Welcome to the Dollhouse
The film follows middle-school student Dawn Weiner who faces degradation at school, where she is teased constantly, and at home as she struggles to cope with inattentive parents, snobbish classmates, a smart older brother, an attractive younger sister, and her own insecurities.
21 February 1980, Staten Island, New York City, New York, USA
21 September 1952, Taipei, Taiwan
1976, Virginia, USA
20 May 1948, Burlington, Vermont, USA
22 April 1971, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA
10 November 1982, Long Island, New York, USA
17 November 1983, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA
25 January 1983, New York, USA
8 January 1925, Eliasville, Texas, USA
18 November 1981, Whitestone, Queens, New York, USA
21 January 1970, New York City, New York, USA
April 06, 2005
hilariously provocative and almost too real
January 01, 2000
At 87 minutes, Dollhouse is a near-perfect morsel. If nothing else, it informs older folk that school principals still threaten to record bad behavior in one's 'personal record' -- only now, computers facilitate the process.
April 09, 2008
quirky and great
March 14, 2005
Still Solondz's one and only great film!
July 23, 2007
At its best it's like the funniest yet bleakest comic book Dan Clowes never drew.
December 20, 2006
One of the highlights of the 1995 Toronto Festival, Solondz's second film is a stark, often funny, always poignant comedy about suburban mores, centering on a misfit Jewish girl tormented by her family and classmates.
June 29, 2016
Welcome to the Dollhouse marks a substantial (and obvious) improvement over filmmaker Todd Solondz's underwhelming debut, Fear Anxiety and Depression...
December 12, 2005
Todd Solondz's only good movie.
December 29, 2003
Blisteringly honest and side-splittingly funny. Solondz's most accomplished film.
September 01, 2009
Welcome to the Dollhouse puts an ugly duckling through her paces.
January 27, 2004
Matarazzo tem forte presença em cena, mas o filme não sai do lugar-comum.
January 01, 2011
A dark look at adolescence; not for kids.

