Reel Critics -- Rob Orozco
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“Storytelling” is the much anticipated follow-up to writer/director
Todd Solondz’s “Welcome to the Dollhouse” and “Happiness.” As with his
previous endeavors, Solondz mines the depths of human depravity and
provides biting social commentaries that are, unfortunately, missing from
today’s paint-by-numbers films.
As the title suggests, “Storytelling” is a narrative film in which the
main theme is narrative itself: a movie about how people turn life
experience into stories and how those stories can betray or exploit the
reality they depict. Sullen, brooding and full of the acid humor that has
marked Solondz’s films to date, the film has ambitions that aren’t quite
realized -- perhaps because part of the movie looks like a solid first
draft. Solondz planned “Storytelling” as a three-part anthology, but
before its release he cut out the third section, starring the star of
‘Dollhouse,’ Heather Mazzola.
The first portion, the better of the remaining pieces, is titled
“Fiction” and is set in the mid-1980s at some anonymous college campus.
The story is about a college creative writing student Vi (Selma Blair)
whose boyfriend Marcus (Leo Fitzpatrick) has cerebral palsy. The duo are
students of a Pulitzer Prize-winning African American professor Gary
Scott (Robert Wisdom). Marcus writes a lame uplifting story about his
cerebral palsy and is lauded by his classmates, who appear uncomfortable
criticizing a disabled person. The aspiring teacher’s pet calls Marcus to
task, which eventually leads to the breakup of Vi and Marcus.
Vi later moves on to a one-night stand with her writing professor, an
imposing figure whose tastes run toward kinky “Mandingo” fantasies. (We
hear but don’t quite see their sexual encounter. To both avoid and
ridicule the MPPAA’s threat of an NC-17 rating, Solondz covers the tryst
with a tacky-looking red rectangle. Because the action is covered, the
ratings organization gave “Storytelling” an R rating.) And when Vi turns
the experience into a story for her class, she finds herself savaged by
the class as being deliberately “mean,” “derogatory” and “creating
uplifting characters/situations” in her story. However, Vi is praised by
her teacher, who nonetheless reminds her with the scathing remark that
“All truth, once written, becomes fiction.”
Unfortunately, part two, “Nonfiction,” is not as potent as part one.
Instead it resembles a rough draft in emulating Albert Brooks’ masterful
1979 mockumentary “Real Life.” Here, a hapless failed actor named Toby
Oxman (Paul Giamatti) tries to improve his luck by becoming an
independent documentary filmmaker -- recording, cinema verite-style, the
lives of the Livingston family, focusing on slacker teen Scooby’s (Mark
Webber) attempt to get into college. The family is replete with
dysfunctional characters: dad Marty (John Goodman) complains about
everything, wife Fern (Julie Hagerty) vainly aspires to be a socialite,
middle son Brady (Noah Fleiss) is a bland jock, youngest son Mikey
(Jonathan Osser) is a sadist in training, and their Salvadoran maid
Consuelo (Lupe Ontiveros) is the victim of all.
While Solondz has a keen ear for dialogue, “Nonfiction” suffers from
Solondz’s apparent desire to jab at recent movies that purport to examine
the darker side of American culture. Solondz’s venom appears to have been
concentrated on “American Beauty,” which is mercilessly scathed as
“American Scooby.” There are priceless moments in the extended roasting
of “American Beauty,” however the overall film suffers from the
digression. The shift in focus from another biting commentary to a blase
conclusion makes the first half of “Storytelling” even stronger. Of
course, by Solondz’s standards, a weak section of a film is still of
greater significance and more challenging than most of the rubbish
filling the multiplexes.
While Solondz can easily be dismissed as a misanthrope, that narrow
view ignores his genuine affection for his characters. Furthermore,
Solondz’s characters explore the depths of human emotions, from the
junior high school setting in “Welcome to the Dollhouse” used to explore
the themes of basic human decency to the various stages of eros and agape
in “Happiness,” Solondz explores the methods and madness of his
characters and comes clean; joyous epiphanies and happy endings be
damned. Solondz is a better filmmaker because of it, and we should
encourage the few remaining writer/directors who are worthy of the
oft-thrown term “artist” by avoiding the weekly dribble foisted on us.
“Storytelling” is rated R for strong sexual content, language and some
drug use.
* ROB OROZCO is an attorney with Morris, Polich & Purdy. He lives in
Costa Mesa with his wife and two cats.
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