By James Bowman on 3.18.09 @ 6:02AM
Sunshine Cleaning is charming if unpersuasive -- but
Emily Blunt is excellent.
If there's such a thing as a money quote, the one in Sunshine
Cleaning, a somewhat charming but ultimately unpersuasive
movie by Christine Jeffs (Sylvia), comes near the end.
Rose Lorkowski (Amy Adams), a single mother who has failed in her
adult life to live up to the social prominence she seems to have
enjoyed in high school, has just had a very bad day. In a moment
of extreme exasperation, she indulges herself in an outburst to a
sympathetic but far from intimate acquaintance, a one-armed clerk
in a cleaning supply store called Winston (Clifton Collins Jr.).
"I am good at getting guys to want me," she tells Winston. "Not
date me or marry me but want me; I'm really good at that. That
and cheering. I was really good at cheering."
Winston, whom we naturally expect to be destined himself to a
romance with her until Ms. Jeffs runs out of film, dryly replies:
"Cheering's good."
"Yeah, but not as lucrative as you'd think."
It's funny and it's moving, but I'm afraid it’s not true. Oh, it
may be true for her character in the movie, but it's only an
indication of a false note in that character. This is the idea
that there is some special fatality in her sexiness that makes
men not want to commit to her -- even so far as just to want to
"date" her. That's probably how it looks to her, but it is the
movie's job to supply the corrective to that point of view.
Everybody knows, these days, that the world is full of men who
don't want to commit. This is not the curse of Rose but a natural
and inevitable product of the culture we have chosen for
ourselves in the wake of the sexual revolution. Why
would men want to commit when they can get the thing for
whose sake they have always committed, up until 40 years ago,
without committing?
In other words, Rose is just feeling sorry for herself, but in a
way that (I imagine) many single women -- and especially single
mothers -- with unhappy love-lives often are. The feeling may
increase the movie's potential market among this particular
demographic, but those with a little more detachment will see the
problems with magnifying her own troubles until she becomes the
most signal sexual victim in the known universe with a very
particular bone to pick with God for thus singling her out. As a
way of denying her own responsibility for carrying on an affair
with her high-school boyfriend, Mac (Steve Zahn), now a police
detective and married to somebody else, fatal conceit might have
some promise, but Ms. Jeffs doesn't know how to exploit it.
Instead, she gives her heroine yet another grudge against fate in
the long-ago suicide of her mother.
Yet insofar as this traumatic memory is what reinforces the bond
with her ne'er-do-well sister Norah, played by the excellent
Emily Blunt, whom I have admired since her breakthrough role in
My
Summer of Love (2004), I don't mind it so
much. The character of Norah and the relationship between the two
sisters are the two best things about the movie and almost make
up for its many deficiencies, including its taking Rose and
Rose's many disappointments more seriously than they deserve. The
two sisters go into business together cleaning up crime scenes --
which, as Mac explains to Rose, is a job that will pay well
enough to enable her to send her young son, Oscar (Jason
Spevack), to private school. This she feels she has to do because
Oscar is "acting out" and getting into trouble at school and,
like so many parents these days, she blames the school. Clearly,
Oscar is well on his way to becoming, like his mother, a victim
of fate.
Sunshine Cleaning has been much criticized for being so
obviously derivative from Little Miss Sunshine of 2006,
the quirky indy hit that was bound to spin off such imitations --
even though most of them would probably have been more artful and
less obvious than to use "Sunshine" in the title and employ Alan
Arkin to play a very similar grandpa to the one he played in that
picture.
A.O. Scott in the New York Times takes
this almost as a personal affront, though it does give him the
opportunity to make the rather witty joke that, instead of being
called Sunshine Cleaning, the movie would have been more
accurately named "Sundance Recycling." But to me its imitative
quality is less of a black mark against it than its thematic
confusion and its multitude of narrative loose ends.
The other main point of similarity between the two pictures, for
example, lies in Rose's self-help and motivational agenda, which
has her repeating a sentiment that might have been approved by
Greg Kinnear's character in Little Miss, "You are
strong. You are powerful. You can do anything. You are a winner."
Once it is established that she is none of these things, however,
this theme is simply dropped, along with Oscar's further
adventures in socialization, Rose's relationship to a more
successful high school pal, grandpa's get-rich-quick schemes,
Norah's sort-of lesbianism and Rose's prefigured romance with
Winston. Ms. Jeffs doesn't even think it worth explaining why
Winston has only one arm. All this is very annoying, of course,
but insofar as you can concentrate on the two sisters, you will
find the movie to be more than occasionally entertaining.