Synopsis
Most four-year-olds make paintings that hang on the refrigerator in their parents' kitchen, but by that age Marla Olmstead already had her first gallery show in Binghamton, New York. Born in 2000, Marla first picked up a paint brush when she was a year old, following the example of her father, an amateur painter, and soon the tyke was creating large canvases with unexpected skill and enthusiasm. Her father gave one of Marla's paintings to a friend who owned a coffee shop, and when a customer offered to buy the piece for $250, the pre-kindergartener began a career as a professional artist. Marla's work has been displayed around the United States and her paintings fetch as much as $25,000 each, but some have questioned if Marla is following her own muse or taking instruction from her parents. Others have debated the validity of reviews comparing her work to Pablo Picasso and Jackson Pollock, and a few have asked if Marla's parents are the art world equivalent of stage mothers, pushing their child and exploiting her talents for their own benefit. Documentary filmmaker Amir Bar-Lev examines young artist, her work and the controversy behind it in his film My Kid Could Paint That, which was an official selection at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
Year: 2007
Runtime: 82
Country: USA
MPAA Rating: PG13
for language
Category: Documentary
Sound
Dolby Digital
Produced by
A&E Indie Films
A&E IndieFilms
Axis Films
BBC
Passion Films
Passion Pictures
Release
October 05, 2007 (USA - Limited)
by
A&E IndieFilms
Sony Pictures Classics
Awards
2007 - Best Documentary - Utah Film Critics
2007 - Best Documentary - Toronto Film Critics
2007 - IDA/ABC News Videosource Award - Internatinoal Documentary Association
2007 - Film Presented - Toronto International Film Festival
2007 - Film Presented - Karlovy Vary International Film Festiva
2007 - Film Presented - Sundance Film Festival
2007 - Film Presented - Vancouver International Film Festival
2007 - Best Documentary - Toronto Film Critics Association
2007 - Film Presented - London Film Festival
2007 - IDA/ABC News Videosource Award - International Documentary Association