2009-11-21 18:46 KST  
  RSS
Global Voices Online - The world is talking. Are you listening?
JapanFocus
'Little Miss Sunshine' an Indie Gem
Enchanting dysfunctional family comedy works perfectly
Brian Orndorf (briano)     Email Article  Print Article 
  Published 2006-07-31 11:00 (KST)   
©2006 foxsearchlight
The Hoovers are a noisy dysfunctional family from Albuquerque with little in common. When the youngest member of the clan, Olive (Abigail Breslin, "Signs"), gets her prized shot at the Little Miss Sunshine child beauty pageant, she attempts to convince her family, including failed motivational speaker Richard (Greg Kinnear), exasperated mother Sheryl (Toni Collette), silent brother Dwayne (Paul Dano), suicidal uncle Frank (Steve Carell), and her bitter grandfather (Alan Arkin) to take a road trip to California to participate. Loading up a dilapidated VW bus, the family heads west, only to experience every setback imaginable on their journey.

The Sundance Film Festival stumbles along every year with a smorgasbord of indie movie offerings that hipsters and overfed film reporters dote on with smug satisfaction. Rarely do the selections pay off their hype. "Little Miss Sunshine" is the exception to the rule, and in a very big way.

The paint on the outside and the smell on the inside suggest "Sunshine" is just another factory assembled dysfunctional family road trip movie. We've seen that, but not nearly this surprising or this cleverly realized. Here the grumpy grandpa snorts heroin in his free time, and the depressed gay uncle is a puddle of sadness, unable to break his cycle of self-loathing. None of this is recognizable territory, and that's how "Sunshine" snaps the viewer out of the fog of low expectations immediately.

Screenwriter Michael Arndt isn't looking for cliches to bleed dry; instead, he tries to build something special with the Hoovers. The interaction within the family feels authentically prickly, with the hint of a warm undercurrent of love when things go their way. Arndt nurtures the relationships skillfully throughout the picture, knowing exactly where to up the ante or pay the characters off satisfactorily. This is a terrific script that doesn't buckle when facing delicate situations, nor does it pander to the mass crowds, enthusiastically offering characters that aren't always likable or do the right thing.

It helps to have a fantastic cast to fill out the edges of the writing, and directors Valerie Faris and Jonathan Dayton have assembled a wonderful ensemble to give the Hoovers life. The standouts are Greg Kinnear, channeling a pitch-perfect sense of panic at the dissolution of his dreams, and Carell, who conveys a multiplicity of sadness behind his medicated indifference. The whole troupe delivers in a big way, and considering they spend most of the film trapped in a bus, each actor is still able to make their motivations heard.

©2006 Fox Searchlight Pictures

As the Hoovers cross the Southwest, Dayton and Faris gently nurse the anxiety of the road trip. It doesn't quite reach Griswold proportions, but the film isn't fearful of silly situations to counteract the somewhat heavy themes of toxic familial interaction. The directors keep their eye trained on every character, and like Frank screams after losing Olive to simple oversight, "no one gets lefts behind." Indeed, the film feels rounded and rewarding, where every step of development is thought out beforehand, but still remains unexpected when flashed in front of you. This is fine bit of direction from two former music video maestros.

No doubt about it, "Little Miss Sunshine" reaches for the heavens with a broadly constructed finale designed to bring the house down. After such commitment to character and crisp demonstration of ability to find their way out of iffy dramatic situations, "Sunshine" earns every last drop of go-for-broke audience pleasing. It may appear to be another insignificant Sundance offering on the outside, but "Little Miss Sunshine" is an enchanting, rewarding picture that should not be passed over.

A

- Little Miss Sunshine by Brian Orndorf 

©2006 OhmyNews
Other articles by reporter Brian Orndorf

Add to :  Add to Del.icio.usDel.icio.us |  Add to Digg this Digg  |  Add to reddit reddit |  Add to Y! MyWeb Y! MyWeb

  Comments    Note: Kindly refrain from personal attacks and profanity.
   Name   Your Blog  
   Title  
   Comment  
   Input
   number
  42   
241.  <UserText 4pac , 2007-03-16 21:41  
240.  <UserText 5pac , 2007-03-16 21:41  
239.  <UserText 5pac , 2007-03-16 21:41  
238.  bikini sex bikini sex , 2006-11-06 05:43  
237.  bikini sex bikini sex , 2006-11-06 05:43  
236.  asian bikini asian bikini , 2006-11-05 22:20  
Yehonathan Tommer
 
Independent Inquiry Is Unavoidable
Michael Werbowski
 
[Fiction] The Plague Chronicles
John Boland
 
Not So "Neet"
Michael Solis
 
Victims of HIV-related Travel Restrictions in Korea
[ESL/EFL Podcast] Saying No
Seventeenth in a series of English language lessons from Jennifer Lebedev...
  [ESL/EFL] Talking About Change
  [ESL/ EFL Podcast] Personal Finances
  [ESL/EFL] Buying and Selling
How worried are you about the H1N1 influenza virus?
  Very worried
  Somewhat worried
  Not yet
  Not at all
    * Vote to see the result.   
 Two Stories Become Three in Lexington, Va.
 Fund Raising Fair
 Will Hatoyama Ban Whaling?
 Beauty from the Fires of Hell
 Amazon Business Show Starts in a Week
 Questions for President Obama
 Tiepolo, Rembrandt, Van Gogh, Picasso and More:
 Brazil - Global Entrepreneurship Week
 A Serious Man
 I have been fired from my job
KOREA WORLD SCI&TECH ART&LIFE ENTERTAINMENT SPORTS GLOBAL WATCH INTERVIEWS PODCASTS
  copyright 1999 - 2009 ohmynews all rights reserved. internews@ohmynews.com Tel:+82-2-733-5505,5595(ext.125) Fax:+82-2-733-5011,5077