Little Miss Sunshine
Little Miss Sunshine | |
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Directed by | Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris |
Written by | Michael Arndt |
Produced by | Marc Turtletaub Peter Saraf Albert Berger Ron Yerxa David Friendly Michael Beugg (executive) Jeb Brody (executive) |
Starring | Greg Kinnear Toni Collette Steve Carell Abigail Breslin Alan Arkin Paul Dano |
Distributed by | Fox Searchlight Pictures |
Release dates | July 26, 2006 |
Running time | 103 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | US$8 million[1] |
Template:Infobox movie certificates Little Miss Sunshine is a 2006 Academy Award-winning dramatic comedy film about a family's road trip to a children's beauty pageant. The film was directed by the husband-wife team of Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris and was produced by Big Beach Films on a budget of $8 million.[1] Its distribution rights were bought by Fox Searchlight Pictures for $10 million,[2], reportedly one of the biggest deals ever made in the history of the Sundance Film Festival.[3] The movie was released in the United States on July 26, 2006,[4] and had its continental European premiere on August 12 at the 2006 Locarno International Film Festival.[5] The film was nominated for four Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and won two: Best Original Screenplay for Michael Arndt and Best Supporting Actor for Alan Arkin. It also won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature.
Plot summary
Little Miss Sunshine is the story of a few eventful days in the lives of the Hoovers, a family living in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Sheryl Hoover (Toni Collette) is an over-worked mother of two. Her brother Frank (Steve Carell) is a Proust scholar, temporarily living at home with the family after having attempted suicide in the wake of a failed relationship. Sheryl's husband Richard (Greg Kinnear), is a Type A personality striving to help support the family as a motivational speaker and life coach. Son Dwayne (Paul Dano) is an Nietzsche-reading teenager who has taken a vow of silence and has dreams of becoming a test pilot. Richard's father, Edwin (Alan Arkin), recently evicted from a retirement home for snorting heroin, lives with the family; he is close to his seven-year-old granddaughter Olive (Abigail Breslin).
Olive learns she has qualified for the "Little Miss Sunshine" beauty pageant that is being held in Redondo Beach, California in two days. The family, wanting to support Olive, quickly realizes that they all must accompany her to the pageant, getting there through a 700-mile road trip in their yellow VW van.
Family tensions play out on the highway and at stops along the way, amidst the aging VW van's mechanical problems. The family suffers setbacks: Richard loses a big deal that would have jump-started his motivational technique business; Frank, in a convenience store buying pornography at Edwin's request, encounters the ex-boyfriend whose actions had prompted his suicide attempt; Edwin dies from a heroin overdose during the family's stay at a motel; Dwayne discovers that he is color-blind, which means he cannot become a pilot (a realization that prompts him to break his silence); and Sheryl's obsessive manner impedes her to attempt to keep everyone, including herself, calm and sane. Amidst all this, the family races to get to the pageant on time, traveling in a mini-bus with a horn that won't stop honking and must be push started.
The climax takes place at the pageant, which features very young girls with teased hair and capped teeth, wearing adult-like swimsuits and evening wear and performing elaborate dance numbers. Olive, untrained in beauty pageant conventions, is evidently out of place. Recognizing that Olive is a fish out of water whose feelings could really get hurt, the family considers withdrawing her from the competition: Sheryl nevertheless insists that they have to "let Olive be Olive" and participate.
In the talent portion of the pageant, the hitherto-unrevealed dance that Grandpa Edwin had choreographed for his granddaughter is revealed: to the tune of Rick James' "Super Freak", Olive scandalizes and horrifies the audience and pageant judges with a burlesque performance which she joyfully performs, as oblivious to the subtext behind the dance as the other contestants were to the provocative costumes and heavy makeup they were wearing.
When the pageant director approaches Sheryl and Richard to insist on the immediate end of Olive's performance, they, along with Frank and Dwayne, instead join Olive on the stage and dance alongside her.
The family are next seen outside a police officer's office, and are told that they are free to go on the condition that they never take part in a beauty pageant in California ever again. They pile in the van, and with the horn still honking, smash through a toll booth that the Pageant official had stopped at.
