The Bechdel Cast - Little Miss Sunshine
Episode Date: May 14, 2020Little Miss Bechdel Cast contestants Jaime and Caitlin discuss Little Miss Sunshine!(This episode contains spoilers)For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast.Follow @Bech...delCast, @caitlindurante and @jamieloftusHELP on Twitter. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was assassinated.
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On the Bechdelcast, the questions asked if movies have women in them.
Are all their discussions just boyfriends and husbands or do they have individualism?
The patriarchy's effing vast. Start changing it with the Bechdel cast.
Hello and welcome to the Bechdel cast. My name is Caitlin Durante.
My name is Jamie Loftus.
And it's my birthday episode.
It's your birthday episode. And so we're celebrating accordingly with one of your
favorite movies, as is the birthday tradition in these here parts.
Indeed.
If you've never celebrated a birthday with us, we get to pick movies for our birthday episode. It's that simple.
It's that simple. So we're doing Little Miss Sunshine for my birthday this year. It's just the two of us. We're going to have just a romp of an episode. Just a fun, flirty conversation about Little Miss Sunshine.
If you're new, first of all, congratulations for coming in on a birthday episode.
What a treat for you.
Yeah, seriously.
It's a gift you can give yourself.
But we are a feminist movie podcast that examines popular films using the Bechdel test as a jumping off point for discussion about how the
movie portrays female identifying characters.
Jamie, what on earth is the Bechdel test?
Well, since it's your birthday, I guess I'll finally clue you in on the little secret.
Yeah, thanks.
The Bechdel test is a media metric invented by cartoonist allison bechdel sometimes called
the bechdel wallace test that requires that a piece of media has the following two female
identifying characters with names that talk to each other about something other than a male
identified character for two lines of dialogue oh my goodness it doesn't happen enough what
in this movie or most rude how dare this it's my birthday all movies should pass the bechdel test
for your birthday indiana jentz passes the bechdel test uh that's just it's just about one day a year but yeah so that that's the that's the Bechdel test we pass it all the time every freaking day
in fact yeah should we test it out right now should we should we pass it yeah okay um hey Jamie
what I wasn't expecting that response um uh well my name's caitlin thank you for asking oh it passed no
i just wanted to let you know jamie that i have poured myself a birthday margarita wow
well a cheers to you thank you so much with my little glass of franzia over yonder on the zoom
call and i if i'm not mistaken both my margargarita and your Franzia identify as women.
Oh, she absolutely does.
She can't stop talking about it.
All day long, I'm discussing women's issues with my various glasses of Franzia.
Did you see that clip?
And this is I'm about to stop passing the Bechdel test.
But did you see that clip from a recent episode of Rick and Morty that a bunch of people sent us I bravely have never seen that show they do a little Bechdel test bit that oh do
they yeah there are some wonderful um female writers and allies on that show so I'm I'm
thrilled to hear it yeah it was pretty a funny little clip if I may say you know we we we here at the Bechtel cast love
a funny little clip my feelings towards Rick and Morty are complicated but that's for it's
simply not what the podcast is about and I couldn't be happier about it yeah yeah it's my
birthday yeah we gotta steer the conversation away from Rick and Morty and steer a different
male helmed project so uh we're talking about Little Miss Sunshine.
Jamie, what is your history and your relationship with this film?
I am honestly so surprised that I had never seen this entire movie before.
Wait, what?
I know.
It's right up my alley.
If I had seen it when it came out, which I was at the right age to see it, I truly don't understand how I had seen it when it came out which I was at the right age to
see it I truly don't understand how I missed this movie when it came out I just never I don't know
I just haven't I've seen clips of it I basically knew what happened in the movie but I had never
seen the whole thing in one sitting so it was like truly a pleasure to sit down and watch it
because it's a great movie I really love it it's so good
i know yeah so thank you and and i'd like to also thank your birthday for finally bringing the whole
of this movie into my life it was i cried so many times during this movie i got real emotional it
was who what a journey i love it what's Oh my gosh. What's your history? First of all, my birthday says you're welcome.
And secondly, oh, we should do a little context, I guess, which is that, so on the Matreon,
for our Matrons, I did a little poll, which I often do, because not only do we do a regular
main feed birthday episode for each of us, we also dedicate each of our birthday months
yes we here's the here's the fact we like our birthdays okay we simply like our birthdays and
every year we make a big fucking deal about it and that's we're within our rights to do so that's
true so what i did was on the patreon aka matreon I did a little poll of a few of my favorite movies that we have not yet covered.
And I was basically the top two most voted on movies were going to be the two that we covered on the Matreon this month.
And Little Miss Sunshine blew the other ones out of the fucking water.
It really did.
And we sort of knew that.
We knew people wanted this episode.
But that really, it was an unprecedented response.
I think the most overwhelming response in the history of the Matreon.
I believe so.
Because oftentimes there will be a pretty even split between like a few movies.
A lot of election 2000 going on in the Matreon.
But not this time.
Not this time. We had a clear winner so we decided hey maybe we should move this up to the main feed and then do
something else on the matriarch so that's what we did so this was originally going to be
a matriarch patreon episode but i said hey it's my birthday i can do what i want i want to share the joy of little
miss sunshine i don't want to put this behind the paywall it's available to everyone and here we are
okay to be fair the other two birthday movies you chose it's a whole pile of men it's
monty python and sean of the dead. Yes. Oops. Oopsies.
Listen, it's, it's, these are, we're constantly, you know, I'm very glad that Little Miss Sunshine has moseyed her way onto the main feed.
It feels right.
Yes.
Yes.
I also realized that those three movies, my three birthday picks are all like journey
from point A to point b movies like it's just
all about like a quest i love i love a good quest movie i feel like quests and romps if done well
go hand in hand really absolutely yes i love it so that's just me anyway so my history with the
movie is it came out when i was 20 i I saw it in theaters when it came out.
Like I instantly loved it. I'm so jealous. I was like, Oh my god, these performances
are incredible. I remember thinking that this family in the movie was the closest thing to
my family that I had ever seen on screen. And they aren't even that close. But like it was still the most accurate
depiction of my family that I had ever seen. I just loved how you know, realistic and genuine
all the characters felt. Yeah, I was obsessed with the score. I was in the middle of my undergrad
film school education when the movie came out. and every short film i made that year i
used songs from this score in my student films uh very cool no way so this this was one of
my boyfriend's favorite movies and he i guess that there was a i don't even know which comic
it was but there was a comic that was using the score from this movie in their show and my
boyfriend like I think was kind of being kind of like you probably haven't heard of this so you
know like are you having trouble finding it and he's like yeah it's the score from Little Miss
Sunshine I've heard it and the guy was like mortified because he thought he had like galaxy
brained everybody and everyone's like no we know what this is it was a very popular movie
unrelated I want to see your student films from underground oh you don't want to see them like, sea-brained everybody. And everyone's like, no, we know what this is. It was a very popular movie.
Unrelated, I want to see your student films from undergrad.
Oh, you don't want to see them.
Please, please, please.
For my birthday, I can wait.
Oh, okay.
All right.
I do have a few on DVD.
I have a few.
They're so embarrassing.
I would be mortified.
I've got some, too.
We can swap.
Okay.
All right.
Let's have a screening party that we'll probably have to do again from afar.
Yeah.
Okay.
Sorry.
I interrupted.
So you use the music.
I use the music.
I was just obsessed with the movie.
I loved it.
I bought it on DVD as soon as it came out. I watched it many, many times.
Absolutely loved it.'t it's not
one that i've revisited in recent years i'm not quite i don't know why because i like it's not
that i stopped loving it or anything like that i just i don't know paddington came along you know
you only have so much real estate for favorite movies right there i feel like this is like i
feel like the 2000s were a big year for indie movies, but more so the indie movie aesthetic.
And this movie is like canon.
But I think that why I didn't see this movie the year it came out was that my intro to movies that were sort of indie but kind of not was Juno.
And so I think this movie came out a year too soon
uh sure but this was like this was like golden age quirky white families on a mission to do
various things 2006 baby we were all there should i do the recap and we'll go from there
let's do it okay caitlin's birthday recap of Little Miss Sunshine.
Okay.
So we meet Olive.
That's Abigail Breslin.
Cutie.
Oh, so cute.
And if you're a listener of the podcast, you know that I'm not the biggest fan of many child actors.
Not the actors themselves, but their inability to be good actors.
The acting style.
The acting.
Let's blame it on the instructors the
acting style can be very grating indeed but abigail breslin is an incredible child actor
she's a natural and she's from a family of good child actors because her brother spencer
was on even stevens as beans oh another show that I have not watched.
Ground Floor Shia.
