrow-minded binary thinking. “I want to explore through narrative
techniques something of who we are in this polarized world. The U.S.
is just a microcosm of what is happening globally, when you have the
secular and the fundamentalist division.”
While it is arguable whether this “secular/fundamentalist” division
is simply another American construct, what makes Solondz’s
film sharply rewarding is the fact that
it dares to tell the story we all know— the vulnerability of
adolescents, the obstinacy of limited world views, the unnurturing
environment of strip mall commercialism— through a prism of
uncompromising pain. The movie— as enfant provocateur— works.
Morever, storytelling is Solondz’ forte, and here he has outdone
himself. We have references to Night of the Hunter and
Huckleberry Finn in the fake river scene, where a plastic boat
sails down a pink river, a painted backdrop to Aviva’s journey. We
have “mad tea party” references in the Sunshine home and delightful
Alice in Wonderland transformations as Aviva goes from small to
big, and down again. There is even a countertext to
Dorothy’s “there is no place like home” in Aviva’s lullaby of
escape: “Take me please, help me get faraway, to a place, any
place, faraway.” Each “chapter” of the eight-sectioned piece begins with
a “new” Aviva, always different and always the same (except for the
portrait that hangs in the overlt pink bedroom), which makes the film
fresh no matter how many stories it references or how dark the
theme: a testimony to the power of palindromes.
Our director is wrong to say that we don’t move forward. He has. This
film, “dedicated to Dawn Weiner”, the suicidal adolescent
protagonist of his first movie, is by far his most coherent work,
the one that presses most shockingly at the memory of being
adolescent, and at the pain of being human--imperfect, and yet
wanting, like the director himself, to have it both ways, stressing
imperfection at the same time that he, the artist, makes it rhyme.
-Karin Badt is a film professor at the University of Paris VIII.
She spoke with Todd Solondz at the Venice Film Festival in September
2004. |