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Welcome to the Dollhouse
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Directed by Todd Solondz
Twelve-year-old Dawn Wiener (Heather Matarazzo) is perhaps the most put-upon adolescent in film history in Todd Solondz's bitterly hilarious black comedy Welcome to the Dollhouse. Dawn is bright but awkward, both physically and socially, and is appallingly unpopular among her peers, to whom she's better known as "Wienerdog." Possessing little charm or grace and perhaps the most misguided fashion sense of her generation, Dawn is not an easy girl to like and practically no one seems interested in making the effort. If life is tough for Dawn at school, it's hardly any better at home. While her folks dote on her gratingly cute younger sister Missy (Daria Kalinina) and look with pride to her bookish older brother Mark (Matthew Faber), Dawn is either ignored or treated as an annoyance. Dawn has developed a crush on Steve (Eric Mabius), the hunky guitarist Mark has drafted into his rock band (significantly, Mark is less interested in making cool noise or unloading teenage angst than in having another extracurricular activity to put on his college applications); Steve is polite but obviously not interested in her. However, Dawn has attracted the attention of a boy at school -- Brandon (Brendan Sexton Jr.), a mean-spirited junior thug whose idea of a good time is threatening Dawn with rape. A painfully accurate account of life in junior high (what Matt Groening called "the lowest pit of hell"), Welcome to the Dollhouse is also very funny, but writer and director Todd Solondz never lets the film's humor dilute the agony of its leading character; anyone who has ever been 12 years old will doubtless laugh at Dawn while uncomfortably recalling the horror of their own preteen years. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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pippin06pippin06 Welcome to the Dollhouse, Where ...
by pippin06 in Reel Thoughts
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"The third indie feature of the quartet at the top of my Netflix queue was available instantly and is one of those films that I found out about through my two years plus activity on Spout. Up until some group discussion or blog or list exposed me to it, I had never heard of Welcome to the Dollhouse, but when I read about it and saw it available on Netflix, I queued it up because I'm all about the lonely loser genre. " [More]
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RisseladaRisselada Re: Top 5 Misfits
by Risselada in Filmspotting
"People have named some good ones.Dawn Weiner in Welcome to the Dollhouse was the first one I thought of too.Bruno S. is great in Stroszek, but I actually think The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser is even better.Herzog films are great sources for misfits. Actually you cou " [More]
dreamersbrowdreamersbrow Re: Top 5 Misfits
by dreamersbrow in Filmspotting
""Down and Out" Top 5 Misfits: No geniuses, just Joes and Janes and all the pain that entails. Dawn Weiner ( Heather Matarazzo ) in Welcome to the Dollhouse. We later learn in Palindromes, that Dawn has killed herself, and who can blame her. She is the subject of ridicule and hara " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
One of the most honest films ever made about adolescence, Todd Solondz's Welcome to the Dollhouse is a brutal, caustically hilarious ode to the seventh ring of hell that is the seventh grade. Solondz approaches his material as a survivor: in the character of Dawn Wiener, it is easy to see the director himself, the ostracized geek used as a bottom rung by his peers as they climbed the social ladder. But rather than use his position behind the camera to craft a redemptive tale of a spunky outcast who gets revenge on her tormenters, Solondz is more interested in bleak, mundane reality. Dawn (played to perfection by Heather Matarazzo) doesn't possess the subversive intelligence or creative inclinations that usually endear social misfits to an audience; if you removed her thick glasses, there wouldn't be a beautiful swan hiding underneath, just an awkward girl who can't see. Most tellingly, Dawn doesn't want revenge on her tormenters: she wants to be accepted by them. More than anything else, junior high is about survival. If Dawn can make it to the eighth grade, she's one year closer to escape; and, in the pockmarked scheme of puberty, escape is about all you can hope for. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
 

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