I don't know if it was actually good,
but I know that I watched it.
Great.
So Olive is a seven-year-old girl
who loves all things beauty pageants.
We meet her dad, Richard, played by Greg Kinnear.
He is a motivational speaker
with this nine-step refuse to lose program. He loves
winners. He hates losers. Then we meet her brother, Dwayne. That's Paul Dano.
Paul Dano. Oh, boy.
We learn that he has taken a vow of silence until he gets into the air force because he wants to fly jets uh he is also
obsessed with nichi sure i mean you're just like all right he's supposed to be what a 16 year old
boy we all knew a version of the paul dano character yeah yeah i'm thinking i'm thinking
of a very specific kid in the percussion section. Okay. Yeah. Could just be the haircut.
Not sure.
Oh, sure.
Then we meet her grandpa, played by Alan Arkin.
He is a heroin addict.
And then we meet her mom, Cheryl.
That's Toni Collette, our queen.
Oh, I know.
I kind of forgot she was in this movie.
When I think of this movie, I think Abigail Breslin and Alan Arkin and kind of forgot she was in this movie when i think of this movie i think abigail
breslin and alan arkin and kind of steve carell so i was i i kind of half forgot she was in it
and then was thrilled oh my gosh she's she's present she's not as present as she should be
and we'll talk about that well i was gonna say i think that i sort of forgot she was in it because
she doesn't have enough good scenes but yes um so anyway she
is picking up her brother olive's uncle frank played by steve carell she's picking him up from
the hospital because he has just attempted suicide they sit down to dinner together as a family
we realize that there is a lot of tension in this family. A lot of the people don't really like each other or are only pretending to like each other.
Things like that.
And then Olive listens to a message on the answering machine saying that she has been given a spot in the Little Miss Sunshine pageant.
And she is very excited about this.
The only trouble is that it's in Redondo Beach, California.
Ever heard of it? And they live in new mexico yes new mexico is the perfect place for this family it really is
yeah and their house is so i i've for some reason been to new mexico for various reasons many times
wow brag uh thank you so much i've been to albuquerque five or six times i went to a
strip club in albuquerque on my road on my road trip when i moved from boston to la well albuquerque
is in my experience i mean limited but also weirdly statistically a lot uh it's a weird place
it's a weird place where weird things happen i like that they live
in albuquerque yeah which i guess was not originally this was originally supposed to be
from i think maryland to california and they're like um what about albuquerque we can only afford
to get you as far as new mexico but if it works perfectly yeah um my quick little because it's
my birthday i can do what i want my quick little anecdote about my time in New Mexico was I was traveling across country.
My best friend JT was my travel companion.
And we were just kind of walking around the streets of Albuquerque.
And we happened upon this strip club.
And if you were a couple, you got in for free.
So JT and I pretended to be a couple.
Oh, I know this story.
This is a good story, yeah.
Thank you.
We really oversold it.
I feel like everyone in that position does.
We were like, babe, babe, come on.
Let's go to the strip club.
And then we were making babe babe come on let's go to the strip club and then we're like making out with
each other um and it was really cool really cool thing and then we went into really cool
well i i'm congratulations thank you so much um it was i will say weird albuquerque was the i think
the last time i was there was in like the month of May. And it was so hot that I never want to know what it's like there in not May.
To all our listeners in New Mexico, you're very brave.
You are.
It's simply too hot there.
Yes.
So we have to also take into account that every character in this film is constantly affected by heat stroke so that just the fact that they're
making irrational decisions at times can we we can assume that their whole life has been at 99
degrees and they're driving in this vw bus which we'll get to in a moment but i have to imagine
the air conditioning was either non-existent or not very good in that vehicle so right so they're sweating all over
each other it's it's no wonder things fall apart don't blame capitalism or the system i think we
can just blame the heat of new mexico yes oh okay anyway so this is the trip they have to make and
the pageant is two days away and And based on some specific circumstances, they realize that for this trip to work out,
for them to be able to get Olive to the pageant on time, the entire family has to go.
And they are going to go in this old Volkswagen bus.
Yes.
So they set off there's a scene in a diner where olive and her dad talk about ice cream we
will discuss that at length important scene later an important scene then they discover that the
clutch in the bus is shot they take it to like a mechanic and they find out they can still drive the vehicle as long as they get out
and push to kind of skip over the first gear or two um quirky alert yeah it's true okay so they
set off again after having pushed the vehicle but they soon have to pull over again because
richard gets a call from someone named Stan Grossman.
It's Bryan Cranston.
It's Bryan Cranston, as we will soon find out.
He's the guy who's helping Richard to facilitate this book deal on his nine-step program.
And he learns that the deal didn't go through.
And everyone's upset about this whole thing.
And then they accidentally leave without Olive.
But then they realize it.
And then they swing back around and grab her in one of my favorite scenes in the movie.
I remember that scene in the trailer of the movie.
Oh, it's iconic.
It does not end up being as big of a problem as the trailer would lead you to believe.
They remember immediately and she is fine.
Yes.
But it is a fun scene.
Indeed.
Yes. immediately and she is fine yes but it is a fun scene indeed yes so then that night they check
into a motel and richard and cheryl fight a bunch and richard is like screw this i'm gonna go fix it
so then he drives to scottsdale where he knows stan grossman is at the moment and confronts him
and then we're like oh my gosh yeah there's brian cranston he's looking really
like pretty fucking hot in i like in turn because brian cranston is like often alters himself
physically and you're kind of like oh yeah he's kind of like a traditionally hot daddy
that was my takeaway from that okay i think he's hot in this movie that's great um i did not have those
same feelings i was like he's scruffy he's i was about if he wants to be scruffy he can be scruffy
but not i'm used to seeing him you know all head shaven off in his underwear selling drugs or
something i don't know i didn't watch the show just saw the posters that's more or less it um so basically nothing gets resolved with this confrontation
and richard storms off and then the following morning grandpa won't wake up so they take him
to the hospital where he is pronounced dead but they can't leave him there and they can't take him
with them because the body can't cross state lines without a permit.
Right.
So they decide to sneak him out of the hospital and head the rest of the way to Redondo Beach with his dead body in their trunk.
Great scene.
Hilarious.
Loved it.
Really loved it.
And of course, what happens next is they get pulled over because that's comedy writing baby
um and the cop that pulls them over is hank from breaking bad and we're like wait a minute
is everyone from breaking bad in this movie that's out of my breaking bad breadth of knowledge
well he wasn't on the poster so if he wasn't on the if he's not the two guys on the poster i don't know who he is
um that scene is is weird there is this is like more of a writing note or just like not even a
writing note but like the props should have been shifted differently in that scene there's a very
clearly a corpse right in front of the police officer and he's like like it's funny but the places the props
are put you're just like he would see the corpse he would see the corpse it is right there in front
of him this is script notes with jamie oh cute thank you i guess the idea is that he's just so
horny for porn that he doesn't notice the dead body right there in front of him also uh
nothing bad happens when white guys are pulled over right yes i feel like it's a white guy or
even like a white person like a white woman as well getting pulled over is more often played
for comedy and when it's a non-white character that is like not the case as often but like this
is a very like it is haha funny this man has a corp like like greg kinnear you know even though
his family is adorable they are breaking the law uh but you you never really think they're
gonna get like caught and then it's like oh haha the police officer's horny right bye-bye yeah um
that's i mean that's not even a critique of the movie as much as just like kind of a a trend that
reflects an unfortunate reality because fuck the world true yep so anyways the police officer poses
no threat to them true um surprise so he lets them go and now the family is only 45 minutes away from
their destination but the check-in deadline is also in 45 minutes so time is of the essence here
but they have to pull over again because duane has an outburst because he finds out that he's
colorblind and that means he will not be able to fly jets.
No, Paul Dano.
Paul Dano.
He wanted to fly the plane so bad.
I just need to make a quick note
just because I feel like this happens in movies a lot.
I mean, Paul Dano is kind of a notoriously baby- faced man, but he is 12 years younger than Tony Collette.
Yes.
And I would like to say I object.
He is not.
He is technically he's old enough to be Greg Kinnear's son.
If Greg Kinnear had a son when he was 21 years old, he is not old enough to be Tony Collette's son son um which is you know i mean she's she's a
chameleon what can't she do but also i was like wait a second right this paul dano business you're
just like who do you think you're fooling anyways we don't know maybe he's adopted we don't know
maybe she adopted him when she was 12 when Oh, right. That also makes sense.
Well, no, but if she like was like, maybe she adopted him when she was, let's full blow canon this.
If she adopted him when she was like 25 or 26 and he was already like 10 years old.
Yeah.
Like if she adopted him when he was like, not when he was an infant, when he was older.
