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| Welcome to the Dollhouse | 
enlarge | Director: Todd Solondz Actors: Heather Matarazzo, Christina Brucato, Victoria Davis, Christina Vidal, Siri Howard Studio: Sony Pictures Category: DVD
List Price: $24.96 Buy New: $14.99 You Save: $9.97 (40%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 164 reviews Sales Rank: 13543
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 88 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 DVD Layers: 1 DVD Sides: 2 Picture Format: Array Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: COLD82569D ISBN: 0767827740 UPC: 043396825697 EAN: 9780767827744 ASIN: 0767827740
Theatrical Release Date: May 24, 1996 Release Date: August 3, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: ******BRAND NEW****** ** Over 1.5 million orders shipped worldwide and more than 500 000 items in stock, BUY FROM A TRUSTED SOURCE, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1998 - INETVIDEO ~~~
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description This acclaimed comedy follows an 11-year-old geek who wants to be popular. Special features: full screen and widescreen versions subtitles: english french spanish talent files and theatrical trailer. Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 06/24/2008 Run time: 87 minutes Rating: R
Amazon.com What is junior high school but a strange, disorienting pastiche of black comedy, tragedy, soap opera, and (most of all) horror movie? Well, that pretty much describes Todd Solondz's astonishingly honest and clear-sighted film, Welcome to the Dollhouse. Like Solondz's even more controversial follow-up--the acclaimed and despised Happiness (1998)--Dollhouse unflinchingly looks deep into its characters' souls (and their embarrassing desires, and their floundering sexuality) in ways that can be simultaneously disturbing and liberating, appalling and hilarious. Dawn Wiener (Heather Matarazzo) is a hapless seventh-grade geek whose cruel and contemptuous schoolmates have nicknamed her (what else?) "Wiener Dog." Everything about Dawn is so awkward--the way she looks, talks, moves--that it's no wonder other kids dump on her. They're most likely so insecure about themselves that they're terrified of the Wiener Dog they know lurks somewhere down inside themselves, too. So, the best social and psychological survival tactic is to distance themselves from Dawn by relentlessly reminding her of her "place" at the bottom of the junior-high pecking order. Solondz's vision is hardly sentimental, and you wouldn't even call it "compassionate," but it is a moral vision: authentic, undiluted, and, in the end, understanding. --Jim Emerson
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| Customer Reviews: Read 159 more reviews...
In a Barbie World January 5, 2009 "Welcome to the Dollhouse" was Todd Solondz's amazing breakthrough movie. It's at turns hilarious,poignant,dark, and heartbreaking. Anyone who has been bullied can understand the daily trials of Dawn Wiener (Heather Matarazzo) called "Wiener Dog." Her parents don't appreciate her. They prefer her sappy,ballet-dancing younger sister. She has a crush on a rocker (Eric Mabius of "Ugly Betty",in an early&prescient role,Betty&Dawn are virtually twins) The beautiful people don't like Dawn. Dawn's name is ironic. She feels like she's in the Twilight Zone. Her condition is universal--the desire to love and be loved. When she gets revenge on the bullies,you cheer for her. "Welcome to the Dollhouse" is from back in the day when art house movies weren't bleak. They were usually awash with color (see "Desperate Remedies" and "But I'm a Cheerleader") There's another layer of irony in this bittersweet cake. In "Welcome",Dawn is accused of being a lesbian. Last year,when gay marriage was briefly legal, Matarazzo married her longtime girlfriend. Matarazzo has moved onto smaller roles, even in the awful "Hostel" series. "Welcome" stands as a '90s cult classic.
3.5 stars out of 4 December 19, 2008 The Bottom Line:
An incisive look at the pain of adoloscence that pulls no punches and does not even think about tacking on a happy ending, Welcome to the Dollhouse is an excellent drama (which is often very funny) that should be required viewing for anyone who had a hellish middle school experience.
The story of a young Keith Olbermann, lol j/k September 12, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Welcome to the Dollhouse is a rare and refreshing dark comedy, it's hip, edgy, and all the kids will be talking about it when they're skateboarding and playing hackeysack.
Hey there, how do you like that hip, in your face, logline that I wrote for this movie? I think it's quite proactive. Kidding aside, it is for some reason quite a rare find, even if the subjects it addresses have been milked to death. Adolescent angst, nerds dealing with everyday life and trying to fit in, it's all really chartered territory.
Dollhouse however, presents it in such a dramatic way that it seems quite new; hey, for an hour an a half I WAS an ugly nerdy teenage girl!
