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Todd Solondz

Todd Solondz

Birthday: 15 October 1959, Newark, New Jersey, USA
Height: 170 cm

Todd Solondz was born in Newark, New Jersey. One of his earliest jobs in the film industry was when, as a young man, he worked as a messenger for the Writers' Guild of America. During this time, ...Show More

Todd Solondz
[on Wiener-Dog (2016)] I do love going to the movies. I don't watch them otherwise unless it's homew Show more [on Wiener-Dog (2016)] I do love going to the movies. I don't watch them otherwise unless it's homework. I don't like to watch them on TV or the computer. I like to watch them in the movie theater. Many years ago when they invented the DVR you could record all these great movies and you'd have all these great movies recorded, but it would feel like homework to watch them. I like to go out to see movies on a big screen in a dark room. I like having an audience. That's what movies are for me. [2016] Hide
In American films, this period of life is not treated seriously. You have either the cute and cuddly Show more In American films, this period of life is not treated seriously. You have either the cute and cuddly Disney kid or the evil devil monster. For me it's fertile territory - middle class kids growing up in the suburbs. Hide
[on Wiener-Dog (2016)] I teach Monday mornings. I love it. I have a great time. I love teaching the Show more [on Wiener-Dog (2016)] I teach Monday mornings. I love it. I have a great time. I love teaching the students, working with them. They're like little puzzles. Trying to help them figure out their own solutions. [2016] Hide
[on Wiener-Dog (2016)] On one end of the spectrum is Au hasard Balthazar (1966) and on the other is Show more [on Wiener-Dog (2016)] On one end of the spectrum is Au hasard Balthazar (1966) and on the other is Benji (1974). In between the two this movie lies. [2016] Hide
I saw Vera Drake and Mike Leigh is a masterful filmmaker. I think it's indisputable. He works with a Show more I saw Vera Drake and Mike Leigh is a masterful filmmaker. I think it's indisputable. He works with actors like no one else. It's beautifully shot and beautifully played. And yet at the same time, I just want to scream! I say, would it have been a sin for her to take money for a job well done? Does she have to be sanctified? I can't take it, just how all the liberals, we all go in to see the movie and in a sense it turns us all into martyrs for the good fight. But it's clearly not an examination of the ethical nature and so forth, it's just a given that this is the good fight and we are martyrs for this cause. There's another movie, a lovely film, wonderfully directed, Maria Full of Grace. There's a scene in the movie where you have this 17-year-old pregnant girl in Queens and she sees Women's Health Services, and she goes there. What's the purpose of the scene? All it does is tell us that the baby is okay. I just want to scream! She stays in American, 17, pregnant, no money, no friends, doesn't speak the language. I mean, really, the only thing she's equipped to do is be a prostitute. To me, it's just the falseness of that stay-on-in-America, land-of-hope and so forth, the falseness just makes me want to scream. It's faux-liberal, in fact. I guess it's just being patted on the back, being told, 'You're doing the right thing.' There's no questioning. There's no examination. There's no stopping to think. Hide
I'm just unfortunate that I have this job I hate, I suppose. I keep thinking I've got to find a new Show more I'm just unfortunate that I have this job I hate, I suppose. I keep thinking I've got to find a new career and maybe I will. But for now, this is all I've got. I haven't found a good alternative yet. Hide
My movies aren't for everyone, especially people who like them. My movies aren't for everyone, especially people who like them.
There aren't any other countries in the world where they kill abortionists and bomb clinics. To be a Show more There aren't any other countries in the world where they kill abortionists and bomb clinics. To be an abortionist in the United States is like to be a fireman or a policeman, to take on a heroic profession, but of course, it puts your life on the line. Regardless of one's political convictions, you have to respect the integrity of someone who is willing to risk his life to perform this kind of procedure. You can make a good living doing other sorts of procedures. Hide
I don't have children but if I did and my child wanted to act, I'd be fine with him acting in my mov Show more I don't have children but if I did and my child wanted to act, I'd be fine with him acting in my movie where I feel a certain dignity is accorded. But I would never let my child act in a commercial for the Gap or Banana Republic or for some other consumer goods corporation. That would be the obscenity. Hide
(On his movie "Happiness"): "It's not for everyone and it's not designed for everyone and I don't th Show more (On his movie "Happiness"): "It's not for everyone and it's not designed for everyone and I don't think I'll ever write anything that's designed to appeal to everyone. If you want sympathetic characters it's easy enough to do, you just give someone cancer and of course we'll all feel horribly sad and sorry. You make anyone a victim and people feel that way. But that's not of interest to me as a filmmaker or as a writer. I may be accused of a certain kind of misanthropy but I think I could argue the opposite. I think that it's only by acknowledging the flaws, the foibles, the failings and so forth of who we are that we can in fact fully embrace the all of who we are. People say I'm cruel or that the film's cruel, but I think rather it exposes the cruelty and I think that certainly the capacity for cruelty is the most difficult, the most painful thing for any of us to acknowledge. That we are at all capable. And yet I think that it exists as much as the capacity for kindness and it's only the best of us that are able to suppress, sublimate, re-channel and so forth these baser instincts, but I see them to some degree at play as a regular part of life in very subtle ways and not so subtle ways. I don't think that after the seventh grade that these impulses evaporate. So from my perspective I'm trying to be honest with what I see and what I've experienced and what I believe is true to our nature." Hide
Even talking about the nature of this war, and Iraq and the Middle East, it's very difficult even to Show more Even talking about the nature of this war, and Iraq and the Middle East, it's very difficult even to have a conversation. Anything that veers away from the official line, there's a hysteria that pops in. Hide
To be an abortionist today in the States is, to my mind, very heroic. Who wants to put their lives o Show more To be an abortionist today in the States is, to my mind, very heroic. Who wants to put their lives on the line? You get assassinated, there are bombs in the clinics. There are so many other easier ways to make a living. You put yourself in a very vulnerable place if you do choose that calling. Hide
Some people will of course accuse me of misanthropy and cynicism. I can't celebrate humanity but I'm Show more Some people will of course accuse me of misanthropy and cynicism. I can't celebrate humanity but I'm not out to indict it either. I just want to expose certain truths. Hide
There's good laughter and bad laughter. As long as they're not laughing at the expense of any of the Show more There's good laughter and bad laughter. As long as they're not laughing at the expense of any of these characters, it's OK. My films are comedies, but they're sad comedies and this is the saddest of all. Hide
One of the lessons that I tell my students is: You want to make a film only YOU could make, but NOT Show more One of the lessons that I tell my students is: You want to make a film only YOU could make, but NOT only you can sit through. Hide
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