But that is in no way implied in canon.
We're just, they're like, nope, Tony Collette was 12.
Yeah, I guess they're relying on you assuming that Paul Dano is much younger than he actually is in this movie.
He looks 16 in this movie.
I think his character is supposed to be like 16 or something.
Yeah, 15, 16.
Anyways.
Yes.
So he has an outburst. And then another one of my favorite scenes
follows where they don't know how to like comfort him or kind of get back on track on this trip.
But then Olive goes and just like puts her little arm around his and then he's like,
Angel. And then he's like, Okay, let's go. Because moments before this then he's like okay let's go because moments before this he was like
fuck you guys you're not my family i hate all of you you're losers just leave me here i never want
to see you again but then he's like oh wait all all of us are losers she's a she's the best
it's great uh so they get back in the car again they make it to the pageant just in the nick of
time then olive prepares for the pageant and it quickly becomes obvious to olive and her family
that olive isn't competing at quite the same level as the other contestants and there's a
whole conversation to be had about pageants and all of that although the movie does
not go super deep into it which i which i kind of like having never seen this movie all the way
through was kind of i mean i guess i don't really feel one way or another about that choice but i
thought that the movie was going to be way more about the pageant than it ended up being sure it's a pretty brief part yeah it's mostly i mean they don't even get there
till the beginning of the third act um what a screenwriting master's degree does she have one
yes i'd never bring it up though um so yeah the pageant isn't really the focus of the story, really. But they arrive at the pageant,
she goes on stage, you know, they're doing their, you know, talents and things like that. And then
Dwayne and Richard are like, Olive should not do this. Everyone is going to laugh at her.
But then Cheryl is like, you know, this is what Olive wants. And we're going to let her do it. We're going to let her be her.
And then you're like, I see where they're both coming from.
I know.
And then I did like the touch of like Cheryl does offer her a last minute out.
Like you don't have to do this if you don't want to.
So it does.
It is like clear that it's Olive's choice to do it.
I like that.
Yes, indeed.
And she does make the choice to go through with it. So it's time for Olive to perform her talent. And this is what she had been working on
with Grandpa kind of in the backstory. But we haven't seen this routine before. We, the audience
and the family, no one has seen it before. And it turns out to be this. Just as horny as his magazine.
Yeah.
It's this creepy, like, striptease-like dance to Super Freak that Grandpa choreographed.
And everyone is horrified.
People start leaving.
Her family is like, oh, my God, what's happening? It is a funny. It's so funny. Because her family is like oh my god what's happening as like her family it's it is a funny
it's so because her family is also fully horrified but they're like we've already
we've come such a long way yes like grandpa died we should just just let her do the weird dance
yeah they're just like fuck it we're here to support olive so can't yell at grandpa about it he died right the pageant people are like get
her off the stage and they're like no and then like the dad tackles the mc of the pageant then
the whole family gets on stage and starts dancing with her full romp and then oh so rompy it's a
good movie moment i love it yeah but then we cut to them being reprimanded by like the hotel
security and they're told that they are never allowed to enter olive into another pageant in
the state of california again and they're like that's actually totally fine by us because maybe
beauty pageants suck and then they do one last push to get the car going. And then they drive off back home.
And that's the end of the movie.
It's fun.
It's so fun.
Let's take a quick break and then we'll come right back for a birthday discussion.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16, 2017, was murdered.
There are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate.
My name is Manuel Delia. I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere, a podcast that unhearts the plot to murder a one-woman Wikileaks. Daphne exposed the culture of crime and corruption
that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks everywhere on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. When you're just starting out in your career, you have a lot of questions. Like, how do I speak up when I'm feeling overwhelmed?
Or, can I negotiate a higher salary if this is my first real job?
Girl, yes!
Each week, we answer your unfiltered work questions.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer, we bring in experts who do.
Like resume specialist Morgan Saner.
The only difference between the person who doesn't get the job and the person who gets the job is usually who applies.
Yeah, I think a lot about that quote.
What is it like you miss 100 percent of the shots you never take?
Yeah, rejection is scary, but it's better than you rejecting yourself.
Together, we'll share what it really takes to thrive in the early years of your career without sacrificing your sanity or sleep.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. Hey, everybody, this is Matt Rogers. And Bowen Yang. We've got some exciting news for you.
You know, we're always bringing you the best guests, right? Well, this week, we're taking
it to the next level. The one, the only, Katherine Hahn is joining us on Lost Culture East.
That's right.
The queen of comedy herself.
Get ready for a conversation that's as hilarious
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Tune in for all the laughs, the stories,
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I feel some Sandra Bernhardt in you.
Oh my God, I would love it.
I have to watch Lost. Oh, you have to. No, my God. I would love it. I have to watch Lost.
Oh, you have to.
No, I know.
I'm so behind.
Katherine Hanken's thing.
Oh, I'm really good at karaoke.
What's your song?
Yeah, what's your song?
Oh, I love a ballad.
I felt Bjork's music.
I just was like, who is this person?
I got to hawk this slalom, Ludi.
I'm not hawk the slalom.
I absolutely love it.
It was somehow Shakespearean when you said it.
It was somehow gorgeous.
Yee, my slok, you hollum.
Listen to Las Culturistas on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts and we're back oh there's so much good stuff to talk about yes in this movie would it make sense
to talk about the stuff that didn't hit for us quite as well to start because they're they i feel like we're we're majority love
yes this movie yeah i think that works yeah i i think that my one real gripe if you can call it
that but like if this were like truly for me the perfect most perfectest movie to ever exist
you would get a more fleshed out specific arc for Tony Collette's character.
That was like what I felt missing.
For sure.
Because it's like there, I mean,
it's so rare to have like a family movie where you know deeply who every character is.
And also everyone in the movie is played by like an incredible actor.
Like no one has to pick up slack for anyone in this cast.
It's so good that I like felt Toni Collette not having a full arc.
Like she's the only character that doesn't have a,
I mean,
she does have an arc,
but it's related to the people in her family.
There's not really a piece of the story that's that specific to her or
her inner life and i can see you know she fills the caretaking role in the family she seems to be
the glue of the family trying to keep everyone in check which is a common role for a mother
to have but it i mean that doesn't mean that she doesn't think about other things and have other
you know thoughts goals ambitions etc and I feel like this is a movie that definitely has
room for that right where we know exactly what everyone else in the family wants or wanted or
what their struggle is and it was just like not as clear other than keep the family together right especially because
like she is established to be the breadwinner of the family yeah she is supporting them because
there's a like little exchange where richard is like we can't afford this trip it'll eat into our
seed money and then cheryl's like well if i had any help bringing it in so we know that she's a
working mom we know that she has
a job and that she is earning the bulk of their income of this family but we never find out what
her job is no we don't okay i was making i was like did i miss that i don't think we find out
what she did we don't find out if she likes what she does it's very possible she the job she's
breadwinning with she loves she's been very successful but like
we have no idea we have no idea the best i could get and then this is purely a guess based on a few
context clues because when she's picking frank up from the hospital we can assume that she has
left her job because she's still wearing a name tag so she's wearing a name tag and she is dressed
in like business casual so i was like
she probably works in like customer service maybe at like a bank or something like that i was i was
even like maybe she's like a retail manager or something like but it's they don't tell us and
it seems like this movie went through a lot maybe there's a version of the script or of the movie
where you do know but in this yeah we
don't know exactly what she does we don't know what her relationship with her job is we're only
given insight to her as she relates to her family which isn't true for basically everyone else in
the family we know right about i mean in richard's case it's all about his job
his nine-step program right and for paul danno we know what he wants to do and like we know
how like he's got this like discipline complex and olive wants the pageant and you know like
frank is recovering from this like romantic and professional failure. But like, we just we just don't get that
for for Cheryl. He's the number one Proust scholar in the United States. Or is he number two?
Not anymore. And it's killing him. We even know more. We even know about grandpa's backstory.
You know, he was at this. Yeah, he's a veteran. He's a veteran. He was at this like,
retirement home that he got kicked out of a lot of women he
fucks a lot of ladies and he tells everyone that they should also do the same thing and he has an
addiction struggle like that's just yeah that's I mean five times the amount that we know about
Toni Collette and he dies halfway through right she gets more screen time than him and we still
know the least amount about her but then i was like so i i kind
of cataloged all of that but then i thought about okay yes her role in the story is relegated to
you know being the mom and that's really all we know about her whereas the predominantly
male cast we know a bunch of stuff about them, specifically their like professional pursuits.
But they're all kind of failures at it in some way.
Whereas she's a really, really good mom.
And I was like, OK, well, that's something.
Yeah, I don't know.
But yeah, no, I don't think that she could be a failure at something.