Cast
(in order of appearance)
Main cast:
- Abigail Breslin - Olive Hoover
- Greg Kinnear - Richard Hoover
- Paul Dano - Dwayne
- Alan Arkin - Edwin Hoover
- Toni Collette - Sheryl Hoover
- Steve Carell - Frank Ginsberg
Supporting cast:
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Score and soundtrack
The score for Little Miss Sunshine was written by the Denver band DeVotchKa and composer Mychael Danna. Performed by DeVotchKa, much of the music was adapted from the pre-existing DeVotchKa songs "How It Ends," "The Enemy Guns," and "You Love Me" from the DeVotchKa record How It Ends and "La Llorona" from Una Volta.
Directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris were introduced to DeVotchKa's music after hearing the song "You Love Me" on L.A.'s KCRW radio station.[citation needed] Mychael Danna was brought in to help arrange the pre-existing material and collaborate with DeVotchKa on new material for the film. Both DeVotchKa and Danna received 2007 Grammy nominations for their work on the soundtrack.
The soundtrack also contains two songs by Sufjan Stevens ("No Man's Land" and "Chicago"), and songs by Tony Tisdale ("Catwalkin'"), and Rick James ("Super Freak").[6] According to one of the film's DVD commentary tracks (the one including writer Michael Arndt), "Super Freak", the source music danced to by Olive during the "Little Miss Sunshine" talent competition, was introduced during post-production. Arndt's screenplay had called for Prince's song "Peach"; during filming, the ZZ Top song "Gimme All Your Lovin'" was used.
The Little Miss Sunshine score was not eligible for Academy Award consideration due to the percentage of material derived from already written DeVotchKa songs[citation needed]. The DeVotchka song "Til the End of Time" did receive a nomination for a 2006 Satellite Award as Best Original Song.[7]
Box office
- Little Miss Sunshine had the highest per theater average gross of all films shown in the United States every day for the first 16 days of its release.[8]
- On July 29, 2006, the first Saturday after its initial limited release, Little Miss Sunshine earned a $20,335 per theater average gross.[9]
- As of February 22, 2007, Little Miss Sunshine has made $59,766,008 in the U.S. and $94,323,893 total internationally.[1]
Reviews
The film has a "92% fresh" rating from critics and 96% fresh from users at Rotten Tomatoes.[10]
Michael Medved gave Little Miss Sunshine four stars (out of four) saying that "…this startling and irresistible dark comedy counts as one of the very best films of the year…" and that directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, the movie itself, and actors Alan Arkin, Abigail Breslin and Steve Carell deserve Oscar nominations.[11]
Joel Siegel gave Little Miss Sunshine a rarely-awarded 'A' rating, saying that "Orson Welles would have to come back to life for this not to make my year-end Top 10 list."[12] Breslin's depiction of Olive Hoover has also moved many critics, with USA Today's Claudia Puig saying "If Olive had been played by any other little girl, she would not have affected us as mightily as it did." [13]
Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a C rating, calling the characters "walking, talking catalogs of screenwriter index-card data."[14] Jim Ridley of The Village Voice called the movie a "rickety vehicle that travels mostly downhill" and a "Sundance clunker."[15] Anna Nimouse of the National Review writes that the "film is praised as a 'feel-good' film; perhaps for moviegoers who like bamboo under their fingernails. If you are miserable, then Little Miss Sunshine is the film for you."[16]
On the December 22, 2006 edition of The Tonight Show, Dustin Hoffman, who was on the show along with Abigail Breslin, said, "It's[specify] one of the best performances that I have seen in my entire life."
Awards
Wins
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Nominations
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DVD release
The DVD was released on December 19, 2006. It includes a dual-disc widescreen/full screen format, two commentary tracks, four alternate endings, and a music video by DeVotchKa.
Production information
Template:List to prose (section)
- Originally written as an East Coast road trip movie from Maryland to Florida, it was shifted to a journey from New Mexico to California due to shooting issues.[citation needed]
- Although the role of the suicidal uncle was originally written for Bill Murray[citation needed], and there was studio pressure for Robin Williams[citation needed], the part eventually went to Steve Carell.
- The script was purchased from first time screenwriter Michael Arndt for $250,000.[citation needed]
- Although known to Comedy Central viewers for many years as a correspondent on the high-rated satirical news program The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Steve Carell, at the time he was cast for Little Miss Sunshine, was a relative unknown in Hollywood. According to an article in Entertainment Weekly,[17] the producers of the film worried that he wasn't a big enough star and didn't have much acting experience. However, between the time the film was shot (summer 2005) and its release a year later, Carell became a huge success as the star of the high-grossing film The 40-Year-Old Virgin and the leading character of the popular television series The Office.
