Day Seven: Sunday 20th August

Little Miss Sunshine provides a ray of golden delight to the proceedings.

by Chris Docker

The delightful Little Miss Sunshine

The delightful Little Miss Sunshine

The glamour-set celebrities were a little thin on the ground after last night's EIFF Birthday Party, where the flow of champagne was challenged only by the inventiveness of the whisky cocktails. But that wasn't the case with the crew of Stateside-smash Little Miss Sunshine, who arrived in beat-up VW vans, sporting "Everybody Pretend To Be Normal" badges, to grace the Red Carpet.

It looked like it would rain any minute, so I asked director Valerie Faris if the film was going to bring a little ray of sunshine to our damp Scottish clime. "Well, I hope so," replied co-director Jonathan Dayton, "Do people need cheering up? We quite like the weather - we saw some sun earlier . . ." At this point I had that sinking feeling that comes with asking a really dumb question and not getting a stock soundbite. Moving on quickly, I asked, with the movie being on a worldwide roller-coaster, what they found most fulfilling about the whole process. "Watching it with an audience - and laughing with them." So far, they had struck me as two of the most unpretentious Americans I had ever met. I grabbed a seat inside Cineworld from where I could watch them (many stars leave as soon as the introductions are over, returning only at the end and after a good meal). But they stayed. Chatting in the bar afterwards, the producers said they nearly always do (and with their family of youngsters in tow). The audience laughed till they cried. They applauded spontaneously mid-film. If you haven't been able to get a ticket for this film yet, it goes on general release 8th September.

For tomorrow, my hot tip is Dead Man's Cards, the most realistic, gritty, convincing British crime thriller since Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. If you can't beg, steal or borrow a ticket, call in some big mates...

Share this with others on...
News

Uncovering everyday moments Alvin Hall and Sam Pollard on uncovering the history of The Lorraine

Driven by love and capitalism Director Pierre Le Gall on the themes of Flesh and Fuel

The ultimate act of friendship Robin Campillo on picking up the threads from the late Laurent Cantet

Reaching for a better future Daniel E Catullo, Julie DeVercelly and Gary DeVercelly on hazing and 4000 Days

Escaping perfection Andrew Durham on adapting Alysia Abbott's memoir Fairyland

Playing it safe Will Bates on early musical influences and scoring Tuner

Farewell to Anthony Head Much-loved star dies at 72

More news and features

We're bringing you news, reviews and more from ImagineNative and Tribeca.



We're looking forward to Docs Ireland and the Fantasia International Film Festival.



We've recently brought you coverage of Cannes, Queer East, the San Francisco Independent Film Festival, Visions du Réel, Fantaspoa, Overlook, BFI Flare and SXSW, the Thessaloniki International Documentary Festival and the NY Rendezvous with French Cinema.



Read our full for more.


Visit our festivals section.

Interact

Don't forget that you can follow us on YouTube for trailers of festival films and more. You can also find us on Mastodon and Bluesky.


It's a busy time for festivals and here's the latest:


Fantasia Second wave of titles announced


Tribeca Artistic director Frédéric Boyer discusses the highlights of this year's edition


Cannes The 2026 Palme d'Or has gone to Fjord


Cannes Everytime wins Un Certain Regard prize


Cannes Yuri wins Palm Dog for La Perra


Cannes La Gradiva tops Critics' Week awards