We just don't know. Maybe she, but yeah, no, I don't think that excuses. She could be a failure at something. We just don't know.
Maybe she's, maybe she is a huge failure.
We have no way.
We just haven't concluded.
Let Toni Collette be a failure.
Let Toni Collette fail for once.
She can't.
Yeah, but I, I, I don't know.
I wonder, because I mean, Michael, how do you say his last name?
Arndt?
Arndt.
Too many consonants. Michael, Michael Arndt. wonder because i mean michael how do you say his last name aren't aren't too many michael michael
aren't i i like respect his work a lot and i'm a fan of most of it even cars too
an extremely carzy movie i i mean that's the one thing where i kind of struggled to find an excuse
for him i feel like that is very, and I don't even really mean this
as a severe criticism of him,
but just a writer who doesn't have a ton of insight
into how an adult woman thinks.
Right.
And because he is the sole writer of the movie,
you just kind of don't get a lot more than that.
And then kind of, I guess, that same,
and again, this is pure speculation, but I feel like that same kind of I guess that same and again this is this is pure speculation but I feel like
that same kind of you know soul credited male writer auteur type that he sort of has become
known as you can sort of trace that to the like I was expecting going into this movie way more Toni Collette Abigail Breslin one-on-one
or like connection than you get you really don't get a lot with the two of them you get like that
moment towards the end but I mean they're all together for most of the scenes but her primary
connection with an adult character is with her grandfather not her mother which is fine
you know that's true of some families but it also kind of stood out to me of like oh we really don't
really know much about the mother-daughter connection and they're the only two female
characters right those i mean that was like truly like the only thing that it's not even i mean i
just i just missed it same it doesn't cheapen the product, but I just missed it.
And as I was watching it this time around with a more kind of critical eye,
I was trying to figure out who the movie frames as the protagonist.
To me, it feels like there's no one character who is really,
it feels like more the family unit is the protagonist of this film
rather than any one single character.
So I was like, okay, we have all these different characters in theory contributing equally or like
being equally important to the story as any other one character. So for that to be true of this
narrative, but then to give especially Cheryl, the mom character, the least amount of backstory,
the least amount of interiority,
no other thing we know about her
besides her being, you know,
the supportive mom character
was just especially frustrating.
I agree.
So a little bit of context corner for this movie.
I mean, just the main context for the context corner
is just it took a very long time for this movie to be made.
It took me about seven years for the story being basically done to it coming out.
Because I guess Michael Arndt was like at the time he wrote this, he was like Matthew Broderick's assistant.
Like he had a real glow up narrative over time.
He's a pretty interesting person.
But all that to say, so originally,
this movie ended up selling to I think it was like Focus Features, they sold the script somewhere,
but studio interference got it just became too much. So the studio executive suggested that the
protagonist shift to being Greg Kinnear, which is where you get that whole thing with him going to
Scottsdale, that originally like wasn't there, but added and then basically Michael Arndt was kind of a real one and was like if you
want to shift the focus to be about him then I'm gonna pull the project and take it somewhere else
so it's still about the family but there are I mean I would argue the movie leans a little heavy
on Richard at times for sure but then it's like it was interesting to learn like why that was
yeah his arc with the whole I mean there are entire scenes dedicated to just his specific
pursuit of this like book deal and his you know nines and he's always talking about the nine steps
and like he's he's given a ton of dialogue about it. Because he's also kind of like a walking metaphor too.
For like he's like the walking American dream metaphor character.
Right.
Which we should make a list of at some point.
Right.
So he I would say his subplot is given more focus than I think any other subplot.
It's like him and Olive basically get the two most plot impact well
actually but then it's like grandpa dies I don't know right Olive isn't super the focus until
they get to the pageant the end right she she kind of I mean she's there but she's not involved
for kind of stretches right I don't know I mean it's but they're well i guess i guess that that's
a lot of what the movie kind of like obviously failure is a huge focus on what this movie
tackles and i think it does it like mostly in a pretty cool and like thoughtful way of
how does failure affect people and the majority of the movie does focus on how does
failure affect men and then at the end we sort of you sort of get a peek at like because it's made
clear to the family and all of that like who she is and her body and all these parts of her do not
conform to the beauty pageant quote-unquote rigid standard
that she has somehow failed as well and it's about this family coming to terms with their various
failures and like what does failure even mean who decides whether you succeed or whether you fail
every character sort of has a different definition of what it means to be
quote a winner or a loser and And like, right. Yeah.
And what is Toni Collette's?
Don't ask me.
I don't know.
Yeah, I guess we don't really know because we hear like grandpa's.
Grandpa is like, you know, losers are just people who are so afraid of not winning that
they don't even try.
And he's like, but you're trying.
You're going to.
But even grandpa, I mean, it's this family feels very real in a lot of ways.
And so there are these moments where I feel like it's kind of,
I want to give Michael aren't the benefit of the doubt and say,
it's kind of intentionally done of like,
it seems like grandpa is the only character that comes in having already
kind of rejected the system and rejected this,
this idea of uh what does failure
mean what does success mean to the point where he knows that he has an addiction problem he doesn't
care he's like i'm living my life blah blah blah like which is a take on addiction that is wild uh
true but even he like it's interesting that this movie kind of is pushed along by this pageant
because you see grandpa even though grandpa is nice guy quote unquote he also subtly like
regulates olive's body and behavior a little bit as well because during the ice cream scene i thought
it was like such a i like watched that scene a couple times
just to make sure because there's just so much going on in there but yeah in the ice cream scene
grandpa is one of the driving forces that says like no olive eat ice cream don't worry and his
first reason for doing so is he says i like a woman with some meat on her bones, which in the moment is like, oh, that's sweet.
But then it also reinforces that men dictate how women should look.
And if he likes how a woman looks, then how could it be wrong?
And so it's like there's all these like little, I don't know.
It's really smart because that's what a grandpa would say.
That's what a grandpa trying to make you feel better would say.
Something a little fucked up.
Right.
You're just like, well, I see where he was going with it.
And it's like simple enough for her to understand because, again, she's only seven.
So, you know, there's all these sort of different things at play.
Yeah.
But I do.
OK, so I want to talk about the ice cream scene.
And I think that'll just sort of be maybe a part of the larger beauty standards it's one of the big scenes
yes so basically what happens is that uh they stop for breakfast i think at a diner and olive
orders her waffles a la mode adorable a la mode so she's going to get ice cream. But before the ice cream comes,
her dad, Richard, is like, probably shouldn't have ordered ice cream because if you eat it,
it's going to make you fat and you should try and stay skinny. Yeah. And then body positivity icon Cheryl, Olive's mom, says it's OK to be skinny and it's OK to be fat if that's what you want to be whatever you want
it's okay and then her dad is like well yeah but you know those miss america pageant women
are they skinny or are they fat and olive is like well yeah i guess they're skinny
and he's like okay well it's probably because i don't eat a lot of ice cream yeah so this is the beginning of Olive feeling really bad about herself, her body, her looks, because we see a few scenes after this where she asks Grandpa in the motel room, she says, you know, am I pretty?
And I want to I just don't want to be a loser because Daddy hates losers.
And she starts crying right and then there's that like devastate that's the scene that
was like the ice cream tangential scene that like hurt me the most because there's so many layers to
it is when she goes to miss california and is like do you eat ice cream and miss california says yes
but you're like no she doesn't like you're there's so many layers to that where that brought to mind for me like
instagram pizza girl where it's like a supermodel holding a slice of pizza being like omg i love
pizza so much i'm literally addicted which is like a larger entertainment trope of oh yeah we're going
to allow women to eat junk food as long as it's quirky fun and they still look the way we want them to look
which is so that I mean that scene was like triple devastating to me because I'm like
Miss California is I think lying to her but it's also like she's seven and it helps but then you're
like oh no this that's gonna suck in 10 years when you find out Miss California was lying to you
um I mean I don't know maybe she does eat ice cream
sometimes but then she's also like yeah but my favorite flavor is actually frozen yogurt
i mean who got i mean yeah the the way that beauty pageant winners bodies are policed is like so well
documented that i'm like i don't know she eats ice cream maybe she has in the last year i don't know yeah but yeah the scene in the diner i really it's it's hard to
watch in a good way and i i like that like the other three members of the family are like we're
not going with this like uh richard is such a like flaccid patriarch like he's a failure as a patriarch
as well because no one listens to what he says everyone thinks he's an asshole but he's in their family so they deal with it but I I really like
the choice that like Richard I thought really did think he was saying something helpful to his
daughter which I feel like a lot of those scenes aren't framed that way and there should be in
scenes that are like body shamey in that way I feel like it is usually an easier writing choices
made where it's just like they're saying this to be mean and they're saying this because they hate
you and it's sometimes a character we don't really know that well it's just like bully number three
but this is like a character that we know and you can tell he believes he is like doing the right thing by body shaming and like policing the food of his daughter.
