Little Miss Sunshine Movie Review
Little Miss Sunshine Review
"Little Miss Sunshine" Overview

Rating: R
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Jonathan Dayton,Valerie FarisProducer : Albert Berger,David T. Friendly,Peter Saraf,Marc Turtletaub,Ron Yerxa
Screenwiter : Michael Arndt
Starring : Greg Kinnear,Toni Collette,Abigail Breslin,Alan Arkin,Steve Carell,Paul Dano
The most visited genre in film may be the family drama. It’s probably popular
to produce because it’s something everyone can relate to – having a family with
issues not fit for public consumption and seeing them resolved in two hours
with some great acting thrown in for good measure, hopefully. Whether it’s got
some laughter during the course of events or not, it’s getting quite difficult
to come up with original ideas that force a family to change, or work together,
or learn about each other, in an entertaining fashion.
And now, here’s Little Miss Sunshine. You’re not quite sure what you’re in for
during the Sundance-touting trailer as you see snippets of a family dinner. You
know they are going to be quirky, based on their remarks and the quick cuts.
You also know the acting will be dependable because of the stellar cast,
including Greg Kinnear, Toni Collette, and Alan Arkin. Plus, it’s got a cute
girl with glasses you know you’re going to cheer on because the title is based
on her.
Combining these reliable creative forces with outstanding dialogue and
appropriate timing, Little Miss Sunshine is an engaging experience.
Co-directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris not only make a long dinner
scene interesting, but an interminable drive through a visually boring
landscape also never gets old.
Little Miss Sunshine is the road trip story of how little seven-year-old Olive
gets to a competition she’s been trying to reach for years, the titular
subject. Normally each member of the family has their own self-centered focus,
but Olive’s achievement of acceptance takes precedence and they pile into the
car to spout wit aplenty and deal with themselves.
Everyone has their own fault or weakness, of course, and each comes to light in
its turn, with an intelligent grace instead of an easy resolution. For
instance, when Richard’s (Kinnear) book deal does not come across as planned,
his verbally horny father (Arkin) gives a brief acknowledgement of his efforts,
which is stilted due to lack of practice but no less sincere. Richard’s
response matches it, quietly but no less thankfully. The entire film has this
wonderful balance of handling emotional issues without ever getting precious or
melodramatic.
Olive (Abigail Breslin) is thankfully not the perfect child, either. One of the
first comments she makes is to her uncle, who recently attempted suicide (Steve
Carell) because of an unrequited, homosexual, affair, which she calls silly.
Also, instead of making her say something cute, she simply places her arm
around her brother's shoulder to make him rejoin the family after an outburst.
Little Miss Sunshine is enjoyable because it’s moving without being pedantic,
it’s funny while being honest about how family members treat each other, and it
takes everything about being human with a smart affection sorely lacking in
current filmmaking.
DVD extras include two commentary tracks, alternate endings, and a music video.
You can steal her sunshine.
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Review by Rachel Gordon
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