
Quirky in a Good WayWhy all the hate for Little Miss Sunshine?
Posted Thursday, Feb. 22, 2007, at 1:46 PM ET
Late last month, in the final days of Oscar-nom speculation, Time ran a piece by its longtime movie critic Richard Corliss lamenting the state of independent film in America. In "The Trouble With Sundance," Corliss tells a familiar story: Back in an innocent Sundance past, a few scruffy underground films emerged from Robert Redford's little film fest to score unexpected box office, then the moguls rushed in with an eye to bottling the low-budget magic. In doing so, they inevitably created another stale formula: indie-quirk. As Corliss writes: "Sundance films weren't quirky; they did quirky. Quirky became another genre."
By now, Corliss' thesis is more than valid. It's obvious. You might even say it's formulaic. The critics have a point, which they sometimes make with noticeable bitterness, that many independent films are stale and mannered. But for some of these films, this critical dismissal is a strange fate: to be faulted for pretense, preciosity, and stylistic calculation when their real achievement is to reintroduce an enjoyable sort of broad humor into American cinema. You may not find the next Bergman at Sundance, but you might well find some fancy poop jokes.
The catalyst for Corliss' diatribe was Sundance alum Little Miss Sunshine, which has had earned almost $60 million at the box office and four Oscar nominations, including best picture. Like other indie-quirk films, Little Miss Sunshine opens in an atmosphere of psychological crisis. Uncle Frank (Steve Carrell) has been hospitalized after a gruesomely earnest suicide attempt and is forced to move in with his sister's family, which itself is showing some cracks. Maybe this is what throws people off about these movies, the stunned, anomic tone in their early scenes. The suggestion of trauma in Act I does not mean that we are embarking on a solemn examination of human suffering. It means that we are entering Cuckooland.
In Cuckooland, people with whom you might otherwise identify get away with things that they would normally never even attempt. For example, it is pretty inconceivable that a smart, sensitive, quirky girl like Olive (Abigail Breslin)—whose ambition of winning the Little Miss Sunshine pageant is what starts her family on their fateful road trip—would be drawn to beauty pageants in the first place, or that her smart, sensitive mother (Toni Collette) would allow her to compete in them, or that her cynical, adoring, protective grandfather (Alan Arkin) would go along, too. And it is pretty inconceivable that the usual indie-plex audience would look sympathetically on these indulgences. They are not the beauty-pageant demographic. Except that, well, Uncle Frank, who anyway is gay, has just slit his wrists. And older brother Dwayne (Paul Dano), who fancies himself a Nietzschean, has taken a vow of silence. And dad Richard (Greg Kinnear) is trying to market a patently moronic motivational shtick.
In other words, these characters are odd in a very formalized comedic way. Self-consciousness is part of the setup. They are almost-real people displaced into Cuckooland by a series of transparent indie conceits. The telltale stylistic quirks—the lingering close-ups, the deadpan tone—grant these characters the sort of dignity they wouldn't have in a studio comedy even as it readies you to see them doing some quite improbable things. Things like an 80-year-old snorting heroin and a ferociously repressed middle-aged man directing his family to steal a corpse.
The overtness of these gestures raises all sorts of red flags among critics, who have grown wary of Postmodern tricks in the Tarantino era. But since it's comedy we're talking about, the overriding critical question would seem to be: Is Little Miss Sunshine funny? I found it pretty funny, funnier by a long shot by than the vast majority of mainstream comedies, and, at the indie-plex screening I attended, a lot of people laughed. Little Miss Sunshine may not be a great film. The dad character is saved from being a malicious caricature only by Kinnear's marvelous performance, and the dance-party climax is pat and saccharine. But why should anyone be so annoyed by a genial comedy that clearly satisfies the genre-requirement that it be funny?












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Remarks from the Fray:
Little Miss Sunshine shows each character's life and dreams being shattered, while jabbing at the viewer with slapstick and sight gags. It was like sitting at a funeral next to someone who is making armpit noises. It wraps up with the flat-out, excruciating humiliation of a little girl who is too young and sweet to understand the situation, but tells us that that's OK because this little group of tics and caricatures is ... wait for it ... a family! I left this film feeling angry and used, and I was horrified to see it rewarded with an Oscar nomination.
--Tom_Tildrum
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LMS was a fairly amusing film. About midway through viewing it, I realized it bore an uncanny resemblance to the less-lauded "National Lampoon's Vacation" and have been unable to shake that association ever since.
Nonetheless, I thought it had its redeeming qualities. To this viewer, much of the backlash can be summed up thusly: the "quirky" indie comedies rarely get much establishment (read: Oscar) love or big box office. It's frustrating when the films that are recognized aren't truly exceptional. The best example of this? "My Big Fat Greek Wedding"- a film less envelope-pushing than your average eighties-era Goldie Hawn star vehicle.
Truly hilarious films are overlooked all the time- personally, I found "Clerks II" and "Idiocracy" far more amusing and insightful than LMS, but I knew that viewpoint wouldn't be validated by my fellow movie-goers, let alone critics and the Academy. Unhappy supporters of films that are routinely on the outside looking in are bound to lash out at someone/something. That's where "Little Miss Sunshine" comes in.
--NathanAZ
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The people who didn't like Little Miss Sunshine must be the same people who thought The Simpsons was too rude and mean (when it first started, not now). I don't get it. I'm always interested in a movie that makes me see the humanity in people I wouldn't usually touch with a telephone pole (like the utter twit played by Greg Kinnear, and his pornhound dad).
--sugar_k
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(2/25)