And he thinks that by policing his daughter's body, she will become a winner.
And I think that that is like something that like real people can see in themselves and kind of I would imagine that some people
specifically like men who make comments like that because I've gotten comments like that before I
feel like you know many people in general have gotten comments like that before people who make
comments like that I think think they're doing you a favor even though they're being a fucking
asshole right and I've never seen a scene quite like it where
like it just ends up making a person who thinks they're doing the right thing look stupid and
they don't get it totally but then that comes back to at least for me the Cheryl character and
even in that scene when she does have a rebuttal to what Richard says and like Richard's assholery where she's like, you know, you can be skinny, you can be fat, you can be whatever you want to be.
It's okay to be whatever you want.
And so she has that little moment.
But I feel like in a lot of the scenes where Richard is saying something really awful and toxic, which he does a lot.
For example, he's like, don't apologize.
It's a sign of weakness.
Don't do anything unless you know you're going to win at it.
He also equates mental illness and suicidal ideation to being a loser and being a quitter.
So like he's saying all this horrible stuff all the time.
And I feel like most of the time Cheryl is just like, Richard, stop or Richard no like she's like she doesn't have I want her to have more intelligent
and thoughtful kind of rebuttals to him and she just isn't given that a lot of the time I wish
there was more of that that I kind of understood a little more than the not giving her a story
thing but I guess that's just like in my head I was just I I interpreted that as a her choosing her battles
thing sure because she does push when when she's like hat when his book deal falls through she
fucking gives it to him and it's like that is true you know your failure blah blah so I sort of saw
that as her I mean kind of like playing off of the only things we really know about her is she's
trying to keep the peace in the family and that she's kind of choosing her battles with her deeply insecure husband
who i'm assuming she loves because i cannot think of another reason to be with him i have a feeling
they're like on the brink of divorce like i hope that like six months after like the events of this story, they are like getting a divorce and that like Olive has quit doing pageants by then.
Oh, I feel like I hope for sure that this experience that she's just like, I'm going to do literally anything else.
Yeah.
But but yeah, I mean, Richard, I think it's a kind of true to life too that it's like Richard definitely
grows from this experience and like in the space of a day he has like lost his father and his dream
so that that is you know that's hard uh sure but but it but I like that the movie is kind to him
in the general sense but you don't get the feeling that he has like learned this
great thing like you can picture this character just complaining about the events of this movie
for the rest of his life and never really learning anything right which also feels like uh you know
people that pop up in one's life uh we've got to take another quick break but then we'll come right back
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017
was murdered there are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate. My name is Manuel Delia. I am one of the hosts of Crooks
Everywhere, a podcast that unhurts the plot to murder a one-woman Wikileaks. Daphne exposed the
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I feel some Sandra Bernhardt in you.
Oh my God, I would love it.
I have to watch Lost.
Oh, you have to.
No, I know, I'm so behind.
Katherine Hahn can sing.
Oh, I'm really good at karaoke.
And on camera, yeah, what's your song? Oh, I'm really good at karaoke. What's your song? Yeah, what's your song?
Oh, I love a ballad.
I felt Bjork's music.
I just was like, who is this person?
I got to hawk this slalom, Lugie.
Not hawk the slalom.
I absolutely love it.
It was somehow Shakespearean when you said it.
It was somehow gorgeous.
Yee, my slok,
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Richard was, I mean,
I think that the movie maybe
gives him a little bit too much real estate
over the events of the movie, but I mean, he to maybe gives him a little bit too much real estate over the events of the movie.
But I mean,
he,
he to me seemed like a pretty clear American dream fallacy type of
character where totally context corner,
I guess that Michael aren't came up with the idea for this story's themes in
the general sense.
When he saw a quote from arnold schwarzenegger
i think from the 90s where arnold schwarzenegger was talking to a group of teenagers
and said if there's one thing in this world i hate it's losers i despise them and he kind of
thought that that quote was gross which it is yeah and built out this story around it and i think you
know richard is the character that could be most clearly traced to that quote
down to the first line in the movie.
And I like, it's, you know what?
Sometimes you're like, all right, we get it.
The American dream doesn't exist.
We get it.
But it is kind of cool to see someone
so firmly grasped to it and understand why but also still not like him
like i feel like that's a really tight like a really like thin line to walk where you don't
totally hate richard but you mostly hate him and but you also know you're like okay this is a lower
class family and the scam the pyramid scheme of success
is is really appealing because it gives you the illusion of control it gives you the illusion of
upward mobility that probably is not actually accessible right in most cases because of the
way that things are lined up and he just has no understanding that the american dream is not actually accessible to him and that it's even
less accessible to his daughter like he doesn't right he just doesn't understand it he's like a
bootstraps guy yeah i feel like he voted for gary johnson you know oh my that's my headcanon he
voted for gary johnson i barely remember who that is he wore khakis and he was a dumb ass
so maybe that's where i'm pulling from
yeah i mean this is one of those movies where a lot of the characters are not people to admire
that they have a lot of you know toxic views or issues that make them characters that you didn't you might not necessarily
want to be friends with but they're still they're written so well they're written so realistically
the nuance that these characters are given make it so that you can't help but feel compelled by
them even if they're kind of shitty all around. I mean, like the grandpa character too. Not a great guy.
He's not a good guy.
You get the sense that he's a pretty heavy misogynist.
He's homophobic.
He's homophobic stuff.
Yep.
He's grandpa-ing hard.
Yes.
Yeah.
But I don't know.
I would hazard a guess that a lot of people have a grandpa like him,
like out of touch, you know, know racist misogynist grandpa but
my grandpa's 90 years old and woke just kidding my grandpas are dead and they died when i was five
so i have no idea what kind of people they were brave um but i don't imagine probably not good
you're like white, probably bad views.
It's just math.
But yeah, I mean, he also sucks.
I mean, that was another character where I'm just like,
is this movie cutting this guy too much slack?
He's not a good guy, but he's Alan Arkin,
so you're already like, I love him. And he loves his granddaughter, so we're like, I love him and then he's and he and he loves his granddaughter so we're like yes i love him
but um you know but that is kind of the beautiful part is every man in this story is narcissistic
and self-involved and fragile in very different ways which is cool yes and it's uh you get a lot
of i mean there's a lot of different types of fragile
masculinity on display here right and we've barely talked about frank right so frank steve carell
he's an academic he's an academic he has this kind of tragic backstory that he is open about
you know he is okay to tell his seven-year-old niece about i was also having an
inner battle in that scene i'm just like that's such a family to family thing i'm like my family
for sure would not have told me but then it's like i don't know it's a family to family thing
i don't know right i'd like to hear what what our listeners think but for me that scene where more or less he comes out to his
niece right by saying yes i fell in love with someone and i was very much in love with him
and olive goes him it was a boy you fell in love with a boy and he's like yes i did very much and
she's like oh that's silly but we don't get the sense that it's she's like hateful or anything like that this is just the first time she's heard of a man being in love with another man and like you know there's always
the debate of like well how are we going to explain homosexuality to children right and it's
like turns out it's pretty easy like they might not totally yeah i thought it was thoughtfully done and sure kids might not fully understand immediately or they might have a reaction like
oh that's silly i mean at least at this time where there's not i mean and this ties to media
of like there just is not a lot of queer media for children to even introduce like if you don't
have a queer person in your immediate life as a
kid right the media doesn't do much to educate you on it so right and then like i mean they turn on
the tv in the motel and like george w bush is giving a speech and we're like oh right this was
during the bush presidency bad bad dad yeah i and another just good writing as it pertains to i mean
there's a lot of good writing
going on with Frank, just almost in every, and Steve Carell is so good in this, like
he's so good, but the movie does not define Frank by his queerness, which I feel like
is a bad writing choice that is made all the time.
