Home   In Cinemas   Showtimes   Box Office   Coming Soon   Top Rated Movies   Y! Star Reviewers   Browse Movies   Special Features   
Sunshine Cleaning (2009)
What's New Watch the trailer about a stone that grants kids wishes
Sunshine Cleaning
Release Date: 9th July 2009
Language: English
Running Time: 91 mins
 
Rating: NC16
Genre: Comedy
Starring: Alan Arkin, Amy Adams, Emily Blunt
Directed by: Christine Jeffs
Local Distributor: Golden Village Pictures
 
User Reviews: Read Review | Write Review
Users:
(15 ratings)
Sign in to rate this movie
Movie Plot Back to top

Rose, once the most popular girl in high school, has a 7-year-old son named Oscar (Jason Spevack) and now works as a maid. Younger sister Norah is the edgier one, a party girl who lives with dad Joe (Alan Arkin). Rose's policeman lover Mac (Steve Zahn) mentions one day how much money can be made in the unsavoury specialised business of crime scene cleanup and Rose decides that it is the perfect enterprise to pay for better education for his son. She ropes in Norah to help and the two sisters get more than they bargained for.

User's Review and Ratings Back to top

life is a long learning process

i couldnt understand why this was under the comedy genre when i dun find anything funny about this movie? so many people were talking during the movie, and we just duno how it will end. it seems more like a girl happen to see an opportunity, jump in, wanting to be entreprenuer, halfway through, things happened, closed shop, in much bigger debts, and start all over again. the moral of the story is, whatever happens, you still need your daddy's money to start over again.

Story:

Acting:

Direction:

Visuals:

Overall:

Sign in to recommend this review. Report Abuse

Cinema Online's Review Back to top

"Suicide... It's a good thing," as said by Emily Blunt in this film and may have been a good idea for this reviewer. Don't be deceived by the cheerful title of "Sunshine Cleaning" when the tale revolves around two desperate sisters, Rose and Norah who decides to make a living by cleaning up crime scenes. A bloody affair, but somebody has to do it. Heck, eventually the girls discover something far deeper than just cleaning up the mess - helping people cope better with the passing of their loved one. Least it makes the job sound less gruesome and maid-like.

Former high school popular cheerleader, Rose is a single mom raising an intelligent seven-year-old seems to have her life at a stand-still. She works as a cleaning lady and is in a shabby affair with a married cop, Steve Zahn who is her former high school sweetheart.

Plenty of issues surround this movie, Rose and Norah struggles with their new cleaning company ironically named Sunshine Cleaning, Rose continues her affair with a married cop, Norah keeps in contact with a deceased lady's daughter to break the news of her mother's death, Rose's son behaves awkwardly after listening to horror stories made-up by Norah, their father - well, nothing much, but he does some good somewhere. The story has quirky characters with emotional and humoristic elements here and there. However, it leaves this reviewer feeling flat as no climax could be felt.

Thankfully, a ray of sunshine can be found and it comes in the form of Amy Adams who plays the main character Rose. The "Ella Enchanted" star has always seemed so genuine in her performance, projecting honesty, integrity, vulnerability and strength into Rose's character. This bubbly girl here can morph from a Disney chick to a single mother with emotional issues. Emily Blunt does well as a rebellious yet helpful sister and Clifton Collins Jr, a one-armed man who owns a cleaning store exudes a sweet charm, adding a good dimension for Adam's possibly new prospect.

"Sunshine Cleaning" needs some cleaning up to do because the story itself seemed dull.

Production Photos - Click thumbnail for larger photos
Sunshine Cleaning Production Photo
Amy Adams
Sunshine Cleaning Production Photo
Amy Adams
Sunshine Cleaning Production Photo
Emily Blunt