Little Miss Sunshine
Little Miss Sunshine | |
---|---|
Albert Berger | |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Fox Searchlight Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 102 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $8 million[1] |
Box office | $101 million[1] |
Little Miss Sunshine is a 2006 American tragicomedy[2] road film directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris (in their directorial debut) from a screenplay written by Michael Arndt. The film stars an ensemble cast consisting of Greg Kinnear, Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Paul Dano, Abigail Breslin, and Alan Arkin, all of whom play members of a dysfunctional family taking the youngest (Breslin) to compete in a child beauty pageant. It was produced by Big Beach Films on a budget of US$8 million.[1][3] Filming began on June 6, 2005, and took place over 30 days in Arizona and Southern California.
The film premiered at the
Little Miss Sunshine was a box office success, earning $101 million, and was praised mainly for the performances (particularly towards Breslin and Arkin), direction, screenplay and humor. The film garnered four nominations at the
Plot
Sheryl Hoover is an overworked mother of two living in
Olive learns she has qualified for the "Little Miss Sunshine" beauty pageant, being held in Redondo Beach, California, in two days. Richard, Sheryl, and Edwin want to support her, and Frank and Dwayne cannot be left alone, so the whole family goes. Because they have little money, they go on an 800-mile (1,300 km) road trip in their yellow Volkswagen van. Family tensions play out along the way, amidst the aging van's mechanical problems. When the van breaks down early on, the family learns that they must push the van until it is moving at about 20 mph (32 km/h) before it is put into gear, at which point they have to run up to the side door and jump in. Later on, the van's horn starts honking unceasingly by itself, which leads to the family being pulled over by a state trooper.
Throughout the trip, the family suffers numerous personal setbacks and discovers their need for each other's support. Richard loses an important contract that would have jump-started his motivational business. Frank encounters the ex-boyfriend who, in leaving him for an academic rival, had prompted his suicide attempt. Edwin dies from a heroin overdose, and the family has to smuggle his body out of the hospital, almost getting caught by the police. During the final leg of the trip, Dwayne discovers that he is color blind, meaning he cannot become a pilot. This prompts him to finally break his silence and scream his disdain for his family, though he apologizes after Olive calms him with a hug.
After a frantic race against the clock, the family arrives at the pageant hotel. The other contestants are slim,
The family is later released from the hotel's security office on the condition that Olive never enters a beauty pageant in California again. Piling into the van with the horn still honking, they happily smash through the barrier of the hotel's toll booth and begin their trip back home to Albuquerque.
Cast
- Greg Kinnear as Richard
- Steve Carell as Frank
- Toni Collette as Sheryl
- Paul Dano as Dwayne
- Abigail Breslin as Olive
- Alan Arkin as Grandpa
- Bryan Cranston as Stan Grossman
- Beth Grant as Pageant Official Jenkins
- Wallace Langham as Kirby
- Matt Winston as Pageant MC
- Julio Oscar Mechoso as Mechanic
- Paula Newsome as Linda
- Dean Norris as State Trooper McCleary
- Mary Lynn Rajskub as Pageant Assistant Pam
Production
Casting
You start off with all these people living their separate lives and the climax of the movie is them all jumping up onstage together. So the story is really about these families starting separately and ending together.
—Michael Arndt, writer[5]
When choosing the cast for the film, directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris were assisted by casting directors Kim Davis and Justine Baddeley who had worked with them on previous music videos.[6] Davis and Baddeley traveled to "every English-speaking country"[6] to search for the actress to portray Olive Hoover, and they finally chose actress Abigail Breslin through an audition when she was six. Paul Dano was cast as Dwayne two years before production began and in preparation for portraying his character, spent a few days taking his own vow of silence.[7]
The role of Frank, the suicidal Proust scholar, was originally written for Bill Murray, and there was also studio pressure for Robin Williams.[8] The directing duo chose Steve Carell for the role a few months before filming began, and in an interview revealed: "When we met with Steve Carell, we didn't know he could do this based upon what he had done. But when we met with him and talked to him about the character, the tone of the movie and the way we were approaching it, he was right on the same page with us."[6] Although known to Comedy Central viewers for many years as a correspondent on the highly rated satirical news program The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, at the time Carell was cast for Little Miss Sunshine, he was relatively unknown in Hollywood.[9] Producers of the film were worried that he was not a big enough star and did not have much acting experience.[10]
Script and development
The script was written by