And it also doesn't explicitly tie his like suicidality to queerness because i feel
like there's it is also very common to other a queer character and and make that their entire
arc has to do with their sexuality and frank's arc really doesn't have much to do with his sexuality
it has to do with a failed relationship and it has to do with a professional failure which i feel like
it's just it's just like having an openly queer character who has proceeded to be written like
a person which is like what everyone should do i just i was really because in 2006 you just never
know what people are but but it just it is like i i thought really i thought was really well done of
like frank is not really othered or defined by his sexuality in the way that i feel like a lesser
2006 writer would do for sure for sure and i like the michael arndt writes different types of toxic
masculinity or just like male fragility in general clashing with each other in such a
good way where like the way that Richard and Frank's fragility brushes against each other
is so like oh I see it like they have the same problem and they don't even realize it
where where you know they think like oh this other person's like such an asshole and I don't like
them and like I think
that like it's sort of implied that Richard thinks that like Frank is like an academic and he's just
like pretentious and Frank thinks that Richard is a fraud and they're both kind of right but it like
boils down to they both feel like professional failures but they don't want to admit that to
themselves and therefore we'll
never talk about it and therefore they'll hate each other forever and you're just like oh it's
so i mean with people of all genders where it's just like oh they're enemies but they don't
understand they have the same problem they should just see a therapist and i and i really i thought it was pretty thoughtfully done how frank's
the beginning of frank's story is handled as well where he um has tried to take his own life
and survives and his sis tony kles his sister yes their sister and brother I kept I was like I kept forgetting
who was related to but he so so she goes to get him and brings him to the house and just the way
that just like pulling from my own experience it is kind of like fun I mean it's not funny
but in a way it kind of is where it's like when you bring someone home who has attempted to take their own
life they don't want to like be with you and they don't want to like sit with an open door and like
your like sister's house smells weird and just it's just like the whole situation sucks and no
one knows how to deal with it and it was not I mean I and I'm in no way implying this is funny
but just like based on my own experience of coming home after something like that
and like being left in like rooms with the door open and my dad would kind of just walk in and be
like, like, it's like, no one really knows how to handle it. And I thought that that situation was
handled in a way that wasn't, I mean,'s just like it isn't tragedy porn it's dealt
with in a grounded way and you know it's like the family is doing their best they they are not
equipped to handle this I also thought it was a really thoughtful touch how they added in that
throwaway line of dialogue about insurance yes how they said like you know we'd love to keep him
longer but we can't because of insurance which happens in these situations more often than not. And yeah, I just thought that that whole storyline was dealt
with very well. Yeah. And I mean, I don't get me started on health care, health insurance,
all that stuff. Listen to sludge for that. But yeah, I was i was really impressed by at this time in cinema history and
basically throughout all time you know mental illness mental health was not handled well in
most media it was still deeply deeply stigmatized maybe i'm missing something but it didn't feel
to me as though anything about frank's mental illness to me it
felt like there was no real stigma that the movie subscribes to maybe certain characters namely
richard yeah who can't deal and doesn't that man needs therapy yeah it's just yeah which but i feel like he's reflecting like the opinion of okay about to get
galaxy brain the opinion of capitalism like he's just regurgitating the american dream take on
struggling with mental illness which is that it's unproductive and therefore for losers it's not
serving capitalism yeah just pick yourself up by your bootstraps and uh just like
deal with it exactly yeah so stuff like that i yeah i thought it was really like no one knows
how to handle that situation no family's gonna deal with it perfectly but everyone is trying i
like i really liked that quick scene with paul dano and steve carell where he writes on his
notepad like please don't kill yourself yeah because it's again it's
just like the specifics of that situation is like you can tell paul dano is like i love my uncle and
i don't want him to die also that would be a very stressful thing to happen in my room like you know
like i it's just it's really well done i don't know yeah it just it's so rare to see a situation
like that there were a number of times in this movie where
i thought about the royal tenenbaums and how much better this movie is than the royal tenenbaums
oh yeah because that's another movie that has a long opening montage where you meet the whole
family and you have a character who attempts to take their own life and just i feel like everything
that the royal tenenbaums
does well almost everything because we still need as we said more tony collette information
but but like the royal tenenbaums are huge thing with that opening montage was that we only find
out about the female characters as they relate to the male characters and the way that the suicide
plot line was handled in that movie was pretty atrocious
right and you see similar themes pop up in this movie that they that is just done far more
thoughtfully and yeah i agree a couple other just kind of quick things that i had uh well i guess i
want to talk about more about just the idea of pageants, beauty pageants, all that stuff.
We've done a lot of pageant movies.
We have.
Almost all of them.
More or less.
We have done Miss Congeniality on the main feed.
And then let's not forget about Pageantuary.
Which we did a few Januaries ago.
And we covered... Drop Dead Gorgeous dead gorgeous and dumpling two great movies there's a lot of it's it's kind of like it's bizarre because we
we don't really fuck with pageants but we generally fuck with pageant movies right but
only because they're usually making a larger point yes and like you already mentioned the
pageant isn't necessarily really what this movie is about it's more about this family and the family
dynamics and them having to get through a bunch of kind of traumatic things that happened to several
of them over the course of this trip to a pageant. And then the story does conclude with Olive competing
and stuff like that. And then there's a little bit of examination of like, well, it's pretty
fucked up that we have little girls compete in these pageants. We are encouraging like the
sexualization of children in these like children pageants.
You know, I don't think, again, the movie goes into great detail about.
I think it doesn't say a ton, but I feel like it says enough.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
It's not subtle.
It's definitely not subtle.
But it's not overbearing. It's not like the agenda of this movie isn't to indict or like heavily critique pageant culture.
There's a little bit of that.
There's like a little sliver of it, especially most notably when Dwayne and Richard go to Cheryl backstage.
And they're like, they basically said basically said like we're not in Kansas
anymore this is a whole different ball game all of like everyone is going to laugh and ridicule
people have like remortgaged their house to be here like yeah like and I thought it was interesting
that they're uh I guess all the the girls in the Little Miss Sunshine pageant are actual pageant
kids yes I read that as well and that they're like i guess i think this was like a kind of a smart thing to do that the pageant parents
who came with with the girls were asked what do you think and they were like well it's a little
over the top but not too much and you're like oh boy but i've but i've also seen toddlers and
tiaras so i don't ask me why.
I got sick once and I watched a lot of it.
I embarrassingly watched several, many, many episodes of Here Comes Honey Boo Boo.
Oh, I forgot that that was where Honey Boo Boo came from.
Yeah, I think so.
I think she was a Toddlers and Tiaras kid.
Well, I'm glad that we at least, we very rarely have like an overlapping guilty pleasure.
That's a fun one.
Yeah.
So bottom line is like, I mean, we could have a whole discussion, which I think we've already
had on various episodes of the podcast, just generally speaking about like, maybe beauty
pageants aren't that good because, you know, there's this emphasis on adhering to western beauty
standards and all those problems that we foist upon women and young girls like from a very early
age like and it's it's the same thing of of richard being like you have to be skinny don't eat ice
cream we want you to stay skinny and like just all these all these expectations that we foist
upon women and girls about like the your beauty is your most important quality and let's make a
whole industry around exploiting that via beauty pageants and like how fucked up all of that is
but then also like feminism says like you can can do whatever you want. So if you want to compete in beauty pageants, like do it.
If you,
if that empowers you.
There have been like,
I don't know.
Beauty pageants.
It's like a very complicated discussion that we've had in various capacities.
Yeah.
I'm not wholesale condemning them.
And it's like,
you know,
there,
there are different ways to look at.
I'm,
I'm not a fan,
but I'm like also not petitioning to have them shut
down i don't know i like this this movie is not you know making a new point about beauty pageants
but but i don't think it's necessarily trying to and and i think it is kind of nice that the movie
does firmly come down not on the side of it uh which is kind of nice because that's like a point
that like miscongeniality doesn't get there she wins you know miss congeniality and she's like well maybe
this was nice i think i'll stay hot you know like the that whole thing so it's like at least little
miss sunshine you know firmly is like we don't fuck with this which is which is refreshing yeah
i i think like generally for the time we spend there the points that are made are
good ones yeah there was uh did you see the the behind the scenes note that abigail breslin
um wore like a padded suit to play this character oh no that is a thing that took place oh interesting
i guess that the olive character was described in the script as, quote, plump.
And that Abigail Breslin was asked to wear a padded suit.
I see.
Throughout filming.
Okay.
So I will say, I think that that's a bit weird.
I think that that's a bit weird uh i think that that's weird in general when a woman
is asked to wear a padded suit that does not have to do with like needing to appear pregnant for a
role right i generally don't like it right to me the idea is like if your story calls for a character
that is yeah plus size then cast that an actor who fits that description.
Which is not slight
against Abigail Breslin in any way.
She's, you know,
a very small child
doing a great job in this movie.
But I did think that that was
kind of a, you know,
I don't think that that would
currently happen.
Sure.
So, hmm.
Sound off in the comments, gang.
I don't love it.
Here's another thing I didn't love.
Again, in this movie where I do think there's a lot to love.
It's a very white movie.
Yes.
As per most movies.
I think the only woman of color we meet is Linda, the bereavement liaison or whatever her job title is.
Yeah. To me, she felt as though she was presented as a bit of a like bitchy obstacle type because it's like.