- All the girls acting as participants in the beauty pageant, except Abigail Breslin, were veterans of real beauty pageants. They looked the same and performed the same acts as they had in their real-life pageants.[18]
- During the scenes in the van in which Alan Arkin's character was swearing excessively, Abigail had her headphones on and could not hear the lines. When she took her headphones off and asked what they were talking about, Arkin says "politics." Only when she saw the movie did she know what was being said.[19]
- Rebecca Annitto, the niece of producer Peter Saraf and an extra in scenes set in the diner and the convenience store, was killed in a car accident on September 14, 2005.[20] The film was dedicated to her.
Parodies
- In the opening for the pre-show segment for the 79th Academy Awards, Mumble, the dancing penguin from Happy Feet, comes to Los Angeles to attend the award ceremony. The lost penguin finds the same kind of microbus being push-started with characters from Pirates of the Caribbean, Letters from Iwo Jima, Marie Antoinette and Abigail Breslin herself while Queen Elizabeth II is driving. Abigail calls for Mumble to jump in as well and the penguin manages to do so with her help.
- A very short parody, Bigger Miss Sunshine, was released by MTV & Yahoo Movies at the MTV Movie Awards on June 10.
Popular culture references
In Made in America, the series finale of HBO's The Sopranos, the film is seen playing in the hospital room of Silvio Dante at a comically incongruous moment during a visit from Tony Soprano.
References
- ^ a b c "Little Miss Sunshine at Box Office Mojo". Retrieved 2006-12-27.
- ^ Thompson, Anne (2006-01-27). "Some cold, hard facts from Sundance". Reuters/Hollywood Reporter on Yahoo! News Singapore website. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
- ^ Senh Duong, Rotten Tomatoes, SUNDANCE: Searchlight Spends Big For “Little Miss Sunshine”, January 21, 2006. Retrieved 2006-11-17.
- ^ Box Office Mojo Broken link, as of 2006-11-17.
- ^ Eric J. Lyman (2006-08-03). "Locarno opens with low-key launch". hollywoodreporter.com. Retrieved 2007-04-11.
- ^ Little Miss Sunshine (Original Soundtrack) at AllMusic
- ^ The 11th Annual SATELLITE™ Awards Nominees from the International Press Academy website
- ^ "Box Office Mojo". Retrieved 2006-11-28.
- ^ "Daily Box Office". July 30, 2006. Retrieved 2006-11-18.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ "Little Miss Sunshine at Rottentomatoes.com". Retrieved 2006-11-18.
- ^ Michael Medved. ""Little Miss Sunshine"". Retrieved 2006-11-18.
- ^ Joel Siegel (July 27, 2006). "Joel Siegel's Hollywood". Retrieved 2006-11-18.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Claudia Puig. "These kids are golden". USAToday.com. Retrieved 2007-04-11.
- ^ Owen Gleiberman (July 26, 2006). "[[Entertainment Weekly]]". Retrieved 2007-01-18.
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(help); URL–wikilink conflict (help) - ^ Jim Ridley (July 25, 2006). "[[The Village Voice]]". Retrieved 2007-01-18.
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(help); URL–wikilink conflict (help) - ^ "[[National Review]]". February 26, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-27.
{{cite web}}
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(help); URL–wikilink conflict (help) - ^ Entertainment Weekly, "Why everyone's buzzing about 'Little Miss Sunshine'" August 3, 2006. Retrieved November 18, 2006.
- ^ Kim Voynar, "Interview with 'Little Miss Sunshine' Directors Valerie Faris & Jonathan Dayton", last updated 2006-09-12. Retrieved November 18, 2006.
- ^ INTERVIEW: Alan Arkin and Abigail Breslin in "Little Miss Sunshine" CineCon.com
- ^ SOS - Service Opportunities for Students: Rebecca Annitto, (her family and friends established an XWiki site to complete her wish of a Web site dedicated for helping teens to be volunteers), from www.sosprinceton.org
External links
- Press release for the film, from Fox Searchlight Pictures
- Little Miss Sunshine at Rotten Tomatoes
- Little Miss Sunshine at Metacritic
- Little Miss Sunshine at Box Office Mojo
- Little Miss Sunshine at Film Freak Central
- Little Miss Sunshine at Alternative Film Guide