The producers met directors Dayton and Faris while producing Election and in turn gave the script to them to read in 2001. The directors commented later on the script stating: "This film really struck a chord. We felt like it was written for us."[8] The script was purchased from first-time screenwriter Arndt for $250,000 by Marc Turtletaub, one of the film's producers, on December 21, 2001.[16] Yerxa and Berger remained as producers as they were responsible for finding the directors and cinematographer, assisting in the ending re-shoot, and helping bring the film to the Sundance Film Festival.[17]
The film was pitched to several studios, and the only interested studio was Focus Features, who wanted to film it in Canada.[8] After the studio attempted to have the film be centered on the character Richard Hoover, and Arndt disagreed, he was fired and replaced by another writer.[5] The new writer added several scenes, including Richard's confrontation with the character who dismisses his motivational technique business.[18] A corporate change brought in a new studio head and Arndt was rehired when the new writer left after four weeks of rewriting the script.[19] After two years of pre-production, Focus Features dropped the film in August 2004. Marc Turtletaub paid $400,000 to Focus Features to buy back the rights to the film and for development costs.[8] He also paid for the $8 million budget, allowing Little Miss Sunshine to then be filmed.[20]
Filming
Principal photography began on June 6, 2005.[21] Filming took place over 30 days in Arizona and southern California, with scenes shot in keeping with the chronological order of the script.[6][17] Arndt re-wrote the ending to the film six weeks before the film's release at the Sundance Film Festival, and this was filmed in December 2005.[22] The film was dedicated to Rebecca Annitto, the niece of producer Peter Saraf and an extra in scenes set in the diner and the convenience store, who was killed in a car accident on September 14, 2005.[23]
Volkswagen T2 Microbus
When writing the script, Arndt chose the Volkswagen T2 Microbus to use for the road trip based on his experience with the vehicle and its practicality for filming: "I remember thinking, it's a road trip, what vehicle are you going to put them in? And [the] VW bus just seems logical, just because you have these high ceilings and these clean sight lines where you can put the camera. In the front windshield looking back and seeing everybody."[5] Five VW Microbuses were used for the family car as some were modified for different filming techniques.[24] Three of the vans had engines, and the two without were mounted on trailers.[24] During pre-production, the cinematographer used a basic video camera and set it up at angles inside the van to determine the best locations to shoot from during filming.[25] Many of the problems associated with the van that were included in the plot (a broken clutch, a stuck horn, and a detached door), were based on similar problems that writer Arndt experienced during a childhood trip that involved the same type of vehicle.[19][26][27]
In an interview, actor Greg Kinnear jokingly described how the scenes were filmed when he was driving: "I was going like 50 miles an hour [80 km/h] in this '71 VW van that doesn't have side airbags. Basically, you'd wait for this huge camera truck to come whizzing in front of us with the camera. 'Okay, go!' I mean, it was insanity; it's the most dangerous movie I've ever made."
Pageant
Prior to writing the script, Arndt read in a newspaper about Arnold Schwarzenegger speaking to a group of high school students and saying "If there's one thing in this world I hate, it's losers. I despise them." As a result, Arndt developed his script lampooning the thought process: "And I thought there's something so wrong with that attitude ... I wanted to ... attack that idea that in life you're going up or you're going down ... So to a degree, a child beauty pageant is the epitome of the ultimate stupid meaningless competition people put themselves through."[5] Co-director Jonathan Dayton also commented on the importance of the pageant to the film: "As far as the pageant goes, it was very important to us that the film not be about pageants. It's about being out of place, it's about not knowing where you're going to end up ..."[31] 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.[32] To prepare for filming, the directors attended several pageants in Southern California and met with a coordinator to learn more about the pageant process.[33] A mother of a contestant in the film claimed that the film overplayed practices that the contestants go through: "Most pageants aren't quite like that, with shaving the girls' legs, spraying them with fake tans and putting on so much makeup."[33]
When Focus Features initially wanted to film in Canada, the directors opposed it, believing the costs of flying all of the pageant girls and their families would be excessive.[8] The contestants and their families instead spent two weeks filming in a hotel in Ventura with most of the equipment and costumes being provided by the contestants' parents.[33][34] To make Breslin's character the "plump" figure as shown in the film, she had to wear a padded suit during filming.[35] For Olive's final scene involving her dancing routine, Breslin spent two weeks preparing with a choreographer.[28]
Music
"It was very important for us to find the right sound for this movie. We hoped that we could find it before we actually filmed the picture because that's how we worked for years and we've found that music informs our choices."