While there's no agreed upon distinction between them all, there are many different kinds of misfits. There's nerds, dorks, dweebs, geeks, etc. Our heroine, Dawn, is the gawky outcast type with severe self-esteem and self-consciousness issues.
Dawn, aka Wienderdog, comes to the rescue when another nerd is being persecuted by some thugs, but even he doesn't show her any respect! It's pretty bad when even the nerds refute you.
Dawn's home life isn't much better as her sister, Missy, the perfect ballerina, pretty much has a run of the place. Dawn gets in trouble for calling her a l*sbo and her mother chews her out in a scene too uncomfortable for even the camera to look at.
While taking a test, Brandon, her chief tormentor, is copying from her paper and, as usual, she gets a detention because of it. The stress from this results in her getting a bad grade, which she whines about, resulting in her having to write an essay on the subject of dignity. Just another day in the life of Dawn Wiener.
Pushed to the breaking point, Dawn sports a Mohawk and takes a bunch of guns to school and begins to blow-away her tormentors...ooops, I think I'm getting my movie plots mixed up.
That night, over dinner, her uber-nerd older brother speaks brings up a fellow by the name of Steve, a hip rock and roller that's sure to make his silly garage band popular. And once again, Dawn gets punished because of her sister.
Plot point! Next day, Dawn sees Steve performing with the band and is quite smitten with him. Of course the prob is he's a few years her senior. In return for playing with the band, her bro teaches him computer science, so when he's over, Dawn has the chance to finally meet him and exchange pleasantries.
Steve is pretty much the center of her life for awhile as she goes around asking everyone about him. She gets to spend some quality time with him when her bro is late for their studying appointment. She gets to prepare him a snack and play the piano for him.
Things go south however when Steven quits the band over creative differences. To make things even worse, Brandon, that guy that always picks on her at school claims he is going to r*pe her after school and spends the entire day threatening her. She's saved from being r*ped however due to trashman-interuptus. But she gets a call that night from him, informing her that she'll get r*ped tomorrow instead.
She doesn't get r*ped incidentally, but she and Brandon do spend a heart-to-heart at some dump and they seem to bond a little, if only a little. She also gets her first kiss. When she gets home, her mom employs many tactics to get Dawn to tear down her clubhouse because they need the space for their anniversary party, but she doesn't give.
Even though he still bullies her, Brandon and Dawn are getting close and spending a lot of time together. Things blow-up however, when she informs him that she can't be her girlfriend because she has the hots for Steve.
At the anniversary party there are plenty of laughs to be had especially due to the song her bro wrote in honor of them which the band plays. Steve happens to be playing because he was paid $200, so Dawn takes her chance to approach him; but when she finds him he's making out with some hot girl his own age so she pretty much gives up on him. He leaves for New York shortly anyway.
When she gets home her mother informs her that she can't pick Missy up after practice and she's supposed to give Missy a note informing her of this, but she doesn't give it to her in order to get back at them. As a result Missy goes missing and ends up kidnapped.
In school previously, Brandon was arrested for selling drugs, so Dawn pays him a visit at his house. He's getting ready to run away because he doesn't want to go to reform school. She tells him she wants to be his girlfriend, but seeing as though he's going to New York, she can't g along with him. He jumps out the window and is never heard from again.
When Missy's tutu is found in New York, Dawn takes a bus there in order to find her. Missy turns up the next morning however and it turns out she was kidnapped by their neighbor, and she's no worse for the wear.
That pretty much wraps things up folks, she goes to Disneyworld on some gleeclub trip and it ends on the bus ride there. I guess she learns that she shouldn't be a nerd and grows as a person...actually I don't know what the heck she learns, movie's over folks!
I'd prefer the dollhouse September 10, 2008 This film was touted as a fantastic dark comedy. I got the dark part. I'm still waiting on most of the comedy. It was very well acted and I'd even say finely directed... but something was missing. The plot just did not seem to go anywhere after such a strong setup and such stellar presentation of rich characters. I look forward to seeing where this ensemble goes from here, as everyone in it shone. I just wish the darkness could have shed some light on a plot.
Scathing, Wicked, Sad and Funny. May 26, 2008 No one does Black Comedy better than Todd Soldonz, and while this won't have one watching through their fingers like his follow-up "Happiness," but this surely will go down as the most-scathing portrayal of junior high ever filmed. Low-budget, but with writing and acting like this I don't need great lighting or a slick production. If you hated junior high, highly reccomended. If you were a Mean Girl or Boy, you will see how your actions affected others.
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