Yeah, I think so.
Her that the character has to sneak past to get dead grandpa out of the hospital.
And she's kind of presented as an obstacle and things kind of there's a conversation between her and Richard that
quickly escalates and to me it's because like he's being unreasonable and like trying to be this like
entitled white guy who wants to bend the rules and thinks the rules don't apply to him and she's like
no that's not how we do things there are you know rules and laws we have to abide by um so i'm like on her side
during that scene but i think the movie frames her a bit more again as an obstacle i agree with
that you're saying i just think that that's maybe not a to get to the great scene where they smuggle
a corpse out of the hospital i feel like it's not the best writing in the movie to like i feel like
there's almost a little bit of like
all right we can't just have them take a corpse we have to do something and so I feel like the
way that her character acts and I I'm kind of curious if that part was written with a gender
in mind uh when it was done I I could see that part being played by almost anybody but the way that that character
talks to someone whose father has just died doesn't seem very realistic where i agree that
richard is being entitled but like i mean that's not how people talk to someone who just found out
that their father overdosed on heroin like so in general i was like i don't i don't think that
that scene was in a very like
grounded movie that that scene and the cop scene you're just like all right i'm like i don't really
this doesn't seem like a person who exists but whatever right yeah but i mean yeah it is an
extremely white movie we're spending the whole time with this white family and then which just leads to the only people of color being you know in very small roles or used you know just in the background
where there are some girls of color in the pageant but we don't know who they are we don't know what
they're doing they're just you know and there's people at the pad but it's just background right
which is also kind of inherent to this like wave of indie aesthetic
movies that came out in the 2000s it's all about white families right you know and and I think that
the the revelation was that there was acoustic music and that the white families weren't always
rich uh but it it wasn't like and the movies were too long not this one but a lot of
them sure so it was just kind of like that thing we talk about all the time where it's like the
smallest step out of the norm for a comedy and they're like well wait wait wait wait the white
people are they're not millionaires and we're supposed to be like we did it you know right
yeah yeah so for sure oh i'm forgetting about um miss california oh yes miss california frozen
yogurt icon miss california um is also a woman of color feminist icon and fro-yo aficionado
fro-yo icon um also feminist icon kirby the guy who um puts olive in the system after they were four minutes late
to register he was i also think that they made the the woman i don't remember the name of the
character the woman who ran the pageant i'm saying pageant official jenkins she was written full
shrew uh there was no that was another character that you're just like okay this is a i and we only have 20 minutes left but
this is a bit you know but then to kind of contrast that we get feminist icon stage manager
lady yeah she cracks a smile at the end yeah she's like yeah maybe pageants aren't good
um one last thing i wanted to just touch on and I don't know why I like this is a thing
I have fixated on throughout the course of the podcast, but I'm always noticing women's
relationship to cars and driving.
Oh, yes.
I had this too.
Yes.
So there is, believe it or not, folks, there's a stereotype out there on the streets
that women be bad at driving. It comes from me. It comes as you, you invented it. I started it.
You started it. I suck at driving. I, not to brag or anything. You're a good driver. But I'm an
incredible driver. Thank you so much. And I have at different points in my life made a career out of it. Hooters delivery girl.
Yes, I was a Hooters delivery driver. Anyway, so we see the mom not being able to drive
the stick shift. But okay, that didn't super bug me. Because well, the car was broken. The car was broken. She's willing to try.
We also don't see, like, the version of this stereotype where she's, like, driving super recklessly and, like, causing, like, a trail of destruction in her path or anything like that.
Because we see that in a few movies where, like, some, like, this oblivious, like, a woman is just, like, oblivious when she's behind the wheel of a car and it's just like oops and clueless not the sharing right right i was like wait what
yeah and clueless um we get something like that in cameron diaz's character in my best friend's
wedding like we see this um now and again so we don't see that version of this stereotype and also like i don't know i i tried to learn how to drive
a stick shift most people don't know also could not learn so i'm like okay it is like one of the
few things we learn about her character is that she can't drive stick and it's like oh god the
fact that we have to cling to that piece of information but that also i kind of like how that ended up too where like she makes
an attempt to drive and the clutch isn't working and like richard is like well you just gotta like
press down on the clutch and you just gotta it has to be on the floor and she's like it is on the
floor he's explaining it to her right and then when they switch and he's trying it she's like
just push down hard like she's sarcastic and then like
earlier she's like you know I should try I can drive I'll try to drive I gotta learn you know
you're doing it how hard can it be to Richard who she clearly hates and I can't wait for them to get
divorced the end yeah yeah I just I mean more Toni Collette that's just it's it's that simple
more Toni Collette and we haven't really it's that simple. More Toni Collette.
And we haven't really talked that much about Paul Dano.
I like, I don't know.
I like his character.
I feel like it's a good expansion on the like broody teen boy character in a way that,
and I guess this just applies to every character, like every character, no matter how,
because it's like to an extent,
Dwayne on paper sounds a little silly,
where he is very determined to get into the Air Force Academy.
And you can also sort of see in that way
is that his dad's logic has affected him
of like he is trying to be a winner.
He doesn't like his dad, but it's still, you know,
parents fuck with your head.
It's just canon.
I also think, I think he's his stepdad. I think his dad, but it's still, you know, parents fuck with your head. It's just canon. I also think I think he's his stepdad.
I think his step.
Yes.
Sorry, because Tony Clark had a baby when she was 12.
And then and then Greg Kinnear came into her life.
Right.
Either way, you can see that Richard's winner loser mentality has also kind of taken seed in a different way with Dwayne even though even though he doesn't like
him that it's just such a pervasive mentality and has a lot to do with his masculinity and
I just like every character in this family is dealt with with like really thoughtful empathy
so that things that I feel like a lesser writer and a lesser movie could easily make that
Paul Dano character seem really silly,
but it doesn't,
I don't know just,
I mean,
and that's true with almost every character of like,
you could make them into a caricature or you could like really give some
insight into where they're coming from.
And it gets to that point where it's like that,
that scene where he finds out he's colorblind is devastating.
It's so, it's so sad.
And I like that even when he basically, Paul Dano gets the thesis statement of the movie
where he says like, you know, fuck beauty pageants.
Life is like one beauty contest after another, which is even that like he's right.
And it's the thesis statement of the movie but it's so like teen boy
with a bowl cut like he's just like it's such a system man this sucks and then you're just like
oh shut up like you're right but shut up like it's just so well written i love it right it's
such a like a 15 year old boy way of saying that he just he says it like he's the first person to
have ever thought of it like it's just funny also, I don't know if you had this thought, but I was like, oh, man, like if this character
like starts hanging out with like the wrong group of friends or if he like discovers Reddit,
like he is an incel haircut.
He is an incel.
Like he will become an incel.
Yeah.
He really I hope that I hope I feel like he like the one like the family relationship that I think will improve from this movie
is that Frank and Dwayne will become close.
I think that Frank will be a good...
I think that they have a lot to learn from each other and I'm happy for them.
I hope they go on a different road trip.
Maybe Dwayne will also end up
studying proust he i mean he's already into uh he loves nichi or nicha yeah those guys you're like
that's all the same guy basically boring old guy as a job european writers yeah from a different century than the one we're in it seems they make
sense as relatives yeah anyways do you have anything else i also didn't know so michael
aren't i mean he's just he is interesting to me because he's uh this has nothing to do with
feminism this is just a like interesting there is like such a well-tracked pattern of like screenwriter writing one really
well-received good thing and then being offered infinity money and they're then they're writing
blockbusters for the rest of their career where michael arndt wrote little miss sunshine that
was like his first major release it was a huge success and his biggest
writers writing credits since then are Toy Story 3 he was the one that put Woody in the incinerator
yep he is a credited writer on The Force Awakens and so he's only really done like big movies since
then and he'll sometimes rewrite big movies and the hunger games catching fire hunger like really
a brave he did some work on brave oh wow how brave of him he's very in with the pixar crew it would
seem and he's done he the one thing i mean he's done some indie stuff since then but it's like
oh i hope that here's michael arndt if you're listening he's our biggest fan it seems like you have enough
money for now and uh make another fun movie for us to watch thanks yes well that brings us to the um
the directors which this movie was co-directed by a woman valerie ferris along with jonathan
dayton they are a husband wife duo. This was their first feature.
They had made a career of directing, I think, primarily music videos before this.
Music videos.
They did that iconic Smashing Pumpkins Tonight Tonight video.
They directed a lot of Mr. Shell.
They're cool.
They did that new show where...
I didn't watch the show, and the premise of it is annoying to me, but maybe it's good.
The new Netflix show where Paul Rudd is twins.