—Jonathan Dayton, director[6]
Score
The
Directors Dayton and Faris were introduced to DeVotchKa's music after hearing the song "You Love Me" on
Soundtrack
Little Miss Sunshine (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) | |
---|---|
Lakeshore Records | |
Producer | Various Artists |
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
SoundtrackNet | [44] |
The
Track listing
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "The Winner Is" | Rocasound Revamp)" | Rick James | 4:13 |
13. | "La Llorona" | DeVotchKa | 3:24 | |
14. | "How It Ends" | DeVotchKa | 5:39 | |
Total length: | 46:31 |
Release
Sundance Film Festival
Following the film's premiere at the
Box office
Little Miss Sunshine initially opened in seven theaters in the U.S. in its first week, earning $498,796.[52] On July 29, 2006, the first Saturday after its initial limited release, Little Miss Sunshine earned a $20,335 per-theater average gross.[53] It had the highest per-theater average gross of all the films shown in the United States every day for the first 21 days of its release, until being surpassed by the IMAX film Deep Sea 3D on August 15.[54] In its third week of release Little Miss Sunshine entered the list of top ten highest grossing American films for the week. It remained in the top ten until the 11th week of release, when it dropped to 11th place.[52] The highest position it reached was third, which occurred in its fifth week of release. The largest number of theaters the film appeared in was 1,602.[52] Internationally, the film earned over $5 million in Australia, $3 million in Germany, $4 million in Spain, and $6 million combined in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Malta.[55] Little Miss Sunshine has had gross receipts of $59,891,098 in North America and $40,632,083 internationally for a total of $100,523,181.[1]
Home media
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. In its first week of release, DVD sales totaled $19,614,299 and it was the sixth-most sold DVD of the week.[56] By September 16, 2008, gross domestic DVD sales totaled $55,516,832.[56] Rentals of the film from its release through April 15, 2007, totalled $46.32 million.[57] The film was released on Blu-ray on February 10, 2009.[58]
Reception
Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film received a 91% positive aggregate rating, based on 218 reviews, with an average rating of 7.72/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Little Miss Sunshine succeeds thanks to a strong ensemble cast that includes Greg Kinnear, Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Alan Arkin, and Abigail Breslin, as well as a delightfully funny script."[59] On Metacritic, the film holds a score of 80 out of 100, based on reviews from 36 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[60]
Michael Medved gave Little Miss Sunshine four 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 deserved Oscar nominations.[61] Joel Siegel issued an 'A' rating, saying that "Orson Welles would have to come back to life for this not to make my year-end Top 10 list."[62] Stella Papamichael of BBC News called the film "a winning blend of sophistication and silliness".[63] USA Today's Claudia Puig commented on Breslin's depiction of Olive Hoover, "If Olive had been played by any other little girl, she would not have affected us as mightily as it did."[64]
Roger Ebert reflected on the film's themes, writing "Little Miss Sunshine shows us a world in which there's a form, a brochure, a procedure, a job title, a diet, a step-by-step program, a career path, a prize, a retirement community, to quantify, sort, categorize and process every human emotion or desire. Nothing exists that cannot be compartmentalized or turned into a self-improvement mantra about 'winners and losers.'"[70] Brian Tallerico of UGO.com also focused on the film's themes: "Little Miss Sunshine teaches us to embrace that middle ground, acknowledging that life may just be a beauty pageant, where we're often going to be outdone by someone prettier, smarter, or just plain luckier, but if we get up on that stage and be ourselves, everything will turn out fine."[71]
Accolades
Little Miss Sunshine was nominated for and won multiple awards from numerous film organizations and festivals. It was nominated for four
commended the film for its ensemble cast. Then 10-year-old Abigail Breslin was nominated for several Best Supporting Actress and Breakthrough Performance awards.The
among others.Number of producers controversy in Academy Awards
There was some controversy concerning how many
The PGA had previously honored all five of the producers.[90] Albert Berger, reacting to the Academy's decision while at a panel for the film, stated "No matter what the Academy decided, we produced this movie."[17] In June 2007, the Academy announced that they would allow exceptions for films that had more than three producers in the future, stating, "The committee has the right, in what it determines to be a rare and extraordinary circumstance, to name any additional qualified producer as a nominee."[90]
Stage musical adaptation
A musical based on the film, with music and lyrics by William Finn and book and direction by James Lapine, was workshopped at the Sundance Institute Theatre Lab at White Oak in Yulee, Florida October 25 through November 7, 2009.[91] It then premiered at the La Jolla Playhouse from February 15 through March 27, 2011.[92] The cast features Hunter Foster, Malcolm Gets, Georgi James, Dick Latessa, Jennifer Laura Thompson, and Taylor Trensch.[93][94]
On March 11, 2011, Gets left the show. Ensemble member Andrew Samonsky took over the role of Uncle Frank, and understudy Ryan Wagner took over the role of Joshua Rose until the show closed on March 27, 2011. The musical premiered at
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External links
- Little Miss Sunshine at IMDb
- Little Miss Sunshine at the TCM Movie Database
- Little Miss Sunshine at AllMovie
- Little Miss Sunshine at Rotten Tomatoes
- Little Miss Sunshine at Metacritic
- Little Miss Sunshine at Box Office Mojo