BOTTOM
LINE:
An odd and morbid premise
is the unlikely setting for a feel-good, realistic character drama
of two sisters who get in to a biohazard/forensic clean-up business;
however, the resulting film is more a forgettable made-for-TV movie
than a cinematic experience.
THE
GOOD: Rose (Amy
Adams) is a single mother in her early thirties who does not know
where everything went wrong. She runs an average cleaning business
and is sleeping with her high school policeman ex-boyfriend who
is married to another woman. Through him, Rose starts getting work
in the crime scene clean-up business which although morbid, pays
a lot of money. She enlists the help of her slacker sister Norah
(Emily Blunt) and together they set out to make a better life, but
as you expect, not all goes according to plan. In many ways, “Sunshine
Cleaning” is quite a nice film aside from its morbid plot
concept, filled with a number of realistic character moments that
should resonate with people. The problems that the sisters face,
the anxieties and doubts they face are very human and real. As played
by the leads Amy Adams and Emily Blunt, both actresses lend a credibility
to their characters that goes a long way to allowing you to accept
what they are up to. Alan Arkin is excellent as their quirky, opinionated
father who gets up to a number of odd-ball schemes. The subplot
involving Rose’s son Oscar (Jason Spevack) raises some interesting
ideas, particularly in the way schools can misread the behaviour
of children (a chilling moment is when the school principal suggests
medication to ‘correct’ Oscar’s apparently bad
behaviour). “Sunshine Cleaning” is a snapshot of a family
struggling to make it through life set against an odd premise and
in this respect, it is unique and somewhat interesting.