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"Little Miss Sunshine" Directors Brighten The Day With Debut Feature Print E-mail

When a charming film like "Little Miss Sunshine" appears, it deserves a break, and some scrutiny. Who is this married duo of directors, and how did Valerie Faris and Jonathan Dayton happen to so brilliantly craft this dark comedy about a dysfunctional family with a 10 year old daughter who wants to compete in these bizarre beauty pageants? Yeah, the story does hit all the expected indie comedy marks--much to the chagrin of the Voice and Timeout critics--so what? These two did it well, with ease and a twist or two.

So let's face it, few films feature an effective husband-and-wife team, let alone one that has successfully created an impressive body of music videos for the likes of The Smashing Pumpkins, Jane's Addiction, Macy Gray, Janet Jackson, Oasis, Weezer, and The Ramones; a hit MTV series, "The Cutting Edge;" and a slew of enduring commercials for all sorts of major brands.

On top of all that, they chose to do a really off-beat, laugh-out-loud indie film (it took five years to finally complete) and assemble a top flight ensemble of actors for the family ranging from Dad (Greg Kinnear) to Mom (Toni Collette) to the suicidal brother and Proust scholar (Steve Carrell) to drug-addled and sex-crazed Gramps (Alan Arkin). And along the way it took last year's Sundance Film Festival by storm, stirring up such a bidding war that it became the film to be bought for the most money in the festival's 24 year history.

Q: This film really has great emotional impact. How did you get this project; it took you a couple of years to film?

Valerie Faris: Oh no. It was actually pretty quick once we started to film, then we finished, we went to Sundance with it, and we sold it.

Jonathan Dayton: We finished it four days before it screened.

VF: And it was exactly a year ago that we shot it so the long part, the hard part was getting it made.

JD: It was nice because we enjoyed making videos, commercials and documentaries, and while we wanted to do a feature, it wasn't something that we had to do in the abstract. We really wanted to find the right script, and when we read this, we knew this was the project for us because it wasn't a music video director's piece; it was hopefully what you would not expect from a music video director. We were hopefully excited about taking it on, and knowing that performances were going to be the challenge, not some visual trickery.

Q: How did the script come your way?

VF:
Through Ron Yerxa and Albert Berger, two producers whom we've known for a while—they produced "Election," and Albert produced "Crumb." We were always interested in working with them, and they had given us a few scripts that we weren't crazy about; then they gave us this one. Actually when we first read the storyline, we were like, "Tsk. I don't know. Beauty pageant?" It just sounded bad.

JD: "Road movie? Dysfunctional family?" all these things didn't seem very appealing. What's great about the script is that it takes this genre and turns it on its ear. That really meant a lot to us.

VF: I never even felt so much like we were doing a genre film. I just felt like it was a bunch of characters that I really felt I loved, and wanted to see come to life. I know I never felt, "Oh, we're doing a road movie comedy." In fact, we hardly approached this like we were doing a comedy. We weren't laughing on the set after each take. It was more of approaching it from the kind of comedy we like, which is where the comedy comes from the kind of characters, and the situations where you're really identifying with them, hopefully more than laughing at their follies.

JD: If it's truthful, it's so much more satisfying than if you feel like they've chased a life, and here's this big joke delivered. If it feels like, "Oh my god! That's just like my life," when you're laughing at this, you're laughing at your own travails.

ImageQ: Weren't you at first tempted to do your own script or story as your first feature?

VF:
It would take too long (laughs).

JD:
Well, you know I have a lot of respect for writing, and while I enjoy it, there are people who are better at it than I am…

VF:
Michael [Arndt] is a really disciplined, hard-working writer. We'd worked with other writers developing things, but we worked with Michael a little on the script just to trim it down, and get the tone to a place where we felt it was consistent for the movie. We had a great time with him. He's just a very disciplined guy. He knows film inside and out.

I guess it's just that we clicked, and I would rather have Michael write our scripts although there are stories now that we have now, and now want to work with Michael on. It was just a good pairing for us. That's all he does: he writes, and we do too many other things to have the time to spend just ten years to write a script.


 
 
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