Movie Review: Little Miss Sunshine

Tagged as the film that puts the “fun” in “dysfunctional,” Little Miss Sunshine is an entertaining and overall cute experience. Throughout its running-time, the picture crescendos in its characters’ frustrations and developments. By the end, you will appreciate its depth and humor, and view the 100 minutes invested as time well spent.

Olive Hoover (Abigail Breslin) dreams of winning the title of “Little Miss Sunshine” — the top prize at a California beauty pageant. Her father, and lecturer on winners and losers, Richard Hoover (Greg Kinnear), refuses to allow his daughter to not live out her dream.  That’s why, when the opportunity comes, Richard and family quickly seize the moment and hop into their yellow VW van for a cross-country trip.

Also supporting Olive is her suicidal gay Uncle Frank (Steve Carell), drug-addicted grandfather Edwin (Alan Arkin), silent Air Force-bound brother Dwayne (Paul Dano), and stay-at-home mom Sheryl (Toni Collette).

In many ways, Little Miss Sunshine parallels a National Lampoon’s Vacation feature. Namely, the plot is comprised of a little trip that goes too far. The core characters are present in both: mom, dad, son, daughter, uncle/cousin, and grandparent/aunt. And, in Little Miss Sunshine the eldest ends up suffering the same fate as Aunt Edna from Vacation. Furthermore, Greg Kinnear’s character exudes the same exact confidence and determination as Chevy Chase’s to meet an end goal — regardless of the hardships it forces his family to endure. 

Apart from the film’s lead actor, Steve Carell could be pinned as a supporting actor; however, Alan Arkin is merely a shadow in the script that drops a few f-bombs. He departs from the story 50 minutes in, and his screen time before this 50-minute mark is limited. Yes, his character stands out, but not enough to warrant an Academy Award nomination for supporting actor.

Men aside, Abigail Breslin is the highlight of the show. Proving she can not only emit emotion easier than a baby who wants its bottle, but also pull off wearing a fat suit and dancing on par with the likes of Napoleon Dynamite, this charming 10-year-old is surely a star. Only time will tell if this gifted young actress can continue to convey such on-screen magic into her adulthood.

Little Miss Sunshine is a comical and commendable motion picture. Its snowballing plot and unique characters make it an overall positive viewing experience. What’s more, the next time you hear Rick James’ “Super Freak,” you won’t help but to think of Little Miss Sunshine, Olive Hoover, and smile.  

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Article Author: Brandon Valentine

Brandon Valentine is a film critic from Hershey, PA. Aside from possessing the last name “Valentine” and living in “the Sweetest Place on Earth,” Brandon was also born on Valentine’s Day. That’s right, a Valentine born on Valentine’s Day. …

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  • Little Miss Sunshine Little Miss Sunshine

    Take a hilarious ride with the Hoovers, one of the most endearingly fractured families in comedy history. Father Richard (Greg Kinnear) is desperately trying to sell his motivational success program...with no success. ...

Article comments

  • 1 - lono

    Jan 29, 2007 at 11:36 pm

    indeed, an awesome flic. I was dragged to the theatres to see it with my wife last year. I say 'dragged' because I thought it was a stupid chick flic. Wrong, it was brilliant and the hardest I laughed at the movies in years. We bought the DVD the second it came out and have been spreading the gospel through viewings with friends and family.

    What makes it so great is a cast of all stars pull back to serve the story. Watch the nice touches, like when they finally arrive at the competition. Steve Carrell runs in with the family to the hotel. Notice Carrell's job running, he really runs like a 35 year old gay suicidal proust scholar might run.

    The cast is sweeping awards everywhere they go, and I am glad to see Kinnear finally get some cred. Remember his restrained but warm character 'Simon' from 'good as it gets'?

    anyhow, see this movie. Own this movie.

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