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Sunshine Cleaning
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A thirty-something single-mother whose boundless potential was squandered through a series of failed relationships and a misguided effort to help her younger sister succeed in life finds the fruits of her labors finally coming together in director Christine Jeffs' dark family comedy. Back in high school, the future looked pretty bright for Rose Lorkowski (Amy Adams); not only was she the cheerleading captain, but she was also dating the star quarterback. Flash forward a little over a decade, and Rose is working overtime in hopes of getting her son into a better school. Her sister Norah (Rose Byrne) is still living at home with their father Joe (Alan Arkin), a failed salesman whose penchant for jumping into get-rich-quick schemes has left the family without a financial net to fall back on. Rose may be down, but she certainly isn't out, and when she hatches a plan to launch a crime-scene clean-up business, the money starts rolling in. Sure cleaning up murder scenes and suicide sites may not be the most glamorous job in the world, but death is a fairly profitable business and as the phone keeps ringing, Rose and Norah finally begin to experience the closeness of sisterhood that has eluded them all these years while providing their family with true security. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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"First Person The format of the First Person series is what Errol Morris does best: finding unusual people, sitting them down in front of a camera, positioning the camera in the right way, and getting them to talk about what makes them so interesting. And then finding the right B-roll footage to splice in at the right times. Morris's inve " [More]
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"Sunshine Cleaning has all the signs of a movie that went into production too soon, with script that was either still being written or with one in serious need of revision. The movie has the cast it needs and a setting that w " [More]
KarinaKarina Sunshine Swept: Trade Roughage ...
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"Is it too “gory,” or did the filmmakers want too much money? This Variety story offers both as potential reasons for why the Amy Adams/Emily Blunt Sundance comedy Sunshine Cleaning " [More]
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"Is it too “gory,” or did the filmmakers want too much money? This Variety story offers both as potential reasons for why the Amy Adams/Emily Blunt Sundance comedy Sunshine Cleaning " [More]
lopezdashlopezdash First picture from "Sunshine Cl ...
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"The first picture has been posted from Amy Adams and Emily Blunt's 2008 "Sunshine Cleaning."Struck by financial hardship, an ambitious mother and her unmotivated sister become entrepreneurs in the field of biohazard removal and crime scene clean-up. Also starring Alan Arkin, Steve Zahn, and Clifton Collins, Jr.[More]
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"HITTING THEATERS 3/13 Disney's latest leading man: Dwayne Johnson in Race to Witch Mountain Race to Wit " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
The sweet little dramedy Sunshine Cleaning is probably doomed to endless Little Miss Sunshine comparisons, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Both movies have roughly the same amount of indie quirk, both aim for the same modest level of human drama, and both feature Alan Arkin as the loving, crass grandfather to a weird but awesome kid. That's largely where the similarities end, however, because this movie isn't about beauty pageants, it's about cleaning up blood. But let's not get ahead of ourselves. The kid in question belongs to the main character, Rose (played by the skillful Amy Adams, who carries things like a pro without venturing into Best Actress Diva-land). Rose was hot stuff in high school, but these days she supports her eight-year-old son, Oscar, cleaning rich people's McMansions for a Molly Maid type service, with babysitting help from her dad (Arkin), and her sister, Norah (another solid performance by Emily Blunt). Rose's baby-daddy is nowhere to be seen, and she's presently having an affair with her ex-boyfriend from high school, former star quarterback-turned-police officer Mac (Steve Zahn), who's since married someone else, and goes home to a white-picket-fence family life every night. Rose, however, is poor, and meets Mac in motel rooms during the hours she claims are devoted to real estate classes. Meanwhile, Oscar is bright but hyperactive, and gets into lots of trouble at school; dad is into fly-by-night business schemes, wheeling and dealing to retailers with shady overstock food items like no-name caramel corn and off-market shrimp; and Norah is just generally troubled -- in that studded bracelet, adventurously-dyed-hair kind of way. That trouble (and maybe all trouble in the story, really) stems from the death of their mom when she and Rose were kids. That's not a particularly wild premise for the emotional content of the story, but it doesn't have to be -- because the rest of the plot's Mad Libs are filled in so weirdly. On a tip from Mac, Rose learns that there's a good buck in postmortem cleanup, so she drags Norah along on a hackneyed job mopping up after a domestic shooting/finger loss. That job leads to another, and after a reasonably placed montage, we see that Rose has gotten pretty good at this, handling gory stuff that few could stomach, and playing a strange but important role in helping people when things are at their worst. It's a solid depiction of a relatable story, and it's absolutely modest about all of it, especially stylistically, where things stay remarkably reeled in (no super precious, Sundance favorite, Casio-core soundtrack here). And dramatically, there are no signs of the filmmakers overreaching in either direction -- not toward the indie side, with all that contrived über-awkwardness, or toward the movie-magic side, where rehashed storylines are treated like profound revelations. It's just a compelling, well-told story about stuff that everybody can relate to. Namely, there's an ongoing theme about death. But not in a creepy way, in a sympathetic way, pointing out how death is kind of a contradictory thing in people's minds, considering how totally universal it is. On the one hand, it's all ephemeral and airy-fairy: people who have died seem impossible to know; notions of heaven never seem to solidify. But on the other, death is as base and as gritty as it gets: there's the mess, there's the smell, and it happens to absolutely everybody. It might come in second place going up against Little Miss Sunshine toe-to-toe, but Sunshine Cleaning deserves a chance to be enjoyed on its own. And even if it can't, that's not so bad. Who doesn't love Alan Arkin as a trash-talking grandpa? ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide
 

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