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This topic contains:
- overall comments and recommendations
- details about Little Miss Sunshine's classification
and consumer advice lines
- a review of Little Miss Sunshine completed
by Young Media Australia (YMA) on 16 October 2006.
Age recommendations
| Children under 15 |
Not recommended due to coarse language, themes,
sexual references and drug use. |
About the movie
This section contains details about the movie, including its classification
by the Office of Film and Literature Classification (OFLC) and the
associated consumer advice lines.
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Name of movie
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Little Miss Sunshine
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Rating
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M
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Consumer advice lines
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Moderate coarse language, Moderate themes, Moderate
sexual references, Infrequent drug use
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Length
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102 minutes
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YMA review
This review of the movie Little Miss Sunshine contains
the following information:
A synopsis of the story
Olive Hoover (Abigail Breslin), aged seven, loves beauty
pageants and unexpectedly wins the local contest forcing
her family to take her on the long journey from Albuquerque
to California to compete in the national ‘Little Miss
Sunshine' Contest. Her father Richard (Greg Kinnear)
is an unemployed motivational speaker who believes that
the world is divided into winners and losers and that
his family are all going to be winners at any cost. Mother
Sheryl (Toni Collette) is accepting and tolerant of everyone
and believes children should know all the facts and truth
about everything and to make their own choices and decisions
in life, which she will support. This includes defending
her older son Dwayne (Paul Dano), a follower of Nietzche's
philosophy who has taken a vow of silence and hasn't
spoken for nine months. Dwayne hates everybody and his
goal is to become a fighter pilot.
The family also incorporates foul-mouthed, sex obsessed
Grandpa Hoover (Alan Arkin) who was kicked out of a retirement
home for taking heroin. Uncle Frank (Steve Carell) also
comes to live with the family as he failed in a suicide
attempt and needs to be looked after. Thus the whole family
set out on the trip to California in a dilapidated Kombi
van which is their only means of transport. What transpires
is both a very funny and heartbreaking journey as this
dysfunctional family overcome many obstacles to reach the
truly awful and highly hypocritical Little Miss Sunshine
Contest.
Themes
Children and adolescents may react adversely at
different ages to themes of crime, suicide, drug and
alcohol dependence, death, serious illness, family
breakdown, death or separation from a parent, animal
distress or cruelty to animals, children as victims,
natural disasters and racism. Occasionally reviews
may also signal themes that some parents may simply
wish to know about.
Family conflict, Body image, Death and suicide
Use of violence
Research shows that children are at risk of learning
that violence is an acceptable means of conflict resolution
when violence is glamourised, performed by an attractive
hero, successful, has few real life consequences, is
set in a comic context and / or is mostly perpetrated
by male characters with female victims, or by one race
against another.
Repeated exposure to violent content can reinforce the
message that violence is an acceptable means of conflict
resolution. Repeated exposure also increases the risks
that children will become desensitised to the use of
violence in real life or develop an exaggerated view
about the prevalence and likelihood of violence in their
own world.
Although no violence is actually shown in this movie,
there is reference to Uncle Frank's attempted suicide,
and he is shown shortly afterwards in a hospital gown
with his wrists bandaged.
Material that may scare or disturb children
Under eight
Children under eight are most likely to be frightened
by scary visual images, such as monsters, physical transformations,
the death of a parent or child abandoned or separated
from parents, children or animals being hurt or threatened
and / or natural disasters.
There are some scenes in this movie that could disturb
children under the age of eight, including the following:
- Olive gets left behind at one stage
until the family realise she is missing.
- Dwayne won't speak and hates everybody
- Olive's parents are constantly arguing
and shouting at each other
- Dwayne has to share his room with his
Uncle Frank, and leaves him a note that he mustn't
kill himself tonight
- Grandpa dies during the journey and the family has
to wrap his body in a sheet until they can contact
an undertaker.
Aged eight to thirteen
Children aged eight to thirteen are most likely
to be frightened by realistic threats and dangers,
violence or threat of violence and / or stories in
which children are hurt or threatened.
There are some scenes in this movie that could disturb
children aged eight to thirteen, including the following:
- Sheryl explains to Olive that Frank
tried to commit suicide because he was very unhappy.
When Olive asks Uncle Frank why he was unhappy, he
explains that he was in love with a young man who didn't
love him back.
- Dwayne discovers he's colour blind during
the trip and goes berserk. He kicks and screams and
runs out of the car. His first speaking words are full
of hatred and venom for his family.
Over the age of thirteen
Children over the age of thirteen are most likely
to be frightened by realistic physical harm or threats,
molestation or sexual assault and / or threats from aliens
or the occult.
Some children over the age of thirteen could be concerned
by the discussions of suicide.
Product placement
None
Sexual references
There are some sexual references in this movie, including:
- Grandpa's advice to Dwayne is to fuck
lots of women in his lifetime, not just one or two
- Grandpa's says that if a woman asks
him to fuck her he wouldn't be able to because he's
too tired.
Nudity and sexual activity
Grandpa buys pornographic magazines which show bare
breasts and buttocks.
Use of substances
There is some use of substances in this movie, including:
- Grandpa snorts heroin
- Sheryl smokes.
Coarse language
There is some coarse language in this movie, including:
- frequent use of the word ‘fuck', and
occasional use of:
- Goddamn
- Oh my God
- Jesus
- arse.
The movie's message
Little Miss Sunshine is a black comedy aimed
at adults. It exposes the hypocrisy in children's beauty
pageants as well as the myth of winners versus losers.
The main messages from this movie are that so called ‘losers'
can be winners too and that body image is irrelevant
in the broad scheme of things.

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