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| DVD - Wide Screen | $12.74 |
Do You Wanna Talk? Gag scene; On the Road with the Hoovers: The Making of Little Miss Sunshine featurette; "We're Gonna Make It..." A session with Mychael Danna and DeVotchka featurette; Who are the Hoovers featurette; No One Gets Left Behind: The music of Little Miss Sunshine featurette; 4 alternate endings with directors' commentary; Directors' commentary by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris; Screenwriter's commentary by Michael Arndt with directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris; "Till the End of Time" performed by DeVotchKa from the Little Miss Sunshine soundtrack; Webisodes; Poster gallery; Deleted scenes
Full Product DetailsArguably the box-office sleeper of 2006, Little Miss Sunshine finds its big laughs by zeroing in on one of the most engaging dysfunctional families ever brought to the screen. At seven years of age, preternaturally ambitious Olive Hoover (Abigail Breslin) is fixated on beauty contests, and she's elated when she qualifies to enter one. For a variety of reasons, getting to the pageant site promises to be a Herculean task the family reluctantly undertakes: Usually optimistic dad Richard (Greg Kinnear) is in the dumps due to business woes; seriously depressed uncle Frank (Steve Carell) is recovering from a suicide attempt; chronically angry brother Dwayne (Paul Dano) has taken a vow of silence; generally supportive mom Sheryl (Toni Collette) worries that Olive is setting herself up for a crushing disappointment; and foul-mouthed grandpa Edwin has a bit of a drug problem. Directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris lavish their attention on the road trip -- a lengthy, obstacle-filled journey that tests the Hoovers and ultimately unites the family behind its youngest member. What makes this modest masterpiece outshine similarly plotted films like National Lampoon’s Vacation is its emphasis on character rather than gags. The acting is of uniformly high caliber, with Carell a standout as a Proust scholar whose reputation and relationship have simultaneously gone down the drain; his is a carefully calibrated and restrained performance. Blending its bite with brains and heart, Little Miss Sunshine comes out a winner. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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