At one point in the film
Happy Tears, Jayne, the main character, is struggling to explain the value and meaning of her dead father-in-law’s blotchy abstract art, until she finally concedes, “You have to know something about other art in order to appreciate it.” Similarly, it might help to know something about other films in order to digest this vibrant, sloppy smear of film kitsch, which revels in gaudy dream sequences and absurd plot twists, adding considerable whimsy to what should be a grim depiction of premature dementia. Writer/director Mitchell Lichtenstein manages to invoke the cinematic specter of camp with a touch just light enough to justify the film...
Released:
2010
Rated:
R
Length:
95 mins