Oh, that is not even really on my radar.
I think that that's fine.
I don't know.
Who knows?
You never know with these things.
And we've kind of touched on this before where it's like, okay, if a woman does get to like write or direct or co-direct
or co-write a movie it's usually because like she's a part of like a husband-wife writing or
directing duo because I feel like you know the system is such that no one wants to take a chance
on just a like one woman without a partner as your creative partner, it's much less likely that anyone will take a chance on you and hire you.
Yeah, which has been true since the beginning of movies.
Right.
Where like some of the first female screenwriters,
like they were extremely talented,
but they were able to get in on the ground floor
because of a position that their spouse held.
Yeah.
So, I mean, we don't know what the story is with this directing couple they're great
like i like their stuff yeah same maybe i mean maybe they don't want to work separately but i
would be i would be interested to see you know it's hard i mean it's like yeah we just don't know
what her exact input was no but uh valerie come on the cast and let us know she's also our biggest
fan she's our other biggest fan so she's listening so she's she's
everyone involved in this movie listens paul danno used to come to the coffee shop that i lived near
oh no way yeah and one time melissa lazada oliva friend of the cast was staying with me and he she
was like reading a book because she's like that she's reading a book at the coffee shop oh whatever books and and then paul dana was like
that book's good and she was like oh it was very exciting and then she like ran back to my house
and was like paul dana read a book it was really really exciting stuff incredible thank you but
yeah i think that's all i had did you have anything else i think that that's everything yeah no i um i really like this movie but does it pass the bechdel test it does again not as much as
you would necessarily think i think it goes back to the i want a stronger relationship between uh
olive and cheryl thing and you do get some tender moments you know you get that moment when they're in the hospital and you know she gives this whole speech about like we're gonna have a family meaning and you
know we have to stick together and i just love you guys so much and then we get the
duane is like writes on his little you know notepad like go hug mom i know which is such a sweet older sibling thing to do too you're just like oh
but what i really want is more screen time between olive and cheryl and for that relationship to be
explored more and for cheryl as a character to just be given more of an interior life and because
there was room dedicated to all the other characters at length yeah and i
mean it would have been a real like i mean a super issue if we were not getting enough olive on top
of that but it's like you know the women in this van are already outnumbered don't shortchange one
of them unfortunately i mean yeah i think the bechdel test problem this is this is actually a
movie where i feel like the bechdel test is a very useful metric to use which isn't true for
but but for this one i think it is yeah because it just it passes but but not as much as it should
given who's in it i think the one the conversation that i was like really locked on to was um toward
the end when Cheryl is like,
basically gives all of an out.
If she wants it,
she's like,
you know,
if you sat this one out,
cause,
cause she also,
I think senses that all of is apprehensive about competing.
Cause she is looking at the other girls and she's,
she knows that she is scared.
There's that scene where she like looks at herself in the mirror.
She's examining her body.
She's wearing the swimsuit. Why do we have to have little girls parade around in swimsuits
to be judged by pageant judges? It's horrifying. But anyway, so like Cheryl's like, you know,
Olive, if you want to sit this one out, you can totally do that. But Olive's like, no,
I'm competing. So that whole exchange was one that I really enjoyed.
And shall we rate it on our nipple
scale we shall uh zero to five nipples based on its representation of women even though i would
give this movie like i would give it a 10 out of 10 on the rompometer i would give it like a five
out of five on just like movies i love but as far as our nipple scale i would i would go down
to maybe like a three and a half or maybe like an even like a 3.25 because even though the female
characters we do get to know i really love them i i love chery Cheryl's character even though we're not given a whole lot of
additional information about her just aside from her role in the movie as the mother just especially
because like it's clearly established that she has a job and we just don't find out what it is
we don't know anything about her and it was frustrating yeah but even so i do i do love her character
i'm so on her side all of the all of i'll get it all of the time ha well that brings me to
olive who i also really love like she's such a sweet little girl and yeah i just this is a movie
that i guess is about a family unit that I think should give
more focus to the female characters and that relationship between those two female characters.
So them as individuals and them as a like mother-daughter dynamic. I would have loved
to see that explored more. But even so, I think I'll go with a 3.5. Because it handles a lot of other things. Well, as we've
discussed the portrayal of mental illness, the fact that we have a queer character, which by
my point of view, and again, you know, I might be coming in with some blind spots here, but it felt
to me like that was handled pretty responsibly. And yeah, it's just a sweet, I love a dark comedy. You know,
I love I love that climactic sequence when the entire family gets on stage, which is like,
kind of signifies every character arc that we see, even though again, Cheryl isn't really given
much of an arc, all the other the men get to change, but the woman stays pretty static throughout.
But only because she's already such a good mom.
I don't know.
Three and a half nipples.
I'll give one to Toni Collette.
I will give one to Abigail Breslin.
I will give one to the Volkswagen bus.
And I'll give my half nipple I'll give it to Uncle Frank
I'm gonna give this a 3.5 as well for for much the same reasons I feel like there is an opportunity
for I mean of all the male relationships we get to explore in this movie whether it be between i mean there was a moment
where i was like oh yes every movie is about fathers and sons when alan arkin tells greg
kaneer like i'm proud of you you tried that's good you're just like okay i don't really care
uh the like you find out about that relationship you find out a little bit about you know the
tension between richard and frank you find out about the tension between Dwayne and Richard like you get a blossoming friendship between Frank and Dwayne and
you just that there's not that many versions of relationships for women to have because there's
only two and we don't really get it so that was a little disappointing and I feel like is just kind of single male writer you know culture of
you know they're they're writing what they know and they don't know how to make women talk to
each other at length and so they just don't so that was a bummer but I do I agree that I like
that I mean Toni Collette can do a lot with a little which I think she does here uh yes I like
that she is the breadwinner like i mean
the the frustrating thing is everything i know about her i like and i wish i knew more
and i wish that the movie almost had like the confidence it has in its male characters to
allow her to fail a little bit outside of her maternal role but ultimately it is a wonderful movie i laughed to cry it's great olive is a wonderful character
i feel like she would be our friend as an adult um i like she she's the best i also think it's so
i mean it is kind of nice to see demonstrated how pervasive beauty pageant culture is where I feel like sometimes you get
the idea from media of like oh only you know young women who have pageant families or only young
women who look a certain way are interested in pageant culture but it it is so pervasive that
it gets to everyone one way or another and all of of, you know, is in by no means a pageant pushing family.
And she still develops,
you know,
a want to participate.
And I think that that's something that you don't really see acknowledged a lot.
So I liked,
I liked that.
I like her.
I want to know what she's like when she's older.
And yeah,
this is the beautiful sequel.
Where's that?
Actually,
you know what?
I think that
that sounds good and then when you would see it you're like i actually don't want it like
just write a different movie maybe but yeah i think it's a wonderful movie three and a half
nippies wished that there had been more of the female relationship but i'll give one to Tony Collette, one to Abigail Breslin, and one to the lady who held Abigail Breslin's hand on the way to the stage.
Oh, yeah.
And then a half nipple to Alfred Molina, who should have been in this movie.
I wonder what he was doing.
I wonder what he was up to.
I feel like Alfred Molina should have been.
He would have been really – I won't recast any of the family
because I feel like it is the perfect cast for the family.
But maybe if they made Alfred Molina in the audience of the pageant as a really intense pageant parent, that would be great.
Well, please and thank you.
Let's recut the movie.
Let's put him in there.
In 2006, he was in the da vinci code oh that's a bum that's not even a good
that's a bad excuse it's probably a better paycheck though listen he's got children
that's true anyways but yeah three and a half nipples and and a lovely movie happy birthday
caitlin oh my gosh thank you so much yeah i i'm so glad we we finally got
around to talking about this movie oh here's something we can plug so we're you know our
social media uh twitter and instagram follow us there at bechtel cast my actual birthday is on
may 17th hello i'm a tourist thank you so much on my birthday, we are going to do just a Instagram
live hangout, the two of us. Yes, it's going to be fun. A chill hang. We're going to be encouraging
donations to your local food bank if you're able to donate if you're in a position to do that.
And yeah, come hang out with us. That's going to be at 2 p.m pacific time sunday may 17th and then in addition to that
you can subscribe to our matreon our may treon get it there's no better time there's no better
month there's literally no better month and then of course our merch can be found on tpublic.com
slash the bechtel cast where you can get all of your merch needs
I think that'll about do it yeah we cherish you we hope that you're you're safe and and doing well
and we'll talk to you soon we love you we all won the pageant oh my gosh we all won little miss
sunshine wow that was that is what I would say if I actually hadn't wanted the movie. I'd be like, um, and then she wins.
Yeah.
Bye.
Bye.
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