From The New Yorker
Todd Haynes's rarely screened short is like a Freudian haiku: it hints at some larger psychosexual truths, yet glides coolly under them, leaving us to extract our own meanings. It centers on Stevie, a six-year-old boy who is obsessed with Dottie, the star of an "I Love Lucy"-like television show. Mother indulges his devotion, Father disapproves, and the girls on the school bus, who, unlike Stevie, can freely discuss their adoration of Dottie, think he's a freak. Haynes subtly presents the forces acculturating an effeminate boy in the stilted atmosphere of fifties Long Island. In the face of this pressure, Stevie retains his poise and dwells on fantasies of revenge. By the end, the question of who does or doesn't deserve to get spanked gains a remarkable intensity. -Michael Agger
Copyright © 2006
The New Yorker
Product Description
Another dazzling suburban phantasm from writer-director Todd Haynes,
Dottie Gets Spanked (made post-
Poison and pre-
Safe) is a stylized, bittersweet nod to his childhood fascination with
I Love Lucy. Deep in the heart of pre-hippie 1960s America, young artistically-inclined Steven Gale is obsessed with Dottie Frank, wacky star of the eponymous hit sitcom
The Dottie Show. While his mother gently encourages the boy's fixation, his father grows increasingly frustrated by his son's apparently "sissified" interests. This provocative, heartfelt mini-feature anticipates Haynes' Oscar-nominated
Far From Heaven with its excavation of placid mid-century surfaces and deeply-buried emotions.
SPECIAL FEATURES
- New audio commentary by Todd Haynes
- Rare 1989 short film
He Was Once: an inventive parody of 1960s kiddie claymation show
Davey and Goliath, co-starring and co-produced by Haynes
- Behind-the-scenes production photos
- Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hearing impaired