by Derek Smith 8/17/06
If the picture to your right can't stand for the current
state of pop-indie filmmaking, it can at least stand as a clear
representation of just about
every problem I have with Little
Miss Sunshine. If independent filmmakers think that all
you need to present an original vision is to embrace the outcasts of
mainstream cinema - the homosexuals, the depressed (hey, they got a
two-for-one with Steve Carrell on this one), the angst-ridden teen, the
chubby kid and parents trying to make ends meet - and then inject them
into a formulaic plot, than we might as we throw ourselves at the feet
of the studios and let them have their way with us. I mean, I'm
all for quirkiness with tender mix of comedy and drama, but Little Miss Sunshine is pure cotton
candy - instances of sweetness that dissolve into nothing...perfectly
agreeable in the present but leaving you with a sticky residue that
requires some serious Scope-time to remove. Ok, forget about the
mouthwash and take what you will from the rest. My point is that
these are exactly the types of films that we don't need to be applauding even if
they're far from the worst trash Hollywood dishes out on a weekly
basis. Personally, I didn't hate the film because the likes of
Carrell and Toni Collette are just so damn likeable, but if independent
cinema is supposed to be original, challenging and attempting to expand
the possibilities of genre and style, what good are pleasant, quirky
audience-pleasers?
For fear of sounding like I'm trashing a film that I kind
of, almost enjoyed, I should give some credit where credit is
due. Its one impressive feat is that it manages to get more
mileage out of its tiresome archetypes than one could ever hope for,
both in terms of humor and the few perversely touching sequences on the
road, but even these moments are fleeting as absurd coincidences and
contrivances immediately bring things crashing down to
mediocrity. Carrell's struggle to cope with the loss of his lover
and, subsequently, his job is played straight (no pun intended) and his
stone-faced resilience and acceptance of everything thrown his way from
the start of the film is actually quite moving until the filmmaker's
decide to play his misery for laughs in an uncomfortably bad quicky
mart scene that I won't ruin for those planning to see the film.
The scene exemplifies the major fault of Little Miss Sunshine - a staunch
refusal to let things get too serious without interrupting with
repeated attempts at bittersweet humor and the inability to be dramatic
without simultaneously being cute. It remains stuck in a limbo
state that more and more indie films find themselves these days because
of its non-committal attitude. Relying almost solely on its
bubbly quirkiness to keep things afloat, it falls into the trap of the
newfound indie formula where the embracing of the dysfunctional family
is all you need for a successful film. Psychological and
philosophical truths are doled out like fortune cookies as if audiences
aren't ready to swallow the cold, hard truths of the modern world
without the candy-coating. That it even touches on some serious
issues like disaffected youth and high-pressure child-rearing is enough
for many people to give this film a pass, but in the end, all it is one
big blown opportunity. After all, if independent filmmakers stop
taking risks, then what are we left with?