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		No. 33 - 
				Little Miss Sunshine (2006)Big Beach Films/Bona Fide 
				Productions/Third Gear Productions, 
				Fox Searchlight Pictures
 Welcome to 
		hell...
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				Little Miss Sunshine (2006), 
				DML Rating: 
				★★★★★★★★★★ 
				- perfect 
		
		Rated: R for strong language, some sexual and drug content Directors:  Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris; 
		Screenplay: Michael Arndt 
		 Starring: Greg Kinnear, Steve Carell, 
		Toni Collette, Paul Dano, Abigail Breslin, Alan Arkin, Bryan Cranston, 
		Beth Grant Movie Introduction: Here we have the Hoover family: a 
		struggling motivational speaker Richard (Kinnear); a stressed-out wife 
		Sheryl (Collette); a gay, depressed uncle Frank (Carell); a 
		Nietzsche-obsessed teenager Dwayne (Dano) 
		and a mildly perverted grandfather Edwin (Arkin). This dysfunctional 
		crew, all pile into a yellow Volkswagen mini-bus and head to California to 
		support pudgy ten-year-old daughter Olive’s (Breslin) qualification for the 
		Little Miss Sunshine Contest. Everyone’s sanity is stretched beyond 
		their limits during this cross-country trek.  
		 
		 Defining Moment: 
		meltdown As the family speeds down the highway on their journey, Olive 
		is playing a game with her coloring books. She gets her brother Dwayne to go along 
		and realizes that he cannot differentiate colors.  Frank overhears this and 
		tells Dwayne, who has taken vow of silence until he gets into 
		fighter-pilot school, the brutal truth that pilots cannot be color 
		blind. This sends the already fragile Dwayne into an emotional tail-spin. 
		He begins to lose it and frantically motions to stop the van! They 
		quickly pull over, the teen jumps out and runs about several yards away. 
		He explodes, expelling all his frustrations and angst! So ends his vow of silence. 
		Something subtle you might have missed:  philosophy 101 Through this nutty family road 
		movie, we are subtly exposed to two distinct philosophies, those of 
		Frederick Nietzsche and 
		Marcel Proust. Dwayne, who like many teenagers hates his parents, uses 
		Nietzsche's mantra to channel his radical energy, and somehow justify 
		his disdain for the world. A central theme from Proust is that we become 
		who we are because of our struggles. Frank himself has recently endured 
		such troubles - the loss of his boyfriend and the loss of his job - his 
		attempted suicide. When Dwayne finds out he cannot be a pilot, Frank 
		understands his pain. It is through their conversations that they start 
		to understand that success is not claiming a title or winning a contest, 
		it's about being your authentic self and learning from your past 
		tribulations.    Memorable Quotes: 
		 "Whoa whoa whoa, back up a 
		minute. D'you know what a loser is? A real loser is someone who's so 
		afraid of not winning, they don't even try. Now you're trying, right?" -
		Grandpa Edwin "Oh my God, I’m getting pulled 
		over. Everyone, just pretend to be normal." Richard Hoover "I'd like to dedicate this to my 
		grandpa, who showed me these moves." - Olive Hoover 
		 Dad's Review: Looking back on my childhood, I 
		can honestly say that we had a level of dysfunction. My parents divorced 
		when I was five. I had ADHD, which drove folks crazy. Mom and I moved 
		ten hours away to live with my sister and 
		her husband, Roberto. My sister was a registered nurse (RN). They had 
		young two children and Roberto was often out of work. He did, however, 
		find time to take long "political" trips 
		to Mexico City. (that's another story.) Anyway, this film resurrects a 
		memory I have regarding a trip to Dallas to visit Six Flags Over 
		Texas (that's us, on the Six Flags tramcar, on the right) . We spent the 
		day at the park, staying past dark. Of course, no hotel room had been 
		booked. Roberto spent two hours driving a grumpy carload around downtown Dallas looking 
		for lodging. We finally 
		landed at a hotel in the middle of the worst part of town, right 
		smack-dab at the intersection of Drug Dealer Avenue and Hooker Boulevard. We clamored 
		into the room, terrified. Yet, we had made it, safe and sound, then 
		Roberto says, "I'm going for a 
		walk." And he left us. We were 
		mortified. Later that night he finally returned. I remember my Mom 
		giving him a piece of her 
		mind. She did that a lot, come to think of it. We made it home alive, but 
		that was a 
		typical adventure in those days.
		 Little Miss Sunshine is 
		an adventure like that, only fueled by high-octane gasoline. Everyone in the film's yellow 
		van has their own set of issues. But, as much as they can, they unite to 
		make sure that Little Olive gets to her Miss Sunshine pageant. One 
		minute in, we all can see this is going to be "one of those trips", with 
		hopefully a happy ending.  One other thing unites our 
		traveling family: Each individual is seeking happiness. The emo teen 
		wants to get away from his family. The father wants to get is book 
		published. The uncle wants to get over his last painful relationship. 
		The mother just wants to hold everything together the best she can. 
		Olive wants to win the contest. Then there's Grandpa-he just wants to 
		speak is mind and look at porn mags. The trip has it comedic ups and 
		downs and it very effective at character-building.  
		 As part of the Little Miss 
		Sunshine pageant, mousy Olive is required to perform a musical number. Her immediate 
		family is too messed up with their own problems to pay her much notice, 
		much less prepare a talent show routine. 
		Luckily Grandpa Edwin volunteers to help her out. As the family makes the long 
		drive, Edwin works with Olive on her number. He coaches 
		her, gives her encouragement, helps her fine-tune the routine. It's 
		truly heartwarming. All the preparation pays off as Olive takes the 
		stage, beaming with confidence. Her moment is one for the ages! Wow. So, does the family pass through 
		the crucible and find collective happiness? Very much so, and it is all 
		about the journey. It is a stellar cast that makes 
		it all work, and the yellow 
		van should be included - it certainly seems to have 
		personality. Alan Arkin, as Grandpa, is a treasure when 
		onscreen.  One final word on families: 
		Guess what - they are all dysfunctional to a degree. Oddly enough, it's 
		the craziness we remember most and laugh about. It makes our 
		family unique. So don't stress over it. Here is what I 
		would tell my younger self, "Relax tiger, it's not as bad as it 
		seems. Just go with it."   
				Onto No. 34... Señor Senator Travels 
		to The Center of Democracy           
 
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