Whatever combination of personal, familial, suburban and human-species pathology is responsible for the warped and wounded characters found in Todd Solondz’s films, it translates into original, challenging, funny cinema.
Sometimes, it yields something affectingly sad, too. All these results occur in “Dark Horse,” the writer-director’s latest unsentimental picture of middle-class disquiet.
Read More
URL: http://www.sfexaminer.com/topics/dark-horse