Release Date Dark Horse Jun 8, 2012 Limited
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Actors For Dark Horse
Jordan Gelber,Selma Blair,Mia Farrow,Justin Bartha,Donna Murphy,Christopher Walken,Aasif Mandvi,Zachary Booth,Tyler Maynard,Mary Joy,Peter McRobbie,Lee Wilkof,Melisa Young,Di QuonGenres Dark Horse : Drama,Comedy
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Dark Horse
User Ranting Dark Horse : 3User Percentage For Dark Horse : %
User Count Like for Dark Horse : 3,016
All Critics Ranting For Dark Horse : 6.4
All Critics Count For Dark Horse : 70
All Critics Percentage For Dark Horse : 73 %
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Movie Overview For Dark Horse
Abe is a man who is in his thirties and who lives with his parents. He works regretfully for his father while pursuing his hobby of collecting toys. Aware that his family doesn't think highly of him, he tries to spark a relationship with Miranda, who recently moved back home after a failed literary/academic career. Miranda agrees to marry Abe out of desperation, but things go awry.TagLine Dark Horse
Trailer For Dark Horse
Review For Dark Horse
It would be unfair and patronizing to say that Solondz needs to grow up, but "Dark Horse" suggests that it's time for the bard of bourgeois hypocrisy to consider moving on.Ann Hornaday-Washington Post
Solondz has made a career out of specializing in highly aberrant views of middle-class life.
Mark Feeney-Boston Globe
That Gelber can make Abe appealing in any way is a triumph. That Solondz can orchestrate such a feat is an even bigger one.
Bill Goodykoontz-Arizona Republic
Solondz will never be much for happy endings, but the film is strangely optimistic and at times borders ever-so-slightly on the whimsical.
Rene Rodriguez-Miami Herald
With champion bloodlines from Walken and Farrow, "Dark Horse" could have been a contender, but it gets so skittish about trodding a familiar path that it pulls up lame.
Joe Williams-St. Louis Post-Dispatch
For once, Solondz seems less interested in scoring points off his characters than in creeping into their shy, sad interior worlds.
Stephanie Zacharek-Los Angeles Times
Solondz seems to be making a statement about arrested development and the harsh realities of loneliness and age, but it's so clumsily and irritatingly executed that his arguments remain difficult to see.
Tricia Olszewski-Washington City Paper
Age seems to have softened Todd Solondz and it is a real shame, as we have tonnes of optimistic filmmakers but only one of him. Come back, Todd.
Adam Ross-The Aristocrat
"Dark Horse" ends up being a film about loneliness, and the desperate things people will think and do to escape it. And, for once, Solondz doesn't sneer at that desperation.
Rob Thomas-Capital Times (Madison, WI)
Though Dark Horse is disturbing and funny like most Solondz pictures, it's also mystifyingly touching; it moves into totally unexpected places.
Jeffrey M. Anderson-Combustible Celluloid
The title could be taken as indicative of the film's chances of scoring outside of Solonfz's small cadre of followers, but 'Dark Horse' indicates that a grain of empathy has made its way into his usual desert of despair.
Frank Swietek-One Guy's Opinion
The suffocating darkness of much of Solondz's work has diminished here, but so has the humor, and it never reaches the massive catharsis of a film like Happiness.
Miles Bowe-Boston Phoenix
Seizing the role, and the screen, Jordan Gelber actually makes us care what happens to his surly, thoroughly unlikable character.
Mike Scott-Times-Picayune
Offers a wealth of small pleasures, but as a whole, it fails to make much of an impact, exhausting direction the longer it pursues a dreamscape tone that only seems to retain perfect shape in the helmer's head.
Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com
When he's hot, (Todd Solondz)... has an uncanny ability to find both absurdist comedy and poignant drama in the vicissitudes of everyday characters.
Leonard Maltin-Leonard Maltin's Picks
The director's claustrophobic vision of optimistic youth slowly curdling into a hellish maelstrom of middle-age malaise is still a fun ride if you enjoy that sort of thing.
Marc Savlov-Austin Chronicle
Even the gentle side of filmmaker Todd Solondz turns out to be pretty nasty.
Chris Hewitt (St. Paul)-St. Paul Pioneer Press
It's brutal to watch, and perhaps mercifully short.
Siobhan Synnot-Scotsman
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