Arts & Entertainment From Happiness To Wartime Writer-director Todd Solondz infuses his new film with singular satire of a Jewish family. Naomi Pfefferman Jewish Journal of Greater L.A. a 'seat' as the people buried in Israel? And you've got such a small piece of land to begin with; why would you want to take eering from behind oversize up space there? It's perverse' green-framed glasses, dressed The writer-director has been reviled in in rumpled khakis and yellow some quarters for this kind of satiric per- sneakers, Todd Solondz looked the part of spective. But as the New York Times noted independent cinema's reigning nerd incen- in its laudatory review of Life, "To dismiss diary as he discussed his new film, Life his attitude as cruel or contemptuous is to During Wartime, which turns his caustic miss the compassion and the almost rab- lens on assimilated American Jewry. binical ethical seriousness that drives his Life is a kind of sequel to his suburban inquiries." despair comedy, Happiness (1998), which Solondz, 50, is almost talmudic in his revolved around the dysfunctional Jordan discourse. He grew up in a kosher home clan and included characters such as a in New Jersey and attended yeshiva dur- nice doctor dad with a predilection for ing elementary school but now describes little boys. While the Jordans in Happiness himself as a "devout atheist!' (Asked why were Jewish only in Solondz's mind, he he peppers his speech with "Thank God;' makes them explicitly MOT in Life During he retorts, "It's a metaphor.") Yet, with Wartime, which he calls his "post-9/11 film!' his wife Emily Horowitz, he is consider- The new movie opens as the pedophile ing a "Chabad-type" nursery school for emerges from prison while his ex-wife, his 18-month-old son, Elroy, so the child Trish Jordan (Allison Janney), prepares for can feel part of the community if he so her son's bar mitzvah and falls for a home- chooses. ly new beau (Michael Lerner) who attracts Solondz's mother fled Nazi-occupied her because — like her — he wishes to be Antwerp, Belgium, as a girl; and that buried in Israel. trauma permeated his childhood home. "Many Jews want to live the good life It also inspired a segment of Storytelling, in the States and then get the good life in which a daughter of survivors mouths in the afterlife by being buried in Israel," platitudes about the Shoah in order to Solondz, who is also known for Welcome raise funds for Jewish charities while mis- to the Dollhouse (1995) and Storytelling treating her Salvadoran maid. When the (2001), said in his gravelly nasal whine. housekeeper gasses the woman and her "But what about all the people who died family to death, it is punishment "for trivi- in the Holocaust — they don't get as good alizing and exploiting the tragedy of the p Holocaust': Solondz said. Not that he is oblivious to Allison Janney, left, as Trish, and Ally Sheedy, right, as Helen, modern-day anti- two of three Jewish sisters who explore the boundaries of Semitism. "Jews forgiveness, family and love in Life During Wartime have flourished in this country so Solondz envisions the pedophile as it seems unseemly to talk about it," he non-Jewish; in Life During Wartime, we said. "But in the larger world, it's like the learn that his ex-wife, Trish, has tried to monster you can't beat down; it's tireless distance herself from him by "becoming and endless and goes from Europe to the almost ba'alei teshuvah," Solondz said. "In Arab world." her mind, she married the gentile, and see In Life During Wartime, the bar mitz- what happened?" vah boy, Timmy, is writing a speech But just as Solondz pokes fun at the inspired by his Torah portion, which Zionist Trish, he satirizes Jordan's pro- deals with "Joseph forgiving his brothers Palestinian sister Helen (Ally Sheedy), a for having screwed him:' Solondz said. rebellious screenwriter who has acquired a Timmy asks his mother whether one tattoo that reads "Jihad" in Arabic. should forgive terrorists who have a good "It's the best thing she can think of reason for their actions; she is mortified to appall her Jewish parents:' Sheedy and responds with cliched answers. quipped. "The movie also deals with how iso- Solondz joked that his upcoming film, lated Americans are from the reality of Dark Horse, is "the first time CAA likes my war — which also serves as a metaphor script, because there's no child molesta- for the war within ourselves, the way we tion, rape or masturbation in it. I'm hop- all have the capacity for kindness as well ing it will be a success, God will — and as cruelty or evil;' Solondz said "One of he stops himself. "Knock wood," he substi- the things that troubled me about the tuted, with a laugh. response to Happiness was that some people felt sympathy for the character [of the child rapist]:' he added. "While I Life During Wartime is scheduled found him to be a tragic figure ... sympa- to open Friday, Aug.13. Check your thy I could never have for someone who local movie listings. succumbed to such instincts!' ews 14 Nate Bloom • Mt Special to the Jewish News ,1 1111•93 a r Mitzvah Tales Last week, Gabrielle Birkner, a (11 reporter with the Forward news- y.= paper, posted an item about ) how actor Paul Rudd (Dinner for Schmucks) had been a D.J. at her 1992 bat mitzvah. I long knew that Rudd had worked as a bar/bat mitz- vah D.J. while try- ing to break into Paul Rudd acting but never saw him in action until Birkner posted excerpts of her bat mitzvah video that included Rudd. Birkner says Rudd "turned out to be the perfect 11:1 a 46 August 12 • 2010 choice for the event." You can view the video here: http://vimeo. corn/13856676. A couple of weeks ago, a Rochester, N.Y., newspaper had an item about local dentist Stephen Korn, 50. He had just fixed, for free, the teeth of former child actor Brandon Cruz, 48. Cruz, who co-starred in the TV series The Courtship of Eddie's Father, has been a punk rocker for 30 years and broke a lot of his teeth on the microphone. Cruz couldn't afford the $40,000 in reconstructive surgery and asked for help on his website. Korn, by chance, was look- ing to say "hello" to Cruz, visited his website and saw the request. Korn met Cruz in Israel in 1972 while there for his bar mitzvah. Cruz was there to make a movie. The Independent, a U.K. paper, just ran a long pro- file of Mark Zuckerberg, 26, the founder and a CEO of Facebook (now valued at Mark $40 billion). The Zuckerberg Independent reports that Zuckerberg, the son of a dentist father (who billed himself as the "painless Dr. Z") and a psycholo- gist mother, had an early passion for Hebrew and for the sport of fencing. The latter interest might have been inspired by Star Wars, which was the theme of Zuckerberg's bar mitzvah. Finally, the website Backstage. corn had a charming profile of actress Cameron Diaz by Fern Champion, the casting agent who discovered her. Diaz, a model, was looking to break into acting in 1994. Champion was looking for an actress to co-star opposite Jim Carrey in The Mask. Long story short, Champion took a chance on Diaz and gave her the part, despite her lack of experience, because she was bowled over by Diaz's naturalness, good humor and infectious giggle. In 2001, Diaz was a big star but accepted an invite to Champion's son's bar mitzvah and made all the other boys and men envious by refusing to dance with anyone but Champion's son. Last summer, she invited Champion and her son to the ceremony in which she was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. ❑