As Todd Solondz explains, Dark Horse is a different kind of take on the Judd Apatow celebration of the Manchild. It’s a bit more aggressive, a lot more realistic, and complex in the way that fans have come to expect from the director of Welcome to the Dollhouse and Palindromes.
Set beyond cheerful pop music, the film follows Jordan Gelber, looking a lot like Jeff Garlin, as he attempts to navigate what he views as a cruel, unfair world in the yellow hummer his parents bought for him. He discovers something like love with the depressed Miranda (a differently-named character reprised by Selma Blair from Storytelling), and he struggles (often hilariously) to understand a world shifting around him.
Fortunately, Solondz took some time out to discuss his take on later-life childhood, how to respond to fans who laugh at child-rape, and how the indie filmmaking world has changed since the 1990s.
On This Week’s Show:
American Otaku [The Beginning - The End]: Todd Solondz on Dark Horse.
Please go rate us on iTunes. It means a lot to us. Promise.
On Last Week’s Show:
The Most Anticipated Movies of Cannes 2012
Get In Touch With Us:
- Call Reject Radio: (512) 212-1301
- Email Reject Radio: radio@filmschoolrejects.com
- Reject Radio on Twitter: twitter.com